Love Songs of Childhood by Eugene Field - HTML preview

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LITTLE MISS BRAG

 

      Little Miss Brag has much to say

      To the rich little lady from over the way

      And the rich little lady puts out a lip

      As she looks at her own white, dainty slip,

      And wishes that she could wear a gown

      As pretty as gingham of faded brown!

      For little Miss Brag she lays much stress

      On the privileges of a gingham dress—

          "Aha,

           Oho!"

 

      The rich little lady from over the way

      Has beautiful dolls in vast array;

      Yet she envies the raggedy home-made doll

      She hears our little Miss Brag extol.

      For the raggedy doll can fear no hurt

      From wet, or heat, or tumble, or dirt!

      Her nose is inked, and her mouth is, too,

      And one eye's black and the other's blue—

          "Aha,

           Oho!"

 

      The rich little lady goes out to ride

      With footmen standing up outside,

      Yet wishes that, sometimes, after dark

      Her father would trundle her in the park;—

      That, sometimes, her mother would sing the things

      Little Miss Brag says her mother sings

      When through the attic window streams

      The moonlight full of golden dreams—

          "Aha,

           Oho!"

 

      Yes, little Miss Brag has much to say

      To the rich little lady from over the way;

      And yet who knows but from her heart

      Often the bitter sighs upstart—

      Uprise to lose their burn and sting

      In the grace of the tongue that loves to sing

      Praise of the treasures all its own!

      So I've come to love that treble tone—

          "Aha,

           Oho!"