Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
III. AdversityOver the hill to the poor-house
Will Carleton (18451912)O
I, a woman of seventy, and only a trifle gray—
I, who am smart an’ chipper, for all the years I ’ve told,
As many another woman that ’s only half as old.
Over the hill to the poor-house—it seems so horrid queer!
Many a step I ’ve taken a-toilin’ to and fro,
But this is a sort of journey I never thought to go.
Am I lazy or crazy? am I blind or lame?
True, I am not so supple, nor yet so awful stout;
But charity ain’t no favor, if one can live without.
To work for a decent livin’, an’ pay my honest way;
For I can earn my victuals, an’ more too, I ’ll be bound,
If anybody only is willin’ to have me round.
Once my cheeks was roses, my eyes as black as coal;
And I can’t remember, in them days, of hearin’ people say,
For any kind of a reason, that I was in their way.
But many a house an’ home was open then to me;
Many a han’some offer I had from likely men,
And nobody ever hinted that I was a burden then.
But he and all the neighbors would own I done my part;
For life was all before me, an’ I was young an’ strong,
And I worked the best that I could in tryin’ to get along.
With now and then a baby for to cheer us on our way;
Till we had half a dozen, an’ all growed clean an’ neat,
An’ went to school like others, an’ had enough to eat.
Worked for ’em summer and winter, just as we ought to ’ve done;
Only perhaps we humored ’em, which some good folks condemn,
But every couple’s child’rn ’s heap the best to them.
I ’d have died for my daughters, I ’d have died for my sons;
And God he made that rule of love; but when we ’re old and gray,
I ’ve noticed it sometimes somehow fails to work the other way.
And when, exceptin’ Charley, they ’d left us there alone;
When John he nearer an’ nearer come, an’ dearer seemed to be,
The Lord of Hosts he come one day an’ took him away from me.
Still I worked for Charley, for Charley was now my all;
And Charley was pretty good to me, with scarce a word or frown,
Till at last he went a-courtin’, and brought a wife from town.
She was quite conceity, and carried a heap o’ style;
But if I ever tried to be friends, I did with her, I know;
But she was hard and proud, an’ I couldn’t make it go.
But when she twitted me on mine, ’t was carryin’ things too fur;
An’ I told her once, ’fore company (an’ it almost made her sick),
That I never swallowed a grammar, or ’et a ’rithmetic.
They was a family of themselves, and I another one;
And a very little cottage one family will do,
But I never have seen a house that was big enough for two.
An’ it made me independent, an’ then I didn’t try;
But I was terribly staggered, an’ felt it like a blow,
When Charley turned ag’in me, an’ told me I could go.
And she was always a-hintin’ how snug it was for us all;
And what with her husband’s sisters, and what with child’rn three,
’T was easy to discover that there wasn’t room for me.
For Thomas’s buildings ’d cover the half of an acre lot;
But all the child’rn was on me—I couldn’t stand their sauce—
And Thomas said I needn’t think I was comin’ there to boss.
And to Isaac, not far from her—some twenty miles at best;
And one of ’em said ’t was too warm there for any one so old,
And t’ other had an opinion the climate was too cold.
So they have well-nigh soured me, an’ wore my old heart out;
But still I ’ve borne up pretty well, an’ wasn’t much put down,
Till Charley went to the poor-master, an’ put me on the town.
Many a night I ’ve watched you when only God was nigh;
And God ’ll judge between us; but I will al’ays pray
That you shall never suffer the half I do to-day.