Mother Goose for Grownups/The Gastronomic Guile of Simple Simon

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118569The Gastronomic Guile of Simple SimonGuy Wetmore Carryl

            Conveniently near to where
                  Young Simple Simon dwelt
            There was to be a county fair,
                  And Simple Simon felt
            That to the fair he ought to go
            In all his Sunday clothes, and so,
            Determined to behold the show,
                  He put them on and went.
(One-half his clothes was borrowed and the other half was lent.)

            He heard afar the cheerful sound
                  Of horns that people blew,
            Saw wooden horses swing around
                  A circle, two and two,
            Beheld balloons arise, and if
            He scented with a gentle sniff
            The smells of pies, what is the dif-
                  Ference to me or you?
(You cannot say my verse is false, because I know it’s true.)

            As Simple Simon nearer came
                  To these attractive smells,
            Avoiding every little game
                  Men played with walnut shells,
            He felt a sudden longing rise.
            The sparkle in his eager eyes
            Betrayed the fact he yearned for pies:
                  The eye the secret tells.
(’Tis known the pie of country fairs all other pies excels.)

            So when he saw upon the road,
                  Some fifty feet away,
            A pieman, Simple Simon strode
                  Toward him, shouting: “Hey!
            What kinds?” as lordly as a prince.
            The pieman said: “I’ve pumpkin, quince,
            Blueberry, lemon, peach, and mince”
                  And, showing his array,
He added: “Won’t you try one, sir? They’re very nice to-day.”

            Now Simon’s taste was most profuse,
                  And so, by way of start,
            He ate two cakes, a Charlotte Russe,
                  Six buns, the better part
            Of one big gingerbread, a pair
            Of lady-fingers, an eclair,
            And ten assorted pies, and there,
                  His hand upon his heart,
He paused to choose between an apple dumpling and a tart.

            Observing that upon his tray
                  His goods were growing few,
            The pieman cried: “I beg to say
                  That patrons such as you
            One does not meet in many a moon.
            Pray, won’t you try this macaroon?”
            But soon suspicious, changed his tune,
                  Continuing: “What is due
I beg respectfully to add’s a dollar twenty-two.”

            Then Simple Simon put a curb
                  Upon his appetite,
            And turning with an air superb
                  He suddenly took flight,
            While o’er his shoulder this absurd
            And really most offensive word
            The trusting pieman shortly heard
                  To soothe his bitter plight:
“Perhaps I should have said before your wares are out of sight.”

            The moral is a simple one,
                  But still of consequence.
            We’ve seen that Simon’s sense of fun
                  Was almost too intense:
            Though blaming his deceitful guise,
            We with the pieman sympathize,
            The latter we must criticize
                  Because he was so dense:
He might have known from what he ate that Simon had no cents.