The Junk Man passed the house today And gave his call in his plaintive way, "Ol' clothes! Ol' clothes! Ol' Clothes! Any ol' clothes to throw away? Any ol' dishes. . . any ol' plates, Any ol' pants or hats or skates, Any ol' kettles or pots or pans, Any ol' bottles or ol' tin cans, Any ol' dresses or any ol' shoes, Any ol' things that you can't use? Ol' clothes! Ol' clothes! Ol' clothes!" I searched the house and made a heap Of things that I didn't need to keep, Outworn garments and out-read books, Clothes that had hung on rusty hooks For the dust to grime and the moths to chew. And thus the old made way for the new. I thought, as the old man went his way, How grand it would be if every day The Junk Man passed the house to say, "Ol' woes Ol' woes Ol' woes Any ol' woes to throw away? Any ol' grudges. . . any ol' hates, Any ol' miseries or sad ol' dates, Any ol' sorrows or any ol' spites, Any ol' fusses or feuds or fights, Any ol' sighs or any ol' tears, Any ol' wishing for yesteryears, Any ol' quarrels or any ol' frets, Any ol' tears or ol' regrets? Ol' woes! Ol' woes! Ol' woes!" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNET: 14. ON THE RELIGIOUS MEMORY OF CATHERINE THOMASON by JOHN MILTON A SUMMER NIGHT by JOHANNA AMBROSIUS TO A FRIEND by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD VINCENT VAN GOGH by HARRIET R. BEAN PSALM 148 by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE THE GOLDEN ODES OF PRE-ISLAMIC ARABIA: IBN KOLTHUM by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT THE PASSIONATE SHEPHERD: AGLAIA. A PASTORAL by NICHOLAS BRETON |