Uncle Sammy Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABCBB DEFEE GHIHH JKCKK LMJMM NOFOO PQRQQ STUTT MKJVV WXMXX YUFUU FZFZZ FA2FA2B2 C2LYLL ND2ND2D2 RE2FE2E2 F2G2PG2G2 NH2JH2H2 FI2J2I2I2 JKPKK MK2MK2K2 L2| Some men were born for great things | A |
| Some were born for small | B |
| Some it is not recorded | C |
| Why they were born at all | B |
| But Uncle Sammy was certain he had a legitimate call | B |
| - | |
| Some were born with a talent | D |
| Some with scrip and land | E |
| Some with a spoon of silver | F |
| And some with a different brand | E |
| But Uncle Sammy came holding an argument in each hand | E |
| - | |
| Arguments sprouted within him | G |
| And twinked in his little eye | H |
| He lay and calmly debated | I |
| When average babies cry | H |
| And seemed to be pondering gravely whether to live or to die | H |
| - | |
| But prejudiced on that question | J |
| He grew from day to day | K |
| And finally he concluded | C |
| 'Twas better for him to stay | K |
| And so into life's discussion he reasoned and reasoned his way | K |
| - | |
| Through childhood through youth into manhood | L |
| Argued and argued he | M |
| And he married a simple maiden | J |
| Though scarcely in love was she | M |
| But he reasoned the matter so clearly she hardly could help but agree | M |
| - | |
| And though at first she was blooming | N |
| And the new firm started strong | O |
| And though Uncle Sammy loved her | F |
| And tried to help her along | O |
| She faded away in silence and 'twas evident something was wrong | O |
| - | |
| Now Uncle Sammy was faithful | P |
| And various remedies tried | Q |
| He gave her the doctor's prescriptions | R |
| And plenty of logic beside | Q |
| But logic and medicine failed him and so one day she died | Q |
| - | |
| He laid her away in the church yard | S |
| So haggard and crushed and wan | T |
| And reared her a costly tombstone | U |
| With all of her virtues on | T |
| And ought to have added A victim to arguments pro and con | T |
| - | |
| For many a year Uncle Sammy | M |
| Fired away at his logical forte | K |
| Discussion was his occupation | J |
| And altercation his sport | V |
| He argued himself out of churches he argued himself into court | V |
| - | |
| But alas for his peace and quiet | W |
| One day when he went it blind | X |
| And followed his singular fancy | M |
| And slighted his logical mind | X |
| And married a ponderous widow that wasn't of the arguing kind | X |
| - | |
| Her sentiments all were settled | Y |
| Her habits were planted and grown | U |
| Her heart was a starved little creature | F |
| That followed a will of her own | U |
| And she raised a high hand with Sammy and proceeded to play it alone | U |
| - | |
| Then Sammy he charged down upon her | F |
| With all of his strength and his wit | Z |
| And many a dextrous encounter | F |
| And many a fair shoulder hit | Z |
| But vain were his blows and his blowing he never could budge her a bit | Z |
| - | |
| He laid down his premises round her | F |
| He scraped at her with his saws | A2 |
| He rained great facts upon her | F |
| And read her the marriage laws | A2 |
| But the harder he tried to convince her the harder and harder she was | B2 |
| - | |
| She brought home all her preachers | C2 |
| As many as ever she could | L |
| With sentiments terribly settled | Y |
| And appetites horribly good | L |
| Who sat with him long at his table and explained to him where he stood | L |
| - | |
| - | |
| - | |
| And Sammy was not long in learning | N |
| To follow the swing of her gown | D2 |
| And came to be faithful in watching | N |
| The phase of her smile and her frown | D2 |
| And she with the heel of assertion soon tramped all his arguments down | D2 |
| - | |
| And so with his life aspirations | R |
| Thus suddenly brought to a check | E2 |
| And so with the foot of his victor | F |
| Unceasingly pressing his neck | E2 |
| He wrote on his face I'm a victim and drifted a logical wreck | E2 |
| - | |
| And farmers whom he had argued | F2 |
| To corners tight and fast | G2 |
| Would wink at each other and chuckle | P |
| And grin at him as he passed | G2 |
| As to say My ambitious old fellow your whiffletree's straightened at last | G2 |
| - | |
| Old Uncle Sammy one morning | N |
| Lay down on his comfortless bed | H2 |
| And Death and he had a discussion | J |
| And Death came out ahead | H2 |
| And the fact that SHE failed to start him was only because he was dead | H2 |
| - | |
| The neighbors laid out their old neighbor | F |
| With homely but tenderest art | I2 |
| And some of the oldest ones faltered | J2 |
| And tearfully stood apart | I2 |
| For the crusty old man had often unguardedly shown them his heart | I2 |
| - | |
| But on his face an expression | J |
| Of quizzical study lay | K |
| As if he were sounding the angel | P |
| Who traveled with him that day | K |
| And laying the pipes down slyly for an argument on the way | K |
| - | |
| And one new fashioned old lady | M |
| Felt called upon to suggest | K2 |
| That the angel might take Uncle Sammy | M |
| And give him a good night's rest | K2 |
| And then introduce him to Solomon and tell him to do his best | K2 |
| - | |
| - | |
| nbsp | L2 |
William Mckendree Carleton
(1)
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