home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1995-10-01 | 166.7 KB | 5,492 lines |
- Project Gutenberg's Etext of A Heap O' Livin' by Edgar A. Guest
-
- Please take a look at the important information in this header.
- We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
- electronic path open for the next readers. Do not remove this.
-
-
- **Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
-
- **Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
-
- *These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations*
-
- Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
- further information is included below. We need your donations.
-
-
- A Heap O' Livin', by Edgar A. Guest
-
- September, 1995 [Etext #328]
-
-
- Project Gutenberg's Etext of A Heap O' Livin' by Edgar A. Guest
- *****This file should be named olivm10.txt or olivm10.zip******
-
- Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, olivm11.txt.
- VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, olivm10a.txt.
-
-
- We are now trying to release all our books one month in advance
- of the official release dates, for time for better editing.
-
- Please note: neither this list nor its contents are final till
- midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
- The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
- Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
- preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
- and editing by those who wish to do so. To be sure you have an
- up to date first edition [xxxxx10x.xxx] please check file sizes
- in the first week of the next month. Since our ftp program has
- a bug in it that scrambles the date [tried to fix and failed] a
- look at the file size will have to do, but we will try to see a
- new copy has at least one byte more or less.
-
-
- Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
-
- We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
- fifty hours is one conservative estimate for how long it we take
- to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
- searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
- projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
- per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $4
- million dollars per hour this year as we release some eight text
- files per month: thus upping our productivity from $2 million.
-
- The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
- Files by the December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000=Trillion]
- This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
- which is 10% of the expected number of computer users by the end
- of the year 2001.
-
- We need your donations more than ever!
-
- All donations should be made to "Project Gutenberg/IBC", and are
- tax deductible to the extent allowable by law ("IBC" is Illinois
- Benedictine College). (Subscriptions to our paper newsletter go
- to IBC, too)
-
- For these and other matters, please mail to:
-
- Project Gutenberg
- P. O. Box 2782
- Champaign, IL 61825
-
- When all other email fails try our Michael S. Hart, Executive
- Director:
- hart@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu (internet) hart@uiucvmd (bitnet)
-
- We would prefer to send you this information by email
- (Internet, Bitnet, Compuserve, ATTMAIL or MCImail).
-
- ******
- If you have an FTP program (or emulator), please
- FTP directly to the Project Gutenberg archives:
- [Mac users, do NOT point and click. . .type]
-
- ftp mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu
- login: anonymous
- password: your@login
- cd etext/etext90 through /etext95
- or cd etext/articles [get suggest gut for more information]
- dir [to see files]
- get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
- GET INDEX?00.GUT
- for a list of books
- and
- GET NEW GUT for general information
- and
- MGET GUT* for newsletters.
-
- **Information prepared by the Project Gutenberg legal advisor**
- (Three Pages)
-
-
- ***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
- Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
- They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
- your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
- someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
- fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
- disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
- you can distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
-
- *BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
- By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
- etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
- this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
- a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
- sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
- you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
- medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
-
- ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
- This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-
- tm etexts, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor
- Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association at
- Illinois Benedictine College (the "Project"). Among other
- things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
- on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
- distribute it in the United States without permission and
- without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
- below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
- under the Project's "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
-
- To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
- efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
- works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
- medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
- things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
- corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
- intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
- disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
- codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
-
- LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
- But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
- [1] the Project (and any other party you may receive this
- etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims all
- liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
- legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
- UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
- INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
- OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
- POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
-
- If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
- receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
- you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
- time to the person you received it from. If you received it
- on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
- such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
- copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
- choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
- receive it electronically.
-
- THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
- WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
- TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
- LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
- PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-
- Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
- the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
- above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
- may have other legal rights.
-
- INDEMNITY
- You will indemnify and hold the Project, its directors,
- officers, members and agents harmless from all liability, cost
- and expense, including legal fees, that arise directly or
- indirectly from any of the following that you do or cause:
- [1] distribution of this etext, [2] alteration, modification,
- or addition to the etext, or [3] any Defect.
-
- DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
- You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
- disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
- "Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
- or:
-
- [1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
- requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
- etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
- if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
- binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
- including any form resulting from conversion by word pro-
- cessing or hypertext software, but only so long as
- *EITHER*:
-
- [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
- does *not* contain characters other than those
- intended by the author of the work, although tilde
- (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
- be used to convey punctuation intended by the
- author, and additional characters may be used to
- indicate hypertext links; OR
-
- [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
- no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
- form by the program that displays the etext (as is
- the case, for instance, with most word processors);
- OR
-
- [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
- no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
- etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
- or other equivalent proprietary form).
-
- [2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
- "Small Print!" statement.
-
- [3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Project of 20% of the
- net profits you derive calculated using the method you
- already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
- don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
- payable to "Project Gutenberg Association / Illinois
- Benedictine College" within the 60 days following each
- date you prepare (or were legally required to prepare)
- your annual (or equivalent periodic) tax return.
-
- WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
- The Project gratefully accepts contributions in money, time,
- scanning machines, OCR software, public domain etexts, royalty
- free copyright licenses, and every other sort of contribution
- you can think of. Money should be paid to "Project Gutenberg
- Association / Illinois Benedictine College".
