Wants.Nor wants that little long." A gentle, genial bard was he Who put that in his song. It should have been some Anchorite, Who, bound his flesh to slaughter, Employed his days in counting beads, And lived on roots and water. He must have had, it seems to me, A most contented mind, And must have known but little of That genus called mankind. Who little wants, nor wants that long, Is only half a human. Man's wants are many, and, I own, 'Tis much the same with woman. For instance I___and I suppose That I am like the rest___ Have many wants that stir and fret In my unquiet breast. So many minus quantities Come into my equation, To name them all would go beyond The scope of numeration. I want my daily bread___and that Includes a bill of fare That, for its comprehensiveness, Would make our poet stare. Not all the fruits of every clime Were I content with having; Not all the cooks of all the world Could satisfy my craving. I want the strongest kinds of meats To fill my larder lean; I want the words of all the wise That are or aye have been. And then I want the power to choose From out the vast collation; I want to know, where now I toss In doubt and speculation. I want, beside, such solid fare, All tender household words, I want the lays of poets and The songs of summer birds. And then I want my friends___a few Who know me well, yet love me, And who, should swift disaster come, Would not be sure to shove me. I want both will and strength to rise Above all hurtful things; I want to be an angel___but I was not born with wings. I want___but it occurs to me That space and type are finite. Should I go on, the printer would "Respectfully decline" it. __Ellen P. Allerton. |
Walls of Corn and Other Poems
Ellen P. Allerton
(Hiawatha, KS: Harrington Printing Company. 1894)
Pages 44-45