GRANDFATHER WATTS used to tell us boys That a Fourth wa'n't a Fourth without any noise. He would say, with a thump of his hickory stick, That it made an American right down @3sick@1 To see his sons on the Nation's Day Sit round, in a sort of a listless way, With no oration and no train-band, No fire-work show and no root-beer stand; While his grandsons, before they were out of bibs, Were ashamedGreat Scott!to fire off squibs. And so, each Independence morn, Grandfather Watts took his powder-horn, And the flint-lock shot-gun @3his@1 father had When he fought under Schuyler, a country lad; And Grandfather Watts would start and tramp Ten miles to the woods at Beaver Camp; For Grandfather Watts used to sayand scowl That a decent chipmunk, or woodchuck, or owl Was better company, friendly or shy, Than folks who did n't keep Fourth of July. And so he would pull his hat down on his brow, And march for the woods, sou'-east by sou'. But onceah, long, long years ago, For Grandfather's gone where good men go, One hot, hot Fourth, by ways of our own (Such short-cuts as boys have always known), We hurried, and followed the dear old man Beyond where the wilderness began To the deep black woods at the foot of the Hump; And there was a clearingand a stump. A stump in the heart of a great wide wood, And there on that stump our Grandfather stood, Talking and shouting out there in the sun, And firing that funny old flint-lock gun Once in a minutehis head all bare Having his Fourth of July out there: The Fourth of July that he used to know, Back in eighteen-and-twenty or so! First, with his face to the heavens blue, He read the "Declaration" through; And then, with gestures to left and right, He made an oration erudite, Full of words six syllables long And then our Grandfather burst into song! And, scaring the squirrels in the-trees, Gave "Hail, Columbia!" to the breeze. @3And I tell you the old man never heard When we joined in the chorus, word for word! But he sang out strong to his bright blue sky; And if voices joined in his Fourth of July, He heard them as echoes from days gone by@1. And when he had done, we all slipped back, As still as we came, on our twisting track, While words more clear than the flint-lock shots Rang in our ears. And Grandfather Watts? He shouldered the gun his father bore, And marched off home, nor'-west by nor'. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PUSSY-WILLOW TIME by ROBERT FROST A MENDOCINO MEMORY by EDWIN MARKHAM GIRL IN A CAGE by CARL SANDBURG THE HAWK by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS CHARLESTON by PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE THE MEMORY OF THE HEART by DANIEL WEBSTER THE LAST RACE by ERNEST HAROLD BAYNES TO LADY CHARLOTTYE GORDON; DRESSED IN A TARTAN SCOTCH BONNET by JAMES BEATTIE |