John
Hood one night said to his wife,
“I
b’lieve I’ll try’n write up my life.
‘Twould
be quite interestin’ too,
Some
uv them times thet I’ve b’en through.”
“Write
up your life?” the good wife said,
“Why
goodness me you’ve lost your head.”
But
down he sat with pen and ink,
And
hemmed and scratched and tried to think.
“John
Hood wus born October eight,
In
what is called the nutmeg state,
In
eighteen hundred, twenty nine,
An'
purty nigh the York State line.”
“So
far so good; I say my dear,
Don’t
say yeou think I ain’t all here.
I’ve
started well, but – arter all,
Not
one event kin I recall.”
Thus
on he rocked and scratched his head,
But
all those “times” of his had fled.
“Thet
pesky show I helped to town
Ain’t
hardly wuth a jottin’ down;
Then
I fell off thet load uv hay,
But
sech things happen ev’ry day.
Then
there’s the time when I could vote,
But
thet ain’t much,” so then he wrote:
“John
Hood wus wed to Mary Lee
March
sixteen, in forty three.”
And
this was all the good man could
Think
to write in his “Life of Hood”.
“It’s
jes the way,” the farmer said;
“Yeour
born, married, and then you’re dead.
That
makes the life uv common men,
But
doesn’t show what might hev b’en.”
July
13, ‘91
Pub.
in
Camb. Press
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