There’s a heap of pent-up goodness
in the yellow
bantam corn,
And I sort o’ like to linger round a berry
patch
at morn;
Oh, the Lord has set our table with a stock o’
things to eat
An’ there’s just enough o’ bitter
in the blend
to cut the sweet,
But I run the whole list over, an’ it seems
somehow that I
Find the keenest sort o’ pleasure in a chunk
o’ raisin pie.
There are pies that start the water circulatin’
in
the mouth;
There are pies that wear the flavor of
the warm
an’ sunny south;
Some with oriental spices spur the drowsy
appetite
An’ just fill a fellow’s being
with a thrill o’
real delight;
But for downright solid goodness that
comes
drippin’ from
the sky
There is nothing quite the equal of a
chunk o’
raisin pie.
I’m admittin’ tastes are diff’runt,
I’m not settin’
up myself
As the judge an’ final critic of
the good things
on the shelf.
I’m sort o’ payin’ tribute
to a simple joy on
earth,
Sort o’ feebly testifyin’
to its lasting charm an’
worth,
An’ I’ll hold to this conclusion
till it comes my
time to die,
That there’s no dessert that’s
finer than a chunk
o’ raisin pie.