Fair Millinger, The

Fred W Loring 1848 ( Boston, Massachusetts) – 1871 (Wickenburg, Arizona)




By the Watertown Horse-Car Conductor
  
  
It was a millinger most gay,
As sat within her shop;
A student came along that way,
And in he straight did pop.
Clean shaven he, of massive mould,
He thought his looks was killing her;
So lots of stuff to him she sold:
"Thanks!" says the millinger.
  
He loafed around and seemed to try
On all things to converse;
The millinger did mind her eye,
But also mound his purse.
He tried, then, with his flattering tongue,
With nonsense to be filling her;
But she was sharp, though she was young:
"Thanks," said the millinger.
  
He asked her to the theatre,
They got into my car;
Our steeds were tired, could hardly stir,
He thought the way not far.
A pretty pict-i-ure she made,
No doctors had been pilling her;
Fairly the fair one's fare he paid:
"Thanks!" said the millinger.
  
When we arrived in Bowdoin Square,
A female to them ran;
Then says that millinger so fair:
"O, thank you, Mary Ann!
She's going with us, she is," says she,
"She only is fulfilling her
Duty in looking after me:
Thanks!" said that millinger.
  
"Why," says that student chap to her,
"I've but two seats to hand."
"Too bad," replied that millinger,
"Then you will have to stand."
"I won't stand this," says he, "I own
The joke which you've been drilling her;
Here, take the seats and go alone!"
"Thanks!" says the millinger.
  
That ere much-taken-down young man
Stepped back into my car.
We got fresh horses, off they ran;
He thought the distance far.
And now she is my better half,
And oft, when coo-and-billing her,
I think about that chap and laugh:
"Thanks!" says my millinger.
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:29 min read
6

Quick analysis:

Scheme a bcbcdadA efefgagA ahahiaiA jkjklala amamnanA khkhoaoa
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,551
Words 307
Stanzas 7
Stanza Lengths 1, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8

Fred W Loring

Frederick Wadsworth Loring was an American journalist, novelist and poet. Loring was born on December 12, 1848, in Boston, Massachusetts, to David and Mary Hall Stodder Loring. He was a fifth great grandson to immigrant Thomas Loring. more…

All Fred W Loring poems | Fred W Loring Books

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