Home
Fictions/Novels
Short Stories
Poems
Essays
Plays
Nonfictions
 
Authors
All Titles
 






In Association with Amazon.com

Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of James Whitcomb Riley > Text of Uncle Dan'l In Town Over Sunday

A poem by James Whitcomb Riley

Uncle Dan'l In Town Over Sunday

________________________________________________
Title:     Uncle Dan'l In Town Over Sunday
Author: James Whitcomb Riley [More Titles by Riley]

I cain't git used to city ways--
Ner never could, I' bet my hat!
Jevver know jes' whur I was raised?--
Raised on a farm! D' ever tell you that?
Was undoubtatly, I declare!
And now, on Sunday--fun to spare
Around a farm! Why jes' to set
Up on the top three-cornered rail
Of Pap's old place, nigh La Fayette,
I'd swap my soul off, hide and tail!
You fellers in the city here,
You don't know nothin'!--S'pose to-day,
This clatterin' Sunday, you waked up
Without no jinglin'-janglin' bells,
Ner rattlin' of the milkman's cup,
Ner any swarm of screechin' birds
Like these here English swallers--S'pose
Ut you could miss all noise like those,
And git shet o' thinkin' of 'em afterwerds,
And then, in the country, wake and hear
Nothin' but silence--wake and see
Nothin' but green woods fur and near?--
What sort o' Sunday would that be?...
Wisht I hed you home with me!
Now think! The laziest of all days--
To git up any time--er sleep--
Er jes' lay round and watch the haze
A-dancin' 'crost the wheat, and keep
My pipe a-goern laisurely,
And puff and whiff as pleases me--
And ef I leave a trail of smoke
Clean through the house, no one to say,
"Wah! throw that nasty thing away;
Hev some regyard fer decency!"
To walk round barefoot, if you choose;
Er saw the fiddle--er dig some bait
And go a-fishin'--er pitch hoss shoes
Out in the shade somewhurs, and wait
For dinner-time, with an appetite
Ut folks in town cain't equal quite!
To laze around the barn and poke
Fer hens' nests--er git up a match
Betwixt the boys, and watch 'em scratch
And rassle round, and sweat and swear
And quarrel to their hearts' content;
And me a-jes' a-settin' there
A-hatchin' out more devilment!
What sort o' Sunday would that be?...
Wisht I hed you home with me!


[The end]
James Whitcomb Riley's poem: Uncle Dan'l In Town Over Sunday

________________________________________________



GO TO TOP OF SCREEN