Silver Wedding
What! five and twenty years have flown
Since you were yoked together;
Your hopes, your pains, your pleasures one,
For calm or stormy weather:
A century quartered since this match;
Astonished, looking back, I
See he’s come thro’ without a “scratch,”
Tho’ she has got a black eye.
And here’s their boy as large as life,
But yesterday a baby;
And now he brings — well, not a wife,
But something nice, that may be.
Theirs, all by love, and half by blood —
See, Sue, for some good match meant,
She’s getting “Rich” by being sued,
And held by an “attachment.”
In every scene, we feel their worth,
Yet cannot quite compute it;
At work, at play, in grief or in mirth,
She has just the knack to suit it;
At human ills, whoever tugs,
She comes to soothe his aching —
More healing than the doctor’s drugs,
And not a bit bad taking.
If any think the fitiest rhyme
For wedlock must be padlock,
And that to hold them all this time,
That “lock” must be a bad lock,
Just mark this happy pair — by age
Still more and more united, –
Then step up to the parsonage,
And hand in hand get wrighted.
Well; we who wear the silver dyes,
With dignified decorum,
Must look with gentle, pitying eyes,
On those who never wore ‘em;
Poor things! ‘tis not their fault, you know,
That they’re too young to marry yet,
We boys were young once, weren’t we Joe?
And so were you, Aunt Harriet.
A clam-bake where no clams you get
Is like a pointless fable,
A clam-bake without Harriet,
Just fancy, if you’re able.
The village Florence Nightingale,
The Dorcas of two churches,
Her worthy mate could only fail
To find a better purchase.
A health to both! may joy go down
The happy path you’re treading,
And by and by we’ll call to crown
Your peaceful Golden Wedding.
- Title
- Silver Wedding
- Alternative Title
- What! Five and twenty years have flown
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Small Scrapbook 164
- Poems by George and Ruth Burleigh, edited by Mary Louise Brown, 1941, held by Little Compton Historical Society, Box A47.24
- Date
- 1868
- Subject
- Marriage
- Occasional Poem
- Humor
- note
- This comes from a larger article about the Silver Anniversary of the Sissons.
- "SILVER WEDDING. — Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Sisson, of Little Compton, celebrated their silver wedding on Monday evening. A large number of guests attended, who brought with them many valuable presents, as testimonials of their regard. The following address was read by G. E. Burleigh, Esq"
- Joseph Sisson married his second wife, Harriet Webb Sisson, in 1843, making 1868 the year of their Silver Anniversary.
- Find-a-Grave for Joseph Sisson
- Media
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Silver Wedding