Vice, vice, vice, vice!— and‘ tis n't all clear and free,
Where any one can take a look and see,
And then decide, immediate, on the spot,
Whether he'll buy his soul-farm there or not;
It's scattered round about so‘ mongst the good,
Folks can n't entirely shun it when they would.
Much better to escape it we'd be able,
If‘ twas obliged to carry‘ round a label
( It always does, some time before it ages,
But not enough so in its early stages ).
My mind was led around about this way,
By a well-dressed young man I met to-day,
Who strove to twist some money out of me,
But had, instead, a first-class lecture free.
My cousin, Abdiel Stebbins, large and good,
Inclined to do even better than he should,
And with a heart that gets him into scrapes
Of a most strange variety of shapes,
But who, before they've run a fatal course,
Always gets out of them by sheer main force,
Wrote me two letters, several years ago,
Which I have kept, with no intent to show,
But simply to read over now and then
As part of my text-book entitled “Men.”
I think I'll get my cousin's wail by letter,
And paste it here where I can find it better.