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The Epicure Print E-mail
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I've sipped a rich man's sparkling wine,
  His silverware I've handled.
I've placed these battered legs of mine
  'Neath tables gayly candled.
I dine on rare and costly fare
  Whene'er good fortune lets me,
But there's no meal that can compare
  With those the missus gets me.

I've had your steaks three inches thick
  With all your Sam Ward trimming,
I've had the breast of milk-fed chick
  In luscious gravy swimming.
To dine in swell cafe or club
  But irritates and frets me;
Give me the plain and wholesome grub —
  The grub the missus gets me.

Two kiddies smiling at the board,
  The cook right at the table,
The four of us, a hungry horde,
  To beat that none is able.
A big meat pie, with flaky crust!
  'Tis then that joy besets me;
Oh, I could eat until I "bust,"
  Those meals the missus gets me.

- Edgar A. Guest

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"The poem is a little myth of man's capacity of making life meaningful. And in the end, the poem is not a thing we see - it is, rather, a light by which we may see - and what we see is life."

~ Robert Penn Warren   
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