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1850–1895

ALWAYS RIGHT.

Eugene Field

DON'T take on so, Hiram, But do what you're told to do; It's fair to suppose that yer mother knows A heap sight more than you.

I'll allow that sometimes her way Do n't seem the wisest, quite; But the easiest way, When she's had her say,

Is to reckon yer mother is right. Courted her ten long winters, Saw her to singin’ - school; When she went down one spell to town,

I cried like a durned ol’ fool; Got mad at the boys for callin’ When I sparked her Sunday night: But she said she knew

A thing or two,— An’ I reckoned yer mother wuz right. I courted till I wuz aging, And she wuz past her prime,—

I'd have died, I guess, if she had n't said yes When I popped f'r the hundredth time. Said she'd never have took me If I had n't stuck so tight;

Opined that we Could never agree,— And I reckon yer mother wuz right!

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ALWAYS RIGHT. · Eugene Field · Poetry Cove