< Yawcob Strauss and Other Poems
HE DIDN'T UNDERSTAND.
- "Pray how is your daughter, friend Scroggins?
- I hear that she had quite a fall
- While dancing the German, last evening,
- At Montague's recherche ball.
- "I'm sorry Miss Laura was injured,
- And hope that no serious harm
- Will ensue from the fall; I assure you
- Wife and I were quite filled with alarm.
- "Those dresses with trails are a nuisance;
- They didn't wear them in our day.
- No wonder that accidents happen
- With such things to get in one's way.
- "When we used to dance, my dear Scroggina,
- There were no such 'pullbacks' as these
- To mar our delight in the ' mazy,'
- And trip us, perchance, on our knees.
- "You could balance, and go down the centre,
- And dance the Virginia reel,
- Without walking half up a panier,
- With the bustle caught on to your heel.
- "Mrs. Grundy called over this morning,
- And said, with a smirk and grimace,
- That Laura, last night at the party,
- Was horribly banged round the face.
- "So I thought I'd come over and ask you
- If she was improving to-day,
- And if we could be of assistance
- In any conceivable way.
- "Mrs. Grundy said—""Zounds, Mr. Jenkins,
- Just tell Mrs. G. to be hanged!
- There's nothing the matter with Laura;
- 'Twas her hair, not her face, that was 'banged.'
This work was published before January 1, 1924, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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