James Whitcomb Riley

A Dost O’ Blues

I’ got no patience with blues at all!
And I ust to kindo talk
Aginst ‘em, and claim, ’tel along last Fall,
They was none in the fambly stock;
But a nephew of mine, from Eelinoy,
That visited us last year,
He kindo convinct me differunt
While he was a-stayin’ here.
 
Frum ever’-which way that blues is from,
They’d tackle him ever’ ways;
They’d come to him in the night, and come
On Sundays, and rainy days;
They’d tackle him in corn-plantin’ time,
And in harvest, and airly Fall,
But a dose ‘t of blues in the wintertime,
He ’lowed, was the worst of all!
 
Said all diseases that ever he had—
The mumps, er the rheumatiz—
Er ever’-other-day-aigger’s bad
Purt’ nigh as anything is!—
Er a cyarbuncle, say, on the back of his neck,
Er a felon on his thumb,—
But you keep the blues away from him,
And all o’ the rest could come!
 
And he’d moan, 'They’s nary a leaf below!
Ner a spear o’ grass in sight!
And the whole wood-pile’s clean under snow!
And the days is dark as night!
You can’t go out—ner you can’t stay in—
Lay down—stand up—ner set!'
And a tetch o’ regular tyfoid-blues
Would double him jest clean shet!
 
I writ his parents a postal-kyard,
He could stay 'tel Spring-time come;
And Aprile first, as I rickollect,
Was the day we shipped him home!
Most o’ his relatives, sence then,
Has either give up, er quit,
Er jest died off; but I understand
He’s the same old color yit!
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