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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE OLD OAKEN BUCKET, by ABRAHAM LINCOLN Poet's Biography First Line: With what anguish of mind I remember my childhood Last Line: In fact, the slop bucket -- that hung in the well. | |||
(As censored by the Board of Health) WITH WHAT ANGUISH of mind I remember my childhood, Recalled in the light of knowledge since gained, The malarious farm, the wet, fungus-grown wildwood, The chills then contracted that since have remained; The scum-covered duck-pond, the pigsty close by it, The ditch where the sour-smelling house drainage fell, The damp, shaded dwelling, the foul barnyard nigh it -- But worse than all else was that terrible well, And the old oaken bucket, the mold-crusted bucket, The moss-covered bucket that hung in the well. Just think of it! Moss on the vessel that lifted The water I drank in the days called to mind, Ere I knew what professors and scientists gifted In the waters of wells by analysis find; The rotting wood-fiber, the oxide of iron, The algae, the frog of unusual size, The water as clear as the verses of Byron, Are things I remember with tears in my eyes. Oh, had I but realized in time to avoid them The dangers that lurked in that pestilent draft, I'd have tested for organic germs and destroyed them With potassic permanganate ere I had quaffed. Or perchance I'd have boiled it, and afterward strained it Through filters of charcoal and gravel combined; Or, after distilling, condensed and regained it In potable form with its filth left behind. How little I knew of the enteric fever Which lurked in the water I ventured to drink; But since I've become a devoted believer In the teachings of science, I shudder to think. And now, far removed from the scenes I'm describing, The story of warning to others I tell, As memory reverts to my youthful imbibing And I gag at the thought of that horrible well, And the old oaken bucket, the fungus-grown bucket -- In fact, the slop bucket -- that hung in the well. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS by ABRAHAM LINCOLN HAPPY WIND by WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES THE BASE OF ALL METAPHYSICS by WALT WHITMAN THE WANDERING JEW by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN JOB. THE INSCRUTABLE MYSTERY by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE THE FOUR ZOAS: NIGHTS THE NINTH by WILLIAM BLAKE JEWELLED OFFERING by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT SONG: BUTTERFLIES by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT ON THE LOSS OF PROFESSOR FISHER by JOHN GARDINER CALKINS BRAINARD |
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