Grandfather's Clock |
Loura Bossinger |
(1876NΙ Henry Clay Work ͺμΑ½Γ’ΜΕ·) |
|
Oh My grandfather's clock; |
Was too large for the shelf, |
So it stood ninety years on the floor; |
It was taller by half |
Than the old man himself, |
Though it weighed not a pennyweight more. |
It was bought on the morn |
Of the day that he was born, |
And was always his treasure and pride; |
|
But it stopped short |
Never to go again, |
When the old man died. |
Ninety years without slumbering, |
Tick, tock, tick, tock, |
His life seconds numbering, |
Tick, tock, tick, tock, |
It stopped short |
Never to go again, |
When the old man died. |
|
In watching its pendulum |
Swing to and fro, |
Many hours had he spent while a boy; |
And in childhood and manhood |
The clock seemed to know, |
And to share both his grief and his joy. |
For it struck twenty-four |
When he entered at the door, |
With a blooming and beautiful bride; |
|
But it stopped short |
Never to go again, |
When the old man died. |
Ninety years without slumbering, |
Tick, tock, tick, tock, |
His life seconds numbering, |
Tick, tock, tick, tock, |
It stopped short |
Never to go again, |
When the old man died. |
Solo |
|
It rang an alarm |
In the dead of the night, |
An alarm that for years had been dumb; |
And we knew that his spirit |
Was pluming his flight, |
That his hour of departure had come. |
Still the clock kept the time, |
With a soft and muffled chime, |
As we silently stood by his side. |
But it stopped short |
Never to go again, |
When the old man died. |
Ninety years without slumbering, |
Tick, tock, tick, tock, |
His life seconds numbering, |
Tick, tock, tick, tock, |
It stopped short |
Never to go again, |
When the old man died. |