Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Uncle Mart's Poem - The Old Snow-Man by James Whitcomb Riley
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Uncle Mart's Poem - The Old Snow-Man

    By James Whitcomb Riley



    Ho! the old Snow-Man
        That Noey Bixler made!
    He looked as fierce and sassy
        As a soldier on parade! -
    'Cause Noey, when he made him,
        While we all wuz gone, you see,
    He made him, jist a-purpose,
        Jist as fierce as he could be! -
            But when we all got ust to him,
                Nobody wuz afraid
            Of the old Snow-Man
                That Noey Bixler made!

    'Cause Noey told us 'bout him
        And what he made him fer: -
    He'd come to feed, that morning
        He found we wuzn't here;
    And so the notion struck him,
        When we all come taggin' home
    'Tud s'prise us ef a' old Snow-Man
        'Ud meet us when we come!
    So, when he'd fed the stock, and milked,
        And ben back home, and chopped
    His wood, and et his breakfast, he
        Jist grabbed his mitts and hopped
    Right in on that-air old Snow-Man
        That he laid out he'd make
    Er bust a trace a-tryin' - jist
        Fer old-acquaintance sake! -
            But work like that wuz lots more fun.
                He said, than when he played!
            Ho! the old Snow-Man
                That Noey Bixler made!

    He started with a big snow-ball,
        And rolled it all around;
    And as he rolled, more snow 'ud stick
        And pull up off the ground. -
    He rolled and rolled all round the yard -
        'Cause we could see the track,
    All wher' the snow come off, you know,
        And left it wet and black.
    He got the Snow-Man's legs-part rolled -
        In front the kitchen-door, -
    And then he hat to turn in then
        And roll and roll some more! -
    He rolled the yard all round agin,
        And round the house, at that -
    Clean round the house and back to wher'
        The blame legs-half wuz at!
            He said he missed his dinner, too -
                Jist clean fergot and stayed
            There workin'. Ho! the old Snow-Man
                That Noey Bixler made!

    And Noey said he hat to hump
        To git the top-half on
    The legs-half! - When he did, he said,
        His wind wuz purt'-nigh gone. -
    He said, I jucks! he jist drapped down
        There on the old porch-floor
    And panted like a dog! - And then
        He up! and rolled some more! -
    The last batch - that wuz fer his head, -
        And - time he'd got it right
    And clumb and fixed it on, he said -
        He hat to quit fer night! -
    And then, he said, he'd kep' right on
        Ef they'd ben any moon
    To work by! So he crawled in bed -
        And could a-slep' tel noon,
            He wuz so plum wore out! he said, -
                But it wuz washin'-day,
            And hat to cut a cord o' wood
                'Fore he could git away!

    But, last, he got to work agin, -
        With spade, and gouge, and hoe,
    And trowel, too - (All tools 'ud do
        What Noey said, you know!)
    He cut his eyebrows out like cliffs -
        And his cheekbones and chin
    Stuck furder out - and his old nose
        Stuck out as fur-agin!
    He made his eyes o' walnuts,
        And his whiskers out o' this
    Here buggy-cushion stuffin' - moss,
        The teacher says it is.
    And then he made a' old wood'-gun,
        Set keerless-like, you know,
    Acrost one shoulder - kindo' like
        Big Foot, er Adam Poe -
            Er, mayby, Simon Girty,
                The dinged old Renegade!
            Wooh! the old Snow-Man
                That Noey Bixler made!

    And there he stood, all fierce and grim,
        A stern, heroic form:
    What was the winter blast to him,
        And what the driving storm? -
    What wonder that the children pressed
        Their faces at the pane
    And scratched away the frost, in pride
        To look on him again? -
            What wonder that, with yearning bold,
                Their all of love and care
            Went warmest through the keenest cold
                To that Snow-Man out there!

    But the old Snow-Man -
        What a dubious delight
    He grew at last when Spring came on
        And days waxed warm and bright. -
    Alone he stood - all kith and kin
        Of snow and ice were gone; -
    Alone, with constant teardrops in
        His eyes and glittering on
    His thin, pathetic beard of black -
        Grief in a hopeless cause! -
    Hope - hope is for the man that dies -
        What for the man that thaws!
            O Hero of a hero's make! -
                Let marble melt and fade,
            But never you - you old Snow-Man
                That Noey Bixler made!



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