-
- *END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
-
-
-
-
-
- A Heap o' Livin'
- by
- Edgar A. Guest
-
-
-
-
- To
- Marjorie and Buddy
- this little book of verse
- is affectionately
- dedicated
- by their Daddy
-
-
-
-
-
- WHEN YOU KNOW A FELLOW
-
- When you get to know a fellow, know his joys
- and know his cares,
- When you've come to understand him and the
- burdens that he bears,
- When you've learned the fight he's making and
- the troubles in his way,
- Then you find that he is different than you
- thought him yesterday.
- You find his faults are trivial and there's not so
- much to blame
- In the brother that you jeered at when you only
- knew his name.
-
- You are quick to see the blemish in the distant
- neighbor's style,
- You can point to all his errors and may sneer
- at him the while,
- And your prejudices fatten and your hates
- more violent grow
- As you talk about the failures of the man you
- do not know,
- But when drawn a little closer, and your hands
- and shoulders touch,
- You find the traits you hated really don't
- amount to much.
-
- When you get to know a fellow, know his every
- mood and whim,
- You begin to find the texture of the splendid
- side of him;
- You begin to understand him, and you cease to
- scoff and sneer,
- For with understanding always prejudices dis-
- appear.
- You begin to find his virtues and his faults you
- cease to tell,
- For you seldom hate a fellow when you know
- him very well.
-
- When next you start in sneering and your
- phrases turn to blame,
- Know more of him you censure than his business
- and his name;
- For it's likely that acquaintance would your
- prejudice dispel
- And you'd really come to like him if you
- knew him very well.
- When you get to know a fellow and you under-
- stand his ways,
- Then his faults won't really matter, for you'll
- find a lot to praise.
-
- THE ROUGH LITTLE RASCAL
-
- A smudge on his nose and a smear on his cheek
- And knees that might not have been washed in
- a week;
- A bump on his forehead, a scar on his lip,
- A relic of many a tumble and trip:
- A rough little, tough little rascal, but sweet,
- Is he that each evening I'm eager to meet.
-
- A brow that is beady with jewels of sweat;
- A face that's as black as a visage can get;
- A suit that at noon was a garment of white,
- Now one that his mother declares is a fright:
- A fun-loving, sun-loving rascal, and fine,
- Is he that comes placing his black fist in mine.
-
- A crop of brown hair that is tousled and tossed;
- A waist from which two of the buttons are lost;
- A smile that shines out through the dirt and the
- grime,
- And eyes that are flashing delight all the time:
- All these are the joys that I'm eager to meet
- And look for the moment I get to my street.
-
- IT ISN'T COSTLY
-
- Does the grouch get richer quicker than the
- friendly sort of man?
- Can the grumbler labor better than the cheerful
- fellow can?
- Is the mean and churlish neighbor any cleverer
- than the one
- Who shouts a glad "good morning," and then
- smiling passes on?
-
- Just stop and think about it. Have you ever
- known or seen
- A mean man who succeeded, just because he
- was so mean?
- When you find a grouch with honors and with
- money in his pouch,
- You can bet he didn't win them just because
- he was a grouch.
-
- Oh, you'll not be any poorer if you smile along
- your way,
- And your lot will not be harder for the kindly
- things you say.
- Don't imagine you are wasting time for others
- that you spend:
- You can rise to wealth and glory and still pause
- to be a friend.
-
- MY CREED
-
- To live as gently as I can;
- To be, no matter where, a man;
- To take what comes of good or ill
- And cling to faith and honor still;
- To do my best, and let that stand
- The record of my brain and hand;
- And then, should failure come to me,
- Still work and hope for victory.
-
- To have no secret place wherein
- I stop unseen to shame or sin;
- To be the same when I'm alone
- As when my every deed is known;
- To live undaunted, unafraid
- Of any step that I have made;
- To be without pretense or sham
- Exactly what men think I am.
-
- To leave some simple mark behind
- To keep my having lived in mind;
- If enmity to aught I show,
- To be an honest, generous foe,
- To play my little part, nor whine
- That greater honors are not mine.
- This, I believe, is all I need
- For my philosophy and creed.
-
- A WISH
-
- I'd like to be a boy again, a care-free prince of
- joy again,
- I'd like to tread the hills and dales the way I
- used to do;
- I'd like the tattered shirt again, the knickers
- thick with dirt again,
- The ugly, dusty feet again that long ago I
- knew.
- I'd like to play first base again, and Sliver's
- curves to face again,
- I'd like to climb, the way I did, a friendly
- apple tree;
- For, knowing what I do to-day, could I but
- wander back and play,
- I'd get full measure of the joy that boy-
- hood gave to me.
-
- I'd like to be a lad again, a youngster, wild and
- glad again,
- I'd like to sleep and eat again the way I used
- to do;
- I'd like to race and run again, and drain from
- life its fun again,
- And start another round of joy the moment
- one was through.
- But care and strife have come to me, and often
- days are glum to me,
- And sleep is not the thing it was and food
- is not the same;
- And I have sighed, and known that I must
- journey on again to sigh,
- And I have stood at envy's point and heard
- the voice of shame.
-
- I've learned that joys are fleeting things; that
- parting pain each meeting brings;
- That gain and loss are partners here, and so
- are smiles and tears;
- That only boys from day to day can drain and
- fill the cup of play;
- That age must mourn for what is lost
- throughout the coming years.
- But boys cannot appreciate their priceless joy
- until too late
- And those who own the charms I had will
- soon be changed to men;
- And then, they too will sit, as I, and backward
- turn to look and sigh
- And share my longing, vain, to be a care-
- free boy again.
