Page 43 - Poetry-Whimsy
P. 43
“Let them shout and fight
And kill bears all night;
We’ll leave them their spears and hatchets of stone
If they’ll give us this thing for our very own.
It will be like a joy above all we could scheme,
To sit up all night and sew such a seam.”
“Beware! take care!” cried an aged old crone,
“Take care what you promise,” said she.
“At first ‘twill be fun,
But, in the long run,
You’ll wish you had let the thing be.
Through this stick with an eye
I look and espy
That for ages and ages you’ll sit and you’ll sew,
And longer and longer the seams will grow,
And you’ll wish you never had asked to sew.
But naught that I say
Can keep back the day,
For the men will return to their hunting and rowing,
And leave to the women forever the sewing.”
Ah, what are the words of an aged crone?
For all have left her muttering alone;
And the needle and thread that they got with such pains
They forever must keep as dagger and chains.
— Lucretia P. Hale (Century Magazine, 1884)
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