Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Convalescent Gripster by Eugene Field
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The Convalescent Gripster

    By Eugene Field



    The gods let slip that fiendish grip
    Upon me last week Sunday--
    No fiercer storm than racked my form
    E'er swept the Bay of Fundy;
    But now, good-by
    To drugs, say I--
    Good-by to gnawing sorrow;
    I am up to-day,
    And, whoop, hooray!
    I'm going out to-morrow!

    What aches and pain in bones and brain
    I had I need not mention;
    It seemed to me such pangs must be
    Old Satan's own invention;
    Albeit I
    Was sure I'd die,
    The doctor reassured me--
    And, true enough,
    With his vile stuff,
    He ultimately cured me.

    As there I lay in bed all day,
    How fair outside looked to me!
    A smile so mild old Nature smiled
    It seemed to warm clean through me.
    In chastened mood
    The scene I viewed,
    Inventing, sadly solus,
    Fantastic rhymes
    Between the times
    I had to take a bolus.

    Of quinine slugs and other drugs
    I guess I took a million--
    Such drugs as serve to set each nerve
    To dancing a cotillon;
    The doctors say
    The only way
    To rout the grip instanter
    Is to pour in
    All kinds of sin--
    Similibus curantur!

    'Twas hard; and yet I'll soon forget
    Those ills and cures distressing;
    One's future lies 'neath gorgeous skies
    When one is convalescing!
    So now, good-by
    To drugs say I--
    Good-by, thou phantom Sorrow!
    I am up to-day,
    And, whoop, hooray!
    I'm going out to-morrow.



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