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Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Bert Leston Taylor > Text of Pole

A poem by Bert Leston Taylor

The Pole

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Title:     The Pole
Author: Bert Leston Taylor [More Titles by Taylor]

(Tune: "Carcassonne.")


I'm an old man, I'm eighty-three,
I seldom get away;
My work, it keeps me close at home--
I have no time for play.
If it were not for the journey back,
That so fatigues a soul,
I'd like to take a little trip--
I never have seen the Pole.

'Tis said that in that favored place
There is no heat or drouth;
And that, whichever way you turn,
You're looking south-by-south.
Some say there is a flagstaff there,
Some say there is a hole.
Think of the years that I have lived
And never have seen the Pole!

The parson a hundred times is right--
We ought to stay at home.
I'm an old man, I'm eighty-three,
I have no call to roam.
And yet if I could somehow find
The time--God bless my soul!--
I think that I would die content
If I only could see the Pole!

My brother has seen Baraboo,
If so he speak the truth;
My wife and son they both have been
As far as to Duluth;
My cousin cruised to Eastport, Maine,
On a ship that carried coal;
I've been as far as Mackinac--
But I never have seen the Pole!


[The end]
Bert Leston Taylor's poem: Pole

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