Paul Laurence Dunbar

Riding to Town

WHEN labor is light and the morning is fair,
I find it a pleasure beyond all compare
To hitch up my nag and go hurrying down
And take Katie May for a ride into town;
For bumpety—bump goes the wagon,
But tra—la—la—la our lay.
There’s joy in a song as we rattle along
In the light of the glorious day.
A coach would be fine, but a spring wagon’s good;
My jeans are a match for Kate’s gingham and hood;
The hills take us up and the vales take us down,
But what matters that? we are tiding to town,
And bumpety—bump goes the wagon,
But tra—la—la—la sing we.
There’s never a care may live in the air
That is filled with the breath of our glee.
And after we’ve started, there’s naught can repress
The thrill of our hearts in their wild happiness;
The heavens may smile or the heavens may frown,
And it’s all one to us when we’re riding to town.
For bumpety—bump goes the wagon,
But tra—la—la—la we shout,
For our hearts they are clear and there’s nothing to fear,
And we’ve never a pain nor a doubt.
The wagon is weak and the roadway is rough,
And tho’ it is long it is not long enough,
For mid all my ecstasies this is the crown
To sit beside Katie and ride into town,
When bumpety—bump goes the wagon,
But tra—la—la—la our song;
And if I had my way, I’d be willing to pay
If the road could be made twice as long.
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