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The Nine Little Goblins

By James Whitcomb Riley

Topics: classic

They all climbed up on a high board-fence -      Nine little Goblins, with green-glass eyes -     Nine little Goblins that had no sense,      And couldn't tell coppers from cold mince pies;         And they all climbed up on the fence, and sat -         And I asked them what they were staring at.     And the first one said, as he scratched his head      With a queer little arm that reached out of his ear     And rasped its claws in his hair so red -      "This is what this little arm is fer!"         And he scratched and stared, and the next one said,         "How on earth do you scratch your head?"     And he laughed like the screech of a rusty hinge -      Laughed and laughed till his face grew black;     And when he choked, with a final twinge      Of his stifling laughter, he thumped his back         With a fist that grew on the end of his tail         Till the breath came back to his lips so pale.     And the third little Goblin leered round at me -      And there were no lids on his eyes at all -     And he clucked one eye, and he says, says he,      "What is the style of your socks this fall?"         And he clapped his heels - and I sighed to see         That he had hands where his feet should be.     Then a bald-faced Goblin, gray and grim,      Bowed his head, and I saw him slip     His eyebrows off, as I looked at him,      And paste them over his upper lip;         And then he moaned in remorseful pain -         "Would - Ah, would I'd me brows again!"     And then the whole of the Goblin band      Rocked on the fence-top to and fro,     And clung, in a long row, hand in hand,      Singing the songs that they used to know -         Singing the songs that their grandsires sung         In the goo-goo days of the Goblin-tongue.     And ever they kept their green-glass eyes      Fixed on me with a stony stare -     Till my own grew glazed with a dread surmise,      And my hat whooped up on my lifted hair,         And I felt the heart in my breast snap to         As you've heard the lid of a snuff-box do.     And they sang "You're asleep! There is no board-fence,      And never a Goblin with green-glass eyes! -     'Tis only a vision the mind invents      After a supper of cold mince-pies, -     And you're doomed to dream this way," they said, -     "And you sha'n't wake up till you're clean plum dead!"

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"They all climbed up on a high board-fence -..."

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Author:James Whitcomb Riley

"They all climbed up on a high board-fence -..." by James Whitcomb Riley

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James Whitcomb Riley

About James Whitcomb Riley

James Whitcomb Riley (1849–1916) was an American poet known as the "Hoosier Poet." His dialect poems—including "Little Orphant Annie" and "When the Frost Is on the Punkin"—celebrate rural Indiana life and childhood nostalgia.

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