________________________________________________
Title: On The Wedding Of G. C.
Author: Eugene Field [
More Titles by Field]
(June 2, 1886.)
Oh, hand me down my spike tail coat
And reef my waistband in,
And tie this necktie round my throat
And fix my bosom pin;
I feel so weak and flustered like,
I don't know what I say--
For I am to be wedded to-day, Dan'l,
I'm to be wedded to-day!
Put double sentries at the doors
And pull the curtains down,
And tell the democratic bores
That I am out of town;
It's funny folks haint decency
Enough to stay away,
When I'm to be wedded to-day, Dan'l,
I'm to be wedded to-day!
The bride, you say, is calm and cool
In satin robes of white--
Well, I am stolid, as a rule,
But now I'm flustered quite;
Upon a surging sea of bliss
My soul is borne away,
For I'm to be wedded to-day, Dan'l,
I'm to be wedded to-day!
[The end]
Eugene Field's poem: On The Wedding Of G. C.
________________________________________________
GO TO TOP OF SCREEN