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The Blue And The Gray.

By Eugene Field

Topics: classic

The Blue and the Gray collided one day     In the future great town of Missouri,     And if all that we hear is the truth, 'twould appear     That they tackled each other with fury.     While the weather waxed hot they hove and they sot,     Like the scow in the famous old story,     And what made the fight an enjoyable sight     Was the fact that they fought con amore.     They as participants fought in such wise as was taught,     As beseemed the old days of the dragons,     When you led to the dance and defended with lance     The damsel you pledged in your flagons.     In their dialect way the knights of the Gray     Gave a flout at the buckeye bandana,     And the buckeye came back with a gosh-awful whack,     And that's what's the matter with Hannah.     This resisted attack took the Grays all a-back,     And feeling less coltish and frisky,     They resolved to elate the cause of their state,     And also their persons, with whisky.     Having made ample use of the treacherous juice,     Which some folks say stings like an adder,     They went back again at the handkerchief men,     Who slowly got madder and madder.     You can bet it was h--l in the Southern Hotel     And elsewhere, too many to mention,     But the worst of it all was achieved in the hall     Where the President held his convention.     They ripped and they hewed and they, sweating imbrued,     Volleyed and bellowed and thundered;     There was nothing to do until these yawpers got through,     So the rest of us waited and wondered.     As the result of these frays it appears that the Grays,     Who once were as chipper as daisies,     Have changed their complexion to one of dejection,     And at present are bluer than blazes.

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"The Blue and the Gray collided one day..."

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Author:Eugene Field

"The Blue and the Gray collided one day..." by Eugene Field

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Eugene Field

About Eugene Field

Eugene Field (1850–1895) was an American writer and poet known as the "children's poet." His poems "Wynken, Blynken, and Nod" and "Little Boy Blue" are cherished classics of American children's literature.

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