Love Songs of Childhood by Eugene Field - HTML preview

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PICNIC-TIME

 

      It's June ag'in, an' in my soul I feel the fillin' joy

      That's sure to come this time o' year to every little boy;

      For, every June, the Sunday-schools at picnics may be seen,

      Where "fields beyont the swellin' floods stand dressed in livin' green";

      Where little girls are skeered to death with spiders, bugs, and ants,

      An' little boys get grass-stains on their go-to meetin' pants.

      It's June ag'in, an' with it all what happiness is mine—

      There's goin' to be a picnic, an' I'm goin' to jine!

 

      One year I jined the Baptists, an' goodness! how it rained!

      (But grampa says that that's the way "baptizo" is explained.)

      And once I jined the 'Piscopils an' had a heap o' fun—

      But the boss of all the picnics was the Presbyteriun!

      They had so many puddin's, sallids, sandwidges, an' pies,

      That a feller wisht his stummick was as hungry as his eyes!

      Oh, yes, the eatin' Presbyteriuns give yer is so fine

      That when they have a picnic, you bet I'm goin' to jine!

 

      But at this time the Methodists have special claims on me,

      For they're goin' to give a picnic on the 21st, D. V.;

      Why should a liberal universalist like me object

      To share the joys of fellowship with every friendly sect?

      However het'rodox their articles of faith elsewise may be,

      Their doctrine of fried chick'n is a savin' grace to me!

      So on the 21st of June, the weather bein' fine,

      They're goin' to give a picnic, and I'm goin' to jine!