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<h2> Reminiscence of My Railroad Days </h2>
<p>Dedicated to Engineer John Hoolihan, Pittsburg and Lake Erie Railroad,
Pittsburg, Pa.</p>
<p>WALL, John, I read your poetry,<br/>
And laughed till I nearly cried,<br/>
Seein' how you became an engineer,<br/>
And got on the right hand side.<br/>
It made me think of the days gone by,<br/>
When I wuz one of you fellers, too,<br/>
What used to run an old machine,<br/>
And go tootin' the country through.<br/>
But the engine that I had then, John,<br/>
Wuz far from a "Nancy Hanks;"<br/>
She wuz old and worn and loggy,<br/>
And jist chuck full of pranks;<br/>
And she wuz wonderfully got up, John,<br/>
Full of bolts and valves and knobs,<br/>
And the boiler wouldn't hold water;<br/>
Gosh, it wouldn't hold cobs.<br/>
<br/>
But I wuz younger then, John,<br/>
And I didn't care a cuss;<br/>
So I'd pull the throttle open<br/>
And jist let her wheeze and fuss.<br/>
The road that I wuz a-runnin' on<br/>
Wuz out in the woolly west;<br/>
Two streaks of rust and the right of way<br/>
Wuz puttin' it at its best.<br/>
So we sort of plugged along, John.<br/>
And didn't put on any frills,<br/>
Never thought of doin' anything<br/>
But doublin' all the hills.<br/>
I tell you those were rocky times,<br/>
And we hadn't no air brake;<br/>
And fifteen miles an hour, John,<br/>
Wuz durn good time to make.<br/>
<br/>
And thar wuz as good a lot of boys<br/>
As you could meet with anywhere;<br/>
Rough and ready open up,<br/>
And always on the square.<br/>
And I'd like to see them all again,<br/>
And grasp each honest hand;<br/>
But some of them, like me, have quit,<br/>
Some have gone to another land.<br/>
I have changed somewhat since then, John,<br/>
Jist a little more steady grown;<br/>
But I often think of my railroad days<br/>
As the happiest ones I've known.<br/>
And, John, I often watch the train.<br/>
As they go whizzing by;<br/>
As I think of Bill, or Jim, or Jack,<br/>
Thar's a tear comes in my eye.<br/>
<br/>
Perhaps you'd like to know, John,<br/>
Just why I quit the rail,<br/>
And as some feller one time sed,<br/>
"Thereby hangs a tale."<br/>
I wuz goin' along one night, John,<br/>
At a purty lively rate,<br/>
The old machine a-doin' her best,<br/>
And me forty minutes late,<br/>
When all at once there came a crash,<br/>
I felt the old track yield,<br/>
And fireman, machine and I<br/>
Went into a farmer's field.<br/>
There's little more to say, John,<br/>
They laid me up for repairs,<br/>
But my fireman, poor fellow,<br/>
Hadn't time to say his prayers.<br/>
<br/>
So now you have my story, John;<br/>
Still, you don't know how it feels<br/>
To know you've got to plug around<br/>
On a couple of flat wheels.<br/>
But it doesn't bother me, John,<br/>
Gosh, not fer a minnit;<br/>
I'm as happy as the day is long,<br/>
And feel jist strictly in it.<br/>
But sometimes I like to meet the boys,<br/>
And talk them days all over,<br/>
And I feel as gay and chipper<br/>
As a calf in a field of clover<br/>
But the happiest days I've known, John,<br/>
The ones that to me see best,<br/>
Wuz when I run an old machine<br/>
Way out in the woolly west.<br/></p>
<p>Glory—Gittin' killed and not gittin' paid fer it.<br/>
—Punkin Centre Philosophy.<br/></p>
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