Analysis of Down On Wriggle Crick

James Whitcomb Riley 1849 (Greenfield) – 1916 (Indianapolis)



'Best time to kill a hog's when he's fat.' --Old Saw.

Mostly folks is law-abidin'
Down on Wriggle Crick--,
Seein' they's no Squire residin'
In our bailywick;
No grand juries, no suppeenies,
Ner no vested rights to pick
Out yer man, jerk up and jail ef
He's outragin' Wriggle Crick!

Wriggle Crick hain't got no lawin',
Ner no suits to beat;
Ner no court-house gee-and-hawin'
Like a County-seat;
Hain't no waitin' round fer verdick,
Ner non-gittin' witness-fees;
Ner no thiefs 'at gits 'new heain's,'
By some lawyer slick as grease!

Wriggle Cricks's leadin' spirit
Is old Johnts Culwell--,
Keeps post-office, and right near it
Owns what's called 'The Grand Hotel--'
(Warehouse now--) buys wheat and ships it;
Gits out ties, and trades in stock,
And knows all the high-toned drummers
'Twixt South Bend and Mishawauk'

Last year comes along a feller--
Sharper 'an a lance--
Stovepipe-hat and silk umbreller,
And a boughten all-wool pants--,
Tinkerin of clocks and watches:
Says a trial's all he wants--
And rents out the tavern-office
Next to Uncle Johnts.

Well--. He tacked up his k'dentials,
And got down to biz--.
Captured Johnts by cuttin' stenchils
Fer them old wheat-sacks o' his--.

Fixed his clock, in the post-office--
Painted fer him, clean and slick,
'Crost his safe, in gold-leaf letters,
'J. Culwells's Wriggle Crick.'

Any kindo' job you keered to
Resk him with, and bring,
He'd fix fer you-- jest appeared to
Turn his hand to anything--!
Rings, er earbobs, er umbrellers--
Glue a cheer er chany doll--,
W'y, of all the beatin' fellers,
He Jest beat 'em all!

Made his friends, but wouldn't stop there--,
One mistake he learnt,
That was, sleepin' in his shop there--.
And one Sund'y night it burnt!
Come in one o' jest a-sweepin'
All the whole town high and dry--
And that feller, when they waked him,
Suffocatin', mighty nigh!

Johnts he drug him from the buildin',
He'pless-- 'peared to be--,
And the women and the childern
Drenchin' him with sympathy!
But I noticed Johnts helt on him
With a' extry lovin' grip,
And the men-folks gethered round him
In most warmest pardership!

That's the whole mess, grease-and-dopin'!
Johnt's safe was saved--,
But the lock was found sprung open,
And the inside caved.
Was no trial-- ner no jury--
Ner no jedge ner court-house-click--.
Circumstances alters cases
Down on Wriggle Crick!


Scheme a bCbcacdc bebecxax xfgfgxhc ixixjxka alal kchc mnmnaxhx opopbxqd brbrqsqs btbtrcjC
Poetic Form
Metre 11110111111 101111 11101 11111 0101 111011 1110111 11111011 11101 10111111 11111 1111101 10101 1111111 111101 1111111 1110111 101110 1111 11100111 1110101 1111011 1110101 01101110 11101 11101010 10101 11011 0010111 111010 1010111 01101010 11101 111111 01111 101111 1111111 11100110 1011101 11101110 11101 1011111 11101 11111011 111110 10101 1010101 1001110110 11111 11111011 10111 1110111 0111111 1011101 1011101 01101111 1101 1111101 11111 0010001 111100 11101111 101101 0011111 01101 1011101 1111 10111110 00011 11101110 1111111 1001010 11101
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 2,263
Words 396
Sentences 22
Stanzas 11
Stanza Lengths 1, 8, 8, 8, 8, 4, 4, 8, 8, 8, 8
Lines Amount 73
Letters per line (avg) 24
Words per line (avg) 5
Letters per stanza (avg) 158
Words per stanza (avg) 36
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

2:03 min read
57

James Whitcomb Riley

James Whitcomb Riley was an American writer, poet, and best-selling author. During his lifetime he was known as the "Hoosier Poet" and "Children's Poet" for his dialect works and his children's poetry respectively. more…

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