IF down his throat a man should choose In fun, to jump or slide, He'd scrape his shoes against his teeth, Nor dirt his own inside. But if his teeth were lost and gone, And not a stump to scrape upon, He'd see at once how very pat His tongue lay there by way of mat, And he would wipe his feet on @3that!@1 | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A PRAYER IN SPRING by ROBERT FROST SOMETHING BEYOND by MARY CLEMMER AMES HUDSON TO AGE by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR REJECTED ADDRESSES: THE BABY'S DEBUT, BY W. W. by JAMES SMITH (1775-1839) THE CHARACTER OF A HAPPY LIFE by HENRY WOTTON ODES: BOOK 1: ODE 10. TO THE MUSE by MARK AKENSIDE PRAIRIE MUSIC by NELLIE COOLEY ALDER |