'Twas a Month after Xmas

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 	'Twas the month after Christmas, and all through the house 
	        Nothing would fit me, not even a blouse. 

        The cookies I'd nibbled, the eggnog I'd tasted
		at the holiday parties had gone to my waist.

 	When I got on the scales there arose such a number!
	 	When I walked to the store (less a walk than a lumber).

 	I'd remember the marvelous meals I'd prepared;
 		The gravies and sauces and beef nicely rared,

 	The wine and the rum balls, the bread and the cheese,
 		And the way I'd never said, "No thank you, please."

 	As I dressed myself in my husband's old shirt,
 		And prepared once again to do battle with dirt 

	I said to myself, as I only can, 
		"You can't spend a winter disguised as a man!"

 	Get rid of the fruit cake, every cracker and chip.
	 	Every last bit of food that I like must be banished,
 	
	Till all the additional ounces have vanished.
	 	I won't have a cookie--not even a lick,
 	
	I'll want only to chew on a long celery stick.
 		I won't have hot biscuits, or corn bread, or pie,
 
	I'll munch on a carrot and quietly cry.
	 	I'm hungry, I'm lonesome, and life is a bore---
 	
	But isn't that what January is for?
 		Unable to giggle, no longer a riot,

 	Happy New Year to all and to all a good diet!


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© Mary Lula Welch