Poetry
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Possum

by Paul Lawrence Dunbar

Ef dey's anyt'ing dat riles me
An' jes' gits me out o' hitch,
Twell I want to tek my coat off,
So's to r'ar an' t'ar an' pitch,
Hit's to see some ign'ant white man
'Mittin' dat owdacious sin-
W'en he want to cook a possum
Tekin' off de possum's skin.

W'y dey ain't no use in talkin',
Hit jes' hu'ts me to de hea't
Fu' to see dem foolish people
Th'owin' 'way de fines' pa't.
W'y, dat skin is jes' ez tendah
An' ez juicy ez kin be;
I knows all erbout de critter-
Hide an' haih-don't talk to me!

Possum skin is jes' lak shoat skin;
Jes' you swinge an' scrope it down,
Tek a good sha'p knife an' sco' it,
Den you bake it good an' brown.
Huh-uh! honey, you's so happy
Dat yo' thoughts is 'mos a sin
When you's settin' dah a-chawin'
On dat possums's cracklin' skin.

White folks t'ink dey know 'bout eatin',
An' I reckon dat dey do
Sometimes git a little idee
Of a middlin' dish er two;

But dey ain't a t'ing dey knows of
Dat I reckon cain't be beat
W'en we set down at de table
To a unskun possum's meat!

Interested in learning more about Paul Laurence Dunbar? Visit his home. And read his words.

 

Possum lovers look upon Paul Laurence Dunbar with reverence. Carl G. Hartman's - perhaps's America's pre-eminent scholar of the opossum dubbed Dunbar the "Homer of the opossum world." [Possums, University of Texas Press, 1952]

 

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