XXVI
November
Sich a mornin’ o’ glory I’ve rar’ly saw,
Tho’ they tell me thet Winter is nigh;
The sun’s fairly glary, an’ hez a reel carry,
An’ I’m swattin’ a bothersome fly.
The sky was ez black ez one o’ Bill’s blots
When over a letter he muddles;
An’ the win’ blow’d a blast, an’ the rain fell fast,
An’ the groun’ was a huddle o’ puddles.
Thet was yistiddy, pard; but terday, by Joel,
It’s Aprul excep’ fer the leaves;
They’re a copper an’ green with a pigeony sheen,
An’ a red like our Heryford beeves.
Mos’ potes will all spring suthin’ on ye ’bout russet,
An’ ox-blood, an’ fawn, an’ maroon;
But they never was here in the “yeller an’ sere”,
An’ reality aint in the’r toon.
I’ll go further yit an’ say thet the shades
O’ them colors I plainly kin see
Is ev’ry durn hue in the specktum but blue,
An’ mebby that’s thar fer all me.
Co’se it’s up in the sky whar ye’d reckon ’t ’ud be,
Sort o’ balancin’ up the whole;
Yew put ’em tergether in this kind o’ weather
An’ it’s eye-musick, pard, fer yer soul!
The glint o’ the sun on our Fall wheat fiel’s—
More em’raldy now then in May—
Is Nacher’s own dope on thet undyin’ hope
Thet keeps us a-pluggin’ away.
They’s a nawful sweet peece kind o’ hangin’ aroun’
An’ it’s great by this ’ere shock o’ stover
Ter feel the ol’ Earth all set fer re-birth
When the War an’ the Winter is over.