The Poetry Corner

On A Crushed Hat

By Robert Fuller Murray

Brown was my friend, and faithful--but so fat! He came to see me in the twilight dim; I rose politely and invited him To take a seat--how heavily he sat! He sat upon the sofa, where my hat, My wanton Zephyr, rested on its rim; Its build, unlike my friend's, was rather slim, And when he rose, I saw it, crushed and flat. O Hat, that wast the apple of my eye, Thy brim is bent, six cracks are in thy crown, And I shall never wear thee any more; Upon a shelf thy loved remains shall lie, And with the years the dust will settle down On thee, the neatest hat I ever wore!