-
- WHAT A BABY COSTS
-
- "How much do babies cost?" said he
- The other night upon my knee;
- And then I said: "They cost a lot;
- A lot of watching by a cot,
- A lot of sleepless hours and care,
- A lot of heart-ache and despair,
- A lot of fear and trying dread,
- And sometimes many tears are shed
- In payment for our babies small,
- But every one is worth it all.
-
- "For babies people have to pay
- A heavy price from day to day --
- There is no way to get one cheap.
- Why, sometimes when they're fast asleep
- You have to get up in the night
- And go and see that they're all right.
- But what they cost in constant care
- And worry, does not half compare
- With what they bring of joy and bliss --
- You'd pay much more for just a kiss.
-
- "Who buys a baby has to pay
- A portion of the bill each day;
- He has to give his time and thought
- Unto the little one he's bought.
- He has to stand a lot of pain
- Inside his heart and not complain;
- And pay with lonely days and sad
- For all the happy hours he's had.
- His smile is worth it all, you bet."
-
- MOTHER
-
- Never a sigh for the cares that she bore for me
- Never a thought of the joys that flew by;
- Her one regret that she couldn't do more for me,
- Thoughtless and selfish, her Master was I.
-
- Oh, the long nights that she came at my call to
- me!
- Oh, the soft touch of her hands on my brow!
- Oh, the long years that she gave up her all to
- me!
- Oh, how I yearn for her gentleness now!
-
- Slave to her baby! Yes, that was the way of
- her,
- Counting her greatest of services small;
- Words cannot tell what this old heart would
- say of her,
- Mother -- the sweetest and fairest of all.
-
- SELFISH
-
- I am selfish in my wishin' every sort o' joy for
- you;
- I am selfish when I tell you that I'm wishin'
- skies o' blue
- Bending o'er you every minute, and a pocketful
- of gold,
- An' as much of love an' gladness as a human
- heart can hold.
- Coz I know beyond all question that if such a
- thing could be
- As you cornerin' life's riches you would share
- 'em all with me.
-
- I am selfish in my wishin' every sorrow from
- your way,
- With no trouble thoughts to fret you at the
- closin' o' the day;
- An' it's selfishness that bids me wish you com-
- forts by the score,
- An' all the joys you long for, an' on top o'
- them, some more;
- Coz I know, old tried an' faithful, that if such
- a thing could be
- As you cornerin' life's riches you would share
- 'em all with me.
-
- RICH
-
- Who has a troop of romping youth
- About his parlor floor,
- Who nightly hears a round of cheers,
- When he is at the door,
- Who is attacked on every side
- By eager little hands
- That reach to tug his grizzled mug,
- The wealth of earth commands.
-
- Who knows the joys of girls and boys,
- His lads and lassies, too,
- Who's pounced upon and bounced upon
- When his day's work is through,
- Whose trousers know the gentle tug
- Of some glad little tot,
- The baby of his crew of love,
- Is wealthier than a lot.
-
- Oh, be he poor and sore distressed
- And weary with the fight,
- If with a whoop his healthy troop
- Run, welcoming at night,
- And kisses greet him at the end
- Of all his toiling grim,
- With what is best in life he's blest
- And rich men envy him.
-
- MA AND THE AUTO
-
- Before we take an auto ride Pa says to Ma:
- "My dear,
- Now just remember I don't need suggestions
- from the rear.
- If you will just sit still back there and hold
- in check your fright,
- I'll take you where you want to go and get
- you back all right.
- Remember that my hearing's good and also I'm
- not blind,
- And I can drive this car without suggestions
- from behind."
-
- Ma promises that she'll keep still, then off we
- gayly start,
- But soon she notices ahead a peddler and his
- cart.
- "You'd better toot your horn," says she, "to let
- him know we're near;
- He might turn out!" and Pa replies: "Just
- shriek at him, my dear."
- And then he adds: "Some day, some guy will
- make a lot of dough
- By putting horns on tonneau seats for women-
- folks to blow!"
-
- A little farther on Ma cries: "He signaled for
- a turn!"
- And Pa says: "Did he?" in a tone that's hot
- enough to burn.
- "Oh, there's a boy on roller skates!" cries Ma.
- "Now do go slow.
- I'm sure he doesn't see our car." And Pa says:
- "I dunno,
- I think I don't need glasses yet, but really it
- may be
- That I am blind and cannot see what's right
- in front of me."
-
- If Pa should speed the car a bit some rigs to
- hurry past
- Ma whispers: "Do be careful now. You're
- driving much too fast."
- And all the time she's pointing out the dangers
- of the street
- And keeps him posted on the roads where
- trolley cars he'll meet.
- Last night when we got safely home, Pa sighed
- and said: "My dear,
- I'm sure we've all enjoyed the drive you gave
- us from the rear!"
-
- ON GOING HOME FOR CHRISTMAS
-
- He little knew the sorrow that was in his vacant
- chair;
- He never guessed they'd miss him, or he'd
- surely have been there;
- He couldn't see his mother or the lump that
- filled her throat,
- Or the tears that started falling as she read
- his hasty note;
- And he couldn't see his father, sitting sor-
- rowful and dumb,
- Or he never would have written that he thought
- he couldn't come.
-
- He little knew the gladness that his presence
- would have made,
- And the joy it would have given, or he never
- would have stayed.
