Lilly-Willy-Woken
Henry Clay Work 1832 (Middletown, Connecticut) – 1884 (Hartford, Connecticut)
Bill Vining had a sorrel colt
Some two years old or more,
But the colt was wild as a mountain deer
And a bridle never wore;
And so one day,
Bill took his colt
named Lilly Willy Woken,
And whipp'd him till his stubborn will
And the whiplash both were broken!
Broke! Broke! Broken!
Your stubborn will is broken
You will dance no more on the sable floor,
O Lilly Willy Woken!
Bill Vining was a banker --
He had a bag of gold;
And not only uncurrent coin,
But customers he sold,
But while he went to break his colt
Young Lilly Willy Woken
His teller told, with his bag of gold
And thus the bank was broken.
Broke! Broke! Broken
Your master's bank is broken!
He will count no more his profits o'er
O Lilly Willy Woken!
Bill Vining was a lover --
He had a lady fair,
Who had said thro' life she'd be his wife
And his bag of gold would share;
But when she saw that all was lost,
Save Lilly Willy Woken,
She felt inclined to change her mind
And so his heart was broken.
Broke! Broke! Broken
Your master's heart is broken!
He will sing no more at his lady's door,
O Lilly Willy Woken!
Bill Vining was a mourner --
He had a host of woes,
And grave despair was pictured where
A smile did once repose.
And so he took the halter off
From Lilly Willy Woken,
And from a shelf he hung himself
And thus his neck was broken!
Broke! Broke! Broken
Your master's neck is broken!
And you see what came of a stubborn frame
O Lilly Willy Woken!
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Submitted on May 13, 2011
Modified on March 05, 2023
- 1:26 min read
- 88 Views
Quick analysis:
Scheme | abxbxacxc CcbC dexeacec CcdC dfxfxcxc CcbC dgfgxcxc CcxC |
---|---|
Closest metre | Iambic tetrameter |
Characters | 1,380 |
Words | 282 |
Stanzas | 8 |
Stanza Lengths | 9, 4, 8, 4, 8, 4, 8, 4 |
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"Lilly-Willy-Woken" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 19 Apr. 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem/17271/lilly-willy-woken>.
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