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Poem by Ella Wheeler Wilcox The Ogre Slam-the-Door There is a certain castle that is beautiful and fair, And plants, and birds, and pretty things, fill every room and hall, But alas! for the unhappy folks who make their dwelling there, A dreadful ogre haunts the house and tries to kill them all. Some day I fear will find them dead and stretched out in their gore The victims of this ogre grim, this wicked Slam-the-door! He's a very tiny ogre just about as tall as you! He never carries hidden arms, or plays with guns and knives. And yet he almost splits the heads of people thro' and thro.' And I think him very dangerous to comfort and to lives. And he often shakes the castle from the ceiling to the floor. This awful, awful ogre known as little Slam-the-door. He gets up bright and early, and he's, oh, so wide awake! And wo! to all the sleepy heads and invalids who doze, They dream the sky is caving in, or that a vast earthquake Has suddenly convulsed the world and ended their repose, As to and fro, and up and down, still noisier than before, They hear the hurrying, flurrying feet of ogre Slam-the-door. Though the Princess of the Castle has a headache, and is ill, Though the Prince is in his study and wants quiet for an hour, This wicked little ogre won't be quiet--or keep still I almost think he sometimes knows he has them in his power. Alas, alas for all the folks, their sorrows I deplore-- The folks shut in that castle with the ogre Slam-the-door. Ella Wheeler Wilcox Ella Wheeler Wilcox's other poems:
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