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Title: The Fifth Of July
Author: Eugene Field [
More Titles by Field]
The sun climbs up, but still the tyrant Sleep
Holds fast our baby boy in his embrace;
The slumb'rer sighs, anon athwart his face
Faint, half-suggested frowns like shadows creep,
One little hand lies listless on his breast,
One little thumb sticks up with mute appeal,
While motley burns and powder marks reveal
The fruits of boyhood's patriotic zest.
Our baby's faithful poodle crouches near--
He, too, is weary of the din and play
That come with glorious Independence Day,
But which, thank God! come only once a year!
And Fido, too, has suffered in this cause,
Which once a year right noisily obtains,
For Fido's tail--or what thereof remains--
Is not so fair a sight as once it was.
[The end]
Eugene Field's poem: Fifth Of July
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