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Poem by James Thomas Fields


Common Sense


She came among the gathering crowd,
A maiden fair, without pretence,
And when they asked her humble name,
She whispered mildly, “Common Sense.”

Her modest garb drew every eye,        
Her ample cloak, her shoes of leather;
And, when they sneered, she simply said,
“I dress according to the weather.”

They argued long, and reasoned loud,
In dubious Hindoo phrase mysterious,        
While she, poor child, could not divine
Why girls so young should be so serious.

They knew the length of Plato’s beard,
And how the scholars wrote in Saturn;
She studied authors not so deep,        
And took the Bible for her pattern.

And so she said, “Excuse me, friends,
I find all have their proper places,
And Common Sense should stay at home
With cheerful hearts and smiling faces.”



James Thomas Fields


James Thomas Fields's other poems:
  1. On a Book of Sea-Mosses
  2. A Valentine
  3. The Lucky Horseshoe
  4. The Owl Critic
  5. To a Friend


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Ogden Nash Common Sense ("Why did the Lord give us agility")

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