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Next Door

Whenever I’m moving my furniture in
      Or shifting my furniture out—
Which is nearly as often and risky as Sin
      In these days of shifting about—
There isn’t a stretcher, there isn’t a stick,
      Nor a mat that belongs to the floor;
There isn’t a pot (Oh, my heart groweth sick!)
      That escapes from the glare of Next Door!
      The Basilisk Glare of Next Door.
 
Be it morn, noon or night—be it early or late;
      Be it summer or winter or spring,
I cannot sneak down just to list at the gate
      For the song that the bottle-ohs sing;
With some bottles to sell that shall bring me a beer,
      And lead up to one or two more;
But I feel in my backbone the serpentine sneer,
      And the Basilisk Glare of Next Door.
      The political woman Next Door.
 
I really can’t say, being no one of note,
      Why she glares at my odds and my ends,
Excepting, maybe, I’m a frivolous Pote,
      With one or two frivolous friends,
Who help me to shift and to warm up the house
      For three or four glad hours or more,
In a suburb that hasn’t the soul of a louse;
      And they’ve got no respect for Next Door!
      They don’t give a damn for Next Door.
 
 
The Bulletin, 18 February 1915
Other works by Henry Lawson...



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