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The Miss, Misters and Mrs., And the St. Joseph's Sisters, Made me a Bluejay, Jay- jaying and soaring Over Wrens and Robins Below in five rows. Teeth marks on Ticondarogas, Initialed pink rubbers, Toothpicks and fingers Solved all those problems. Sister Lucille showed me Sarnia On the Neilson Wall Map, With the Malted Milk, Crispy Crunch bars staring back. They looked too delicious, Her reprimand was contritious, I'm doing time during recess, Ninety minutes til lunch. We stood in a crooked line, Like a snake, to get marked, With her drawer a crack open We'd get a peek at her strap. Black or red, correctively cold; Sister Roseangela, we'd heard, Cried, Quid Pro Quo. We had football baseball, And hockey dreams, Volleyball, basketball, And funeral teams; Field Days, Holy Days, Days needed at home; Teachers were coaches, With little time to complain; But the kids back then Just weren't the same. There were skirmishes, fouls, Strike outs and time outs; We were sliced white bread, No rye or whole grain. We'd march double file Once a week to the Church, To genuflect and reflect At the Stations and Cross. To confess, get redress, Display penitent remorse, Though keeping a secret From the Confessional box, A comfort and curse. Their objective succeeded, The lessons went deep; Using the three Rs, The ABCs, 1, 2, 3s, To impart and ingraine How to carry one's cross. I remember by name The Miss,  Misters and Mrs. And St. Joseph's Sisters Who gave their all, Each day, and always. They've gone or retired, But recalled in tranquility For the life-lessons I admire.
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Apr 29, 2017
Apr 29, 2017 at 12:06 PM UTC
The Miss, Misters and Mrs.
The Miss, Misters and Mrs., And the St. Joseph's Sisters, Made me a Bluejay, Jay- jaying and soaring Over Wrens and Robins Below in five rows. Teeth marks on Ticondarogas, Initialed pink rubbers, Toothpicks and fingers Solved all those problems. Sister Lucille showed me Sarnia On the Neilson Wall Map, With the Malted Milk, Crispy Crunch bars staring back. They looked too delicious, Her reprimand was contritious, I'm doing time during recess, Ninety minutes til lunch. We stood in a crooked line, Like a snake, to get marked, With her drawer a crack open We'd get a peek at her strap. Black or red, correctively cold; Sister Roseangela, we'd heard, Cried, Quid Pro Quo. We had football baseball, And hockey dreams, Volleyball, basketball, And funeral teams; Field Days, Holy Days, Days needed at home; Teachers were coaches, With little time to complain; But the kids back then Just weren't the same. There were skirmishes, fouls, Strike outs and time outs; We were sliced white bread, No rye or whole grain. We'd march double file Once a week to the Church, To genuflect and reflect At the Stations and Cross. To confess, get redress, Display penitent remorse, Though keeping a secret From the Confessional box, A comfort and curse. Their objective succeeded, The lessons went deep; Using the three Rs, The ABCs, 1, 2, 3s, To impart and ingraine How to carry one's cross. I remember by name The Miss,  Misters and Mrs. And St. Joseph's Sisters Who gave their all, Each day, and always. They've gone or retired, But recalled in tranquility For the life-lessons I admire.
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