Stedman and Hutchinson, comps. A Library of American Literature:
An Anthology in Eleven Volumes. 1891.
Vols. IX–XI: Literature of the Republic, Part IV., 1861–1889
A Liz-Town Humorist
By James Whitcomb Riley (18491916)S
Down at Wess’s store, was me,
And Mart Strimples, Tunk, and White,
And Doc Bills, and two er three
Fellers of the Mudsock tribe
No use tryin’ to describe!
And says Doc, he says, says he,—
“Talkin’ ’bout good things to eat,
Ripe mushmillon’s hard to beat!”
Wortermillon beat the mush.
“Red,” he says, “and juicy—Hush!
I’ll jes’ leave it to the crowd!”
Then a Mudsock chap, says he,
“Punkin’s good enough fer me—
Punkin pies, I mean,” he says,—
“Them beats millons! What say, Wess?”
You ’jes fetch that wife of mine
All yer wortermillon-rine,
And she’ll bile it down a spell—
In with sorgum, I suppose,
And what else, Lord only knows!
But I’m here to tell all hands,
Them p’serves meets my demands!”
“Well, I’ll jes’ stand in with Wess—
I’m no hog!” And Tunk says,—“I
Guess I’ll pastur’ out on pie
With the Mudsock boys!” says he;
“Now what’s yourn?” he says to me;
I chawed on—fer—quite a spell—
Then I speaks up, slow and dry,—
“Jes’ tobacker!” I-says-I.
And you’d orto’ heerd ’em yell!