- He didn't know how hungry had the little
- mother grown
- Once again to see her baby and to claim him
- for her own.
- He didn't guess the meaning of his visit
- Christmas Day
- Or he never would have written that he
- couldn't get away.
-
- He couldn't see the fading of the cheeks that
- once were pink,
- And the silver in the tresses; and he didn't
- stop to think
- How the years are passing swiftly, and next
- Christmas it might be
- There would be no home to visit and no mother
- dear to see.
- He didn't think about it -- I'll not say he didn't
- care.
- He was heedless and forgetful or he'd surely
- have been there.
-
- Are you going home for Christmas? Have you
- written you'll be there?
- Going home to kiss the mother and to show
- her that you care?
- Going home to greet the father in a way to
- make him glad?
- If you're not I hope there'll never come a time
- you'll wish you had.
- Just sit down and write a letter -- it will make
- their heart strings hum
- With a tune of perfect gladness -- if you'll tell
- them that you'll come.
-
- AT SUGAR CAMP
-
- At Sugar Camp the cook is kind
- And laughs the laugh we knew as boys;
- And there we slip away and find
- Awaiting us the old-time joys.
- The catbird calls the selfsame way
- She used to in the long ago,
- And there's a chorus all the day
- Of songsters it is good to know.
-
- The killdeer in the distance cries;
- The thrasher, in her garb of brown,
- From tree to tree in gladness flies.
- Forgotten is the world's renown,
- Forgotten are the years we've known;
- At Sugar Camp there are no men;
- We've ceased to strive for things to own;
- We're in the woods as boys again.
-
- Our pride is in the strength of trees,
- Our pomp the pomp of living things;
- Our ears are tuned to melodies
- That every feathered songster sings.
- At Sugar Camp our noonday meal
- Is eaten in the open air,
- Where through the leaves the sunbeams steal
- And simple is our bill of fare.
-
- At Sugar Camp in peace we dwell
- And none is boastful of himself;
- None plots to gain with shot and shell
- His neighbor's bit of land or pelf.
- The roar of cannon isn't heard,
- There stilled is money's tempting voice;
- Someone detects a new-come bird
- And at her presence all rejoice.
-
- At Sugar Camp the cook is kind;
- His steak is broiling o'er the coals
- And in its sputtering we find
- Sweet harmony for tired souls.
- There, sheltered by the friendly trees,
- As boys we sit to eat our meal,
- And, brothers to the birds and bees,
- We hold communion with the real.
-
- HOME
-
- It takes a heap o' livin' in a house t' make it
- home,
- A heap o' sun an' shadder, an' ye sometimes
- have t' roam
- Afore ye really 'preciate the things ye lef'
- behind,
- An' hunger fer 'em somehow, with 'em allus
- on yer mind.
- It don't make any differunce how rich ye get
- t' be,
- How much yer chairs an' tables cost, how great
- yer luxury;
- It ain't home t' ye, though it be the palace of a
- king,
- Until somehow yer soul is sort o' wrapped round
- everything.
-
- Home ain't a place that gold can buy or get up
- in a minute;
- Afore it's home there's got t' be a heap o' livin'
- in it;
- Within the walls there's got t' be some babies
- born, and then
- Right there ye've got t' bring 'em up t' women
- good, an' men;
- And gradjerly as time goes on, ye find ye
- wouldn't part
- With anything they ever used -- they've grown
- into yer heart:
- The old high chairs, the playthings, too, the
- little shoes they wore
- Ye hoard; an' if ye could ye'd keep the thumb-
- marks on the door.
-
- Ye've got t' weep t' make it home, ye've got t'
- sit an' sigh
- An' watch beside a loved one's bed, an' know
- that Death is nigh;
- An' in the stillness o' the night t' see Death's
- angel come,
- An' close the eyes o' her that smiled, an' leave
- her sweet voice dumb.
- Fer these are scenes that grip the heart, an'
- when yer tears are dried,
- Ye find the home is dearer than it was, an'
- sanctified;
- An' tuggin' at ye always are the pleasant
- memories
- O' her that was an' is no more -- ye can't escape
- from these.
-
- Ye've got t' sing an' dance fer years, ye've got
- t' romp an' play,
- An' learn t' love the things ye have by usin' 'em
- each day;
- Even the roses 'round the porch must blossom
- year by year
- Afore they 'come a part o' ye, suggestin'
- someone dear
- Who used t' love 'em long ago, an' trained 'em
- jes t' run
- The way they do, so's they would get the early
- mornin' sun;
- Ye've got t' love each brick an' stone from
- cellar up t' dome:
- It takes a heap o' livin' in a house t' make it
- home.
-
- THE PATH THAT LEADS TO HOME
-
- The little path that leads to home,
- That is the road for me,
- I know no finer path to roam,
- With finer sights to see.
- With thoroughfares the world is lined
- That lead to wonders new,
- But he who treads them leaves behind
- The tender things and true.
-
- Oh, north and south and east and west
- The crowded roadways go,
- And sweating brow and weary breast
- Are all they seem to know.
- And mad for pleasure some are bent,
- And some are seeking fame,
- And some are sick with discontent,
- And some are bruised and lame.
-
- Across the world the gleaming steel
- Holds out its lure for men,
- But no one finds his comfort real
- Till he comes home again.
- And charted lanes now line the sea
- For weary hearts to roam,
- But, Oh, the finest path to me
- Is that which leads to home.
