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1752–1832

TOBACCO

Philip Morin Freneau

This Indian weed, that once did grow On fair Virginia's fertile plain, From whence it came — again may go, To please some happier swain:

Of all the plants that Nature yields This, least beloved, shall shun my fields. In evil hour I first essayed To chew this vile forbidden leaf,

When, half ashamed, and half afraid, I touched, and tasted — to my grief: Ah me! the more I was forbid, The more I wished to take a quid.

But when I smoaked, in thought profound, And raised the spiral circle high, My heart grew sick, my head turned round — And what can all this mean, ( said I ) —

Tobacco surely was designed To poison, and destroy mankind. Unhappy they, whom choice, or fate Inclines to prize this bitter weed;

Perpetual source of female hate; On which no beast — but man will feed; That sinks my heart, and turns my head, And sends me, reeling, home to bed!

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TOBACCO · Philip Morin Freneau · Poetry Cove