A Modern Grandmother

Helen Leah Reed 1864 (Saint John, ) – 1926 (Cambridge, Massachusetts,)



I want to see a grandmother like those there used to be,
In a cosy little farm-house, where I could go to tea;
A grandmother with spectacles and a funny, frilly cap,
Who would make me sugar cookies, and take me on her lap,
And tell me lots of stories of the days when she was small,
When everything was perfect - not like today at all.
  
My grandmother is "grandma," and she lives in a hotel,
And when they ask "What is his age?" she smiles and will not tell.
Says she doesn't care to realize that she is growing old;
Then whispers - "But you're far too big a boy for me to hold."
Her dresses shine and rustle, and her hair is wavy brown,
And she has an automobile, that she steers, herself, down town.
  
My grandmother is pretty. "Do I love her?" Rather - yes;
Our Norah calls her stylish, and on the whole I guess
She's better than the other kind, for once, when I was ill,
She helped my mother nurse me, and read to me until
I fell asleep; and stayed with me, and wasn't tired, and then
She played nine holes of golf with me when I got out again.
Yet, because I've never seen one, just once I want to see
A real old-fashioned grandmother, like those there used to be.
  
  
  
  
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:12 min read
15

Quick analysis:

Scheme AABBCC DDEEFF GGHHIIAA
Closest metre Iambic heptameter
Characters 1,164
Words 239
Stanzas 3
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 8

Helen Leah Reed

Helen Leah Reed American teacher and author; a graduate of Radcliffe College: known for her children's books, which were entertaining as well as educative, the best remembered being her Brenda series of novels. more…

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