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The Hermit
Fun, VII - 17th October 1868
I don't suppose you'd ever find | |
A man who galloped faster | |
To grief of a decisive kind | |
Than FREDERICK DISASTER. |
I never knew a purer man | |
Or one who lived more gently, | |
But still in every little plan | |
He failed incontinently. |
For daily bit and daily sup, | |
Unfitted quite to battle — | |
No man has been more shaken up | |
In this terrestrial rattle. |
Poor FREDERICK succeeded ill | |
In every single section; | |
He could not forge a simple bill | |
Or cheque, without detection; |
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And yet no man more closely bent | |
To work than did my neighbour, | |
For every holiday he spent | |
Ensured a year's hard labour. |
He worked in Chatham, Devonport, | |
And Portland dockyards featly; | |
I've known him build a bomb-proof fort | |
Particularly neatly. |
He worked abroad like any horse | |
Or other dumb mammalia, | |
He once passed through a ten-years' course | |
Road-making in Australia. |
But still, though toiling like a brute, | |
His labour little gained him; | |
Its anything-but-toothsome fruit | |
But scantily sustained him. |
But though black-holed he often got, | |
And bread-and-watered weekly, | |
He never murmured at his lot | |
But always bore it meekly. |
Sometimes he'd say, poor gentle boy, | |
"Though lodged and boarded poorly, | |
E'en such poor boons as I enjoy | |
I'm undeserving surely. |
"Suppose I quit the world so bright | |
And turn a simple hermit — | |
A dim recluse — an anchorite — | |
I don't know what you term it. |
"Then, freed from every sinful mesh, | |
On herbs and frugal diet, | |
I'll mortify rebellious flesh | |
And live in rural quiet. |
"In stony cell without a door | |
I'll live and pay no usance — | |
(I've lived in stony cells before | |
And found the door a nuisance). |
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Page Created 29 July, 2011