Oh, but life went gayly, gayly,
In the house of Idiedaily!
There were always throats to sing
Down the river-banks with spring,
Old-Fashioned Farm
Maritime Provinces
New Brunswick, Canada
(1907)
Artist Unknown
When the stir of heart's desire
Set the sapling's heart on fire.
Bobolincolns in the meadows
Leisure in the purple shadows,
Till the poppies without number
Bowed their heads in crimson slumber,
And the twilight came to cover
Every unreluctant lover.
Not a night but some brown maiden
Bettered all the dusk she strayed in,
While the roses in her hair
Oh, but life went gayly, gayly,
In the house of Idiedaily!
But this hostelry, The Barrow,
With its chambers, bare and narrow,
Mean, ill-windowed, damp, and wormy,
Where the silence makes you squirmy,
And the guest are never seen to,
Is a vile place, a mere lean-to,
Not a traveller speaks well of,
Even worse than I heard tell of,
Mouldy, ramshackle and foul.
What a dwelling for a soul.
Oh, but life went on gayly, gayly,
In the house of Idiedaily!
There the hearth was always warm,
From the slander of the storm.
There your comrade was your neighbor,
Living on to-morrow's labor.
And the board was always steaming,
Though Sir Ringlets might be dreaming.
Not a plate but scoffed at porridge,
Not a cup but floated borage.
The beautiful Borage is an old-fashioned herb whose
leaves are brewed to make a medicinal tea.
The beautiful Borage is an old-fashioned herb whose
leaves are brewed to make a medicinal tea.
There were always jugs of sherry
Waiting for the makers merry,
And the dark Burgundian wine
That would make a fool divine.
Oh, but life went on gayly, gayly,
In the house of Idiedaily!
"The House of Idiedaily"
From "Songs of Vagabondia"
(1908)
William Bliss Carman
(1861-1929)
Canadian-American poet
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