-
- 'Tis there I come to laughing eyes
- And find a welcome true;
- 'Tis there all care behind me lies
- And joy is ever new.
- And, Oh, when every day is done
- Upon that little street,
- A pair of rosy youngsters run
- To me with flying feet.
-
- The world with myriad paths is lined
- But one alone for me,
- One little road where I may find
- The charms I want to see.
- Though thoroughfares majestic call
- The multitude to roam,
- I would not leave, to know them all,
- The path that leads to home.
-
- A FRIEND'S GREETING
-
- I'd like to be the sort of friend that you have
- been to me;
- I'd like to be the help that you've been always
- glad to be;
- I'd like to mean as much to you each minute
- of the day
- As you have meant, old friend of mine, to me
- along the way.
-
- I'd like to do the big things and the splendid
- things for you,
- To brush the gray from out your skies and
- leave them only blue;
- I'd like to say the kindly things that I so oft
- have heard,
- And feel that I could rouse your soul the way
- that mine you've stirred.
-
- I'd like to give you back the joy that you have
- given me,
- Yet that were wishing you a need I hope will
- never be;
- I'd like to make you feel as rich as I, who
- travel on
- Undaunted in the darkest hours with you to
- lean upon.
-
- I'm wishing at this Christmas time that I could
- but repay
- A portion of the gladness that you've strewn
- along my way;
- And could I have one wish this year, this only
- would it be:
- I'd like to be the sort of friend that you have
- been to me.
-
- A SONG
-
- None knows the day that friends must part
- None knows how near is sorrow;
- If there be laughter in your heart,
- Don't hold it for to-morrow.
- Smile all the smiles you can to-day;
- Grief waits for all along the way.
-
- To-day is ours for joy and mirth;
- We may be sad to-morrow;
- Then let us sing for all we've worth,
- Nor give a thought to sorrow.
- None knows what lies along the way;
- Let's smile what smiles we can to-day.
-
- OLD FRIENDS
-
- I do not say new friends are not considerate and
- true,
- Or that their smiles ain't genuine, but still I'm
- tellin' you
- That when a feller's heart is crushed and achin'
- with the pain,
- And teardrops come a-splashin' down his cheeks
- like summer rain,
- Becoz his grief an' loneliness are more than
- he can bear,
- Somehow it's only old friends, then, that really
- seem to care.
- The friends who've stuck through thick an'
- thin, who've known you, good an' bad,
- Your faults an' virtues, an' have seen the strug-
- gles you have had,
- When they come to you gentle-like an' take
- your hand an' say:
- "Cheer up! we're with you still," it counts, for
- that's the old friends' way.
-
- The new friends may be fond of you for what
- you are to-day;
- They've only known you rich, perhaps, an' only
- seen you gay;
- You can't tell what's attracted them; your
- station may appeal;
- Perhaps they smile on you because you're doin'
- something real;
- But old friends who have seen you fail, an' also
- seen you win,
- Who've loved you either up or down, stuck
- to you, thick or thin,
- Who knew you as a budding youth, an' watched
- you start to climb,
- Through weal an' woe, still friends of yours
- an' constant all the time,
- When trouble comes an' things go wrong, I
- don't care what you say,
- They are the friends you'll turn to, for you
- want the old friends' way.
-
- The new friends may be richer, an' more stylish,
- too, but when
- Your heart is achin' an' you think your sun
- won't shine again,
- It's not the riches of new friends you want, it's
- not their style,
- It's not the airs of grandeur then, it's just the
- old friend's smile,
- The old hand that has helped before, stretched
- out once more to you,
- The old words ringin' in your ears, so sweet an',
- Oh, so true!
- The tenderness of folks who know just what
- your sorrow means,
- These are the things on which, somehow, your
- spirit always leans.
- When grief is poundin' at your breast -- the
- new friends disappear
- An' to the old ones tried an' true, you turn for
- aid an' cheer.
-
- FOLKS
-
- We was speakin' of folks, jes' common folks,
- An' we come to this conclusion,
- That wherever they be, on land or sea,
- They warm to a home allusion;
- That under the skin an' under the hide
- There's a spark that starts a-glowin'
- Whenever they look at a scene or book
- That something of home is showin'.
-
- They may differ in creeds an' politics,
- They may argue an' even quarrel,
- But their throats grip tight, if they catch a
- sight
- Of their favorite elm or laurel.
- An' the winding lane that they used to tread
- With never a care to fret 'em,
- Or the pasture gate where they used to wait,
- Right under the skin will get 'em.
-
- Now folks is folks on their different ways,
- With their different griefs an' pleasures,
- But the home they knew, when their years were
- few,
- Is the dearest of all their treasures.
- An' the richest man to the poorest waif
- Right under the skin is brother
- When they stand an' sigh, with a tear-dimmed
- eye,
- At a thought of the dear old mother.
-
- It makes no difference where it may be,
- Nor the fortunes that years may alter,
- Be they simple or wise, the old home ties
- Make all of 'em often falter.
- Time may robe 'em in sackcloth coarse
- Or garb 'em in gorgeous splendor,
- But whatever their lot, they keep one spot
- Down deep that is sweet an' tender.
-
- We was speakin' of folks, jes' common folks,
- An' we come to this conclusion,
- That one an' all, be they great or small,
- Will warm to a home allusion;
- That under the skin an' the beaten hide
- They're kin in a real affection
- For the joys they knew, when their years were
- few,
- An' the home of their recollection.
-
- LITTLE MASTER MISCHIEVOUS
-
- Little Master Mischievous, that's the name for
- you;
- There's no better title that describes the things
- you do:
- Into something all the while where you
- shouldn't be,
- Prying into matters that are not for you to see;
- Little Master Mischievous, order's overthrown
- If your mother leaves you for a minute all
- alone.
-
- Little Master Mischievous, opening every door,
- Spilling books and papers round about the parlor
- floor,
- Scratching all the tables and marring all the
- chairs,
- Climbing where you shouldn't climb and tum-
- bling down the stairs.
- How'd you get the ink well? We can never
- guess.
- Now the rug is ruined; so's your little dress.
-
- Little Master Mischievous, in the cookie jar,
- Who has ever told you where the cookies are?
- Now your sticky fingers smear the curtains
- white;
- You have finger-printed everything in sight.
- There's no use in scolding; when you smile that
- way
- You can rob of terror every word we say.
-
- Little Master Mischievous, that's the name for
- you;
- There's no better title that describes the things
- you do:
- Prying into corners, peering into nooks,
- Tugging table covers, tearing costly books.
- Little Master Mischievous, have your roguish
- way;
- Time, I know, will stop you, soon enough some
- day.
-
- OPPORTUNITY
-
- So long as men shall be on earth
- There will be tasks for them to do,
- Some way for them to show their worth;
- Each day shall bring its problems new.
-
- And men shall dream of mightier deeds
- Than ever have been done before:
- There always shall be human needs
- For men to work and struggle for.
-
- THE SORROW TUGS
-
- There's a lot of joy in the smiling world,
- there's plenty of morning sun,
- And laughter and songs and dances, too, when-
- ever the day's work's done;
- Full many an hour is a shining one, when
- viewed by itself apart,
- But the golden threads in the warp of life are
- the sorrow tugs at your heart.
-
- Oh, the fun is froth and it blows away, and
- many a joy's forgot,
- And the pleasures come and the pleasures go,
- and memory holds them not;
- But treasured ever you keep the pain that causes
- your tears to start,
- For the sweetest hours are the ones that bring
- the sorrow tugs at your heart.
-
- The lump in your throat and the little sigh when
- your baby trudged away
- The very first time to the big red school -- how
- long will their memory stay?
- The fever days and the long black nights you
- watched as she troubled, slept,
- And the joy you felt when she smiled once
- more -- how long will that all be kept?
-
- The glad hours live in a feeble way, but the sad
- ones never die.
- His first long trousers caused a pang and you
- saw them with a sigh.
- And the big still house when the boy and girl,
- unto youth and beauty grown,
- To college went; will you e'er forget that first
- grim hour alone?
-
- It seems as you look back over things, that all
- that you treasure dear
- Is somehow blent in a wondrous way with a
- heart pang and a tear.
- Though many a day is a joyous one when
- viewed by itself apart,
- The golden threads in the warp of life are the
- sorrow tugs at your heart.
-
- ONLY A DAD
-
- Only a dad with a tired face,
- Coming home from the daily race,
- Bringing little of gold or fame
- To show how well he has played the game;
- But glad in his heart that his own rejoice
- To see him come and to hear his voice.
-
- Only a dad with a brood of four,
- One of ten million men or more
- Plodding along in the daily strife,
- Bearing the whips and the scorns of life,
- With never a whimper of pain or hate,
- For the sake of those who at home await.
-
- Only a dad, neither rich nor proud,
- Merely one of the surging crowd,
- Toiling, striving from day to day,
- Facing whatever may come his way,
- Silent whenever the harsh condemn,
- And bearing it all for the love of them.
-
- Only a dad but he gives his all,
- To smooth the way for his children small,
- Doing with courage stern and grim
- The deeds that his father did for him.
- This is the line that for him I pen:
- Only a dad, but the best of men.
-
- HARD KNOCKS
-
- I'm not the man to say that failure's sweet,
- Nor tell a chap to laugh when things go
- wrong;
- I know it hurts to have to take defeat
- An' no one likes to lose before a throng;
- It isn't very pleasant not to win
- When you have done the very best you could;
- But if you're down, get up an' buckle in --
- A lickin' often does a fellow good.
-
- I've seen some chaps who never knew their
- power
- Until somebody knocked 'em to the floor;
- I've known men who discovered in an hour
- A courage they had never shown before.
- I've seen 'em rise from failure to the top
- By doin' things they hadn't understood
- Before the day disaster made 'em drop --
- A lickin' often does a fellow good.
-
- Success is not the teacher, wise an' true,
- That gruff old failure is, remember that;
- She's much too apt to make a fool of you,
- Which isn't true of blows that knock you flat.
- Hard knocks are painful things an' hard to bear,
- An' most of us would dodge 'em if we could;
- There's something mighty broadening in care --
- A lickin' often does a fellow good.
-
- SPRING IN THE TRENCHES
-
- It's coming time for planting in that little patch
- of ground,
- Where the lad and I made merry as he followed
- me around;
- Now the sun is getting higher, and the skies
- above are blue,
- And I'm hungry for the garden, and I wish the
- war was through.
- But it's tramp, tramp, tramp,
- And it's never look behind,
- And when you see a stranger's kids
- Pretend that you are blind.
-
- The spring is coming back again, the birds
- begin to mate;
- The skies are full of kindness, but the world is
- full of hate.
- And it's I that should be bending now in peace
- above the soil
- With laughing eyes and little hands about to
- bless the toil.
- But it's fight, fight, fight,
- And it's charge at double-quick;
- A soldier thinking thoughts of home
- Is one more soldier sick.
-
- Last year I brought the bulbs to bloom and
- saw the roses bud;
- This year I'm ankle deep in mire, and most of
- it is blood.
- Last year the mother in the door was glad as
- she could be;
- To-day her heart is full of pain, and mine is
- hurting me.
- But it's shoot, shoot, shoot,
- And when the bullets hiss,
- Don't let the tears fill up your eyes,
- For weeping soldiers miss.
-
- Oh, who will tend the roses now and who will
- sow the seeds?
- And who will do the heavy work the little
- garden needs?
- And who will tell the lad of mine the things
- he wants to know,
- And take his hand and lead him round the
- paths we used to go?
- For it's charge, charge, charge,
- And it's face the foe once more;
- Forget the things you love the most
- And keep your mind on gore.
-
- FATHER
-
- Used to wonder just why father
- Never had much time for play,
- Used to wonder why he'd rather
- Work each minute of the day.
- Used to wonder why he never
- Loafed along the road an' shirked;
- Can't recall a time whenever
- Father played while others worked.
-
- Father didn't dress in fashion,
- Sort of hated clothing new;
- Style with him was not a passion;
- He had other things in view.
- Boys are blind to much that's going
- On about 'em day by day,
- And I had no way of knowing
- What became of father's pay.
-
- All I knew was when I needed
- Shoes I got 'em on the spot;
- Everything for which I pleaded,
- Somehow, father always got.
- Wondered, season after season,
- Why he never took a rest,
- And that _I_ might be the reason
- Then I never even guessed.
-
- Father set a store on knowledge;
- If he'd lived to have his way
- He'd have sent me off to college
- And the bills been glad to pay.
- That, I know, was his ambition:
- Now and then he used to say
- He'd have done his earthly mission
- On my graduation day.
-
- Saw his cheeks were getting paler,
- Didn't understand just why;
- Saw his body growing frailer,
- Then at last I saw him die.
- Rest had come! His tasks were ended,
- Calm was written on his brow;
- Father's life was big and splendid,
- And I understand it now.
-
- LADDIES
-
- Show me the boy who never threw
- A stone at someone's cat,
- Or never hurled a snowball swift
- At someone's high silk hat --
- Who never ran away from school,
- To seek the swimming hole,
- Or slyly from a neighbor's yard
- Green apples never stole --
-
- Show me the boy who never broke
- A pane of window glass,
- Who never disobeyed the sign
- That says: "Keep off the grass."
- Who never did a thousand things,
- That grieve us sore to tell,
- And I'll show you a little boy
- Who must be far from well.
-
- THE LIVING BEAUTIES
-
- I never knew, until they went,
- How much their laughter really meant
- I never knew how much the place
- Depended on each little face;
- How barren home could be and drear
- Without its living beauties here.
-
- I never knew that chairs and books
- Could wear such sad and solemn looks!
- That rooms and halls could be at night
- So still and drained of all delight.
- This home is now but brick and board
- Where bits of furniture are stored.
-
- I used to think I loved each shelf
- And room for what it was itself.
- And once I thought each picture fine
- Because I proudly called it mine.
- But now I know they mean no more
- Than art works hanging in a store.
-
- Until they went away to roam
- I never knew what made it home.
- But I have learned that all is base,
- However wonderful the place
- And decked with costly treasures, rare,
- Unless the living joys are there.
-
- AT BREAKFAST TIME
-
- My Pa he eats his breakfast in a funny sort of
- way:
- We hardly ever see him at the first meal of the
- day.
- Ma puts his food before him and he settles in
- his place
- An' then he props the paper up and we can't
- see his face;
- We hear him blow his coffee and we hear him
- chew his toast,
- But it's for the morning paper that he seems
- to care the most.
-
- Ma says that little children mighty grateful
- ought to be
- To the folks that fixed the evening as the proper
- time for tea.
- She says if meals were only served to people
- once a day,
- An' that was in the morning just before Pa goes
- away,
- We'd never know how father looked when he
- was in his place,
- Coz he'd always have the morning paper stuck
- before his face.
-
- He drinks his coffee steamin' hot, an' passes
- Ma his cup
- To have it filled a second time, an' never once
- looks up.
- He never has a word to say, but just sits there
- an' reads,
- An' when she sees his hand stuck out Ma gives
- him what he needs.
- She guesses what it is he wants, coz it's no use
- to ask:
- Pa's got to read his paper an' sometimes that's
- quite a task.
-
- One morning we had breakfast an' his features
- we could see,
- But his face was long an' solemn an' he didn't
- speak to me,
- An' we couldn't get him laughin' an' we couldn't
- make him smile,
- An' he said the toast was soggy an' the coffee
- simply vile.
- Then Ma said: "What's the matter? Why are
- you so cross an' glum?"
- An' Pa 'most took her head off coz the paper
- didn't come.
-
- CAN'T
-
- _Can't_ is the worst word that's written or
- spoken;
- Doing more harm here than slander and lies;
- On it is many a strong spirit broken,
- And with it many a good purpose dies.
- It springs from the lips of the thoughtless each
- morning
- And robs us of courage we need through the
- day:
- It rings in our ears like a timely-sent warning
- And laughs when we falter and fall by the
- way.
-
- _Can't_ is the father of feeble endeavor,
- The parent of terror and half-hearted work;
- It weakens the efforts of artisans clever,
- And makes of the toiler an indolent shirk.
- It poisons the soul of the man with a vision,
- It stifles in infancy many a plan;
- It greets honest toiling with open derision
- And mocks at the hopes and the dreams of a
- man.
-
- _Can't_ is a word none should speak without
- blushing;
- To utter it should be a symbol of shame;
- Ambition and courage it daily is crushing;
- It blights a man's purpose and shortens his
- aim.
- Despise it with all of your hatred of error;
- Refuse it the lodgment it seeks in your brain;
- Arm against it as a creature of terror,
- And all that you dream of you some day shall
- gain.
-
- _Can't_ is the word that is foe to ambition,
- An enemy ambushed to shatter your will;
- Its prey is forever the man with a mission
- And bows but to courage and patience and
- skill.
- Hate it, with hatred that's deep and undying,
- For once it is welcomed 'twill break any
- man;
- Whatever the goal you are seeking, keep trying
- And answer this demon by saying: "I _can_."
-
- JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY
-
- _Written July 22, 1916, when the
- world lost its "Poet of Childhood."_
-
- There must be great rejoicin' on the Golden
- Shore to-day,
- An' the big an' little angels must be feelin'
- mighty gay:
- Could we look beyond the curtain now I fancy
- we should see
- Old Aunt Mary waitin', smilin', for the coming
- that's to be,
- An' Little Orphant Annie an' the whole excited
- pack
- Dancin' up an' down an' shoutin': "Mr. Riley's
- comin' back!"
-
- There's a heap o' real sadness in this good old
- world to-day;
- There are lumpy throats this morning now that
- Riley's gone away;
- There's a voice now stilled forever that in
- sweetness only spoke
- An' whispered words of courage with a faith that
- never broke.
- There is much of joy and laughter that we
- mortals here will lack,
- But the angels must be happy now that Riley's
- comin' back.
-
- The world was gettin' dreary, there was too
- much sigh an' frown
- In this vale o' mortal strivin', so God sent Jim
- Riley down,
- An' He said: "Go there an' cheer 'em in your
- good old-fashioned way,
- With your songs of tender sweetness, but don't
- make your plans to stay,
- Coz you're needed up in Heaven. I am lendin'
- you to men
- Just to help 'em with your music, but I'll want
- you back again."
-
- An' Riley came, an' mortals heard the music of
- his voice
- An' they caught his songs o' beauty an' they
- started to rejoice;
- An' they leaned on him in sorrow, an' they
- shared with him their joys,
- An' they walked with him the pathways that
- they knew when they were boys.
- But the heavenly angels missed him, missed his
- tender, gentle knack
- Of makin' people happy, an' they wanted Riley
- back.
-
- There must be great rejoicin' on the streets of
- Heaven to-day
- An' all the angel children must be troopin'
- down the way,
- Singin' heavenly songs of welcome an' pre-
- parin' now to greet
- The soul that God had tinctured with an ever-
- lasting sweet;
- The world is robed in sadness an' is draped in
- sombre black;
- But joy must reign in Heaven now that Riley's
- comin' back.
-
- RESULTS AND ROSES
-
- The man who wants a garden fair,
- Or small or very big,
- With flowers growing here and there,
- Must bend his back and dig.
-
- The things are mighty few on earth
- That wishes can attain.
- Whate'er we want of any worth
- We've got to work to gain.
-
- It matters not what goal you seek
- Its secret here reposes:
- You've got to dig from week to week
- To get Results or Roses.
-
- THE OTHER FELLOW
-
- Are you fond of your wife and your children
- fair?
- So is the other fellow.
- Do you crave pleasures for them to share?
- So does the other fellow.
- Does your heart rejoice when your own are
- glad?
- And are you troubled when they are sad?
- Well, it's that way, too, in this life, my lad,
- That way with the other fellow.
-
- Do you want the best for your own to know?
- So does the other fellow.
- Do you stoop to kiss them before you go?
- So does the other fellow.
- When your baby lies on a fevered bed,
- Does your heart run cold with a silent dread?
- Well, it's that way, too, where all mortals tread --
- That way with the other fellow.
-
- Does it hurt when they want what you cannot
- buy?
- It does with the other fellow.
- Do you for their comfort yourself deny?
- So does the other fellow.
- Would you wail aloud if your babe should die
- For the lack of care you could not supply?
- Well, it's that way, too, as he travels by,
- That way with the other fellow.
-
- OUR DUTY TO OUR FLAG
-
- Less hate and greed
- Is what we need
- And more of service true;
- More men to love
- The flag above
- And keep it first in view.
-
- Less boast and brag
- About the flag,
- More faith in what it means;
- More heads erect,
- More self-respect,
- Less talk of war machines.
-
- The time to fight
- To keep it bright
- Is not along the way,
- Nor 'cross the foam,
- But here at home
- Within ourselves -- to-day.
-
- 'Tis we must love
- That flag above
- With all our might and main;
- For from our hands,
- Not distant lands,
- Shall come dishonor's stain.
-
- If that flag be
- Dishonored, we
- Have done it, not the foe;
- If it shall fall
- We first of all
- Shall be to strike a blow.
-
- THE HUNTER
-
- Cheek that is tanned to the wind of the north.
- Body that jests at the bite of the cold,
- Limbs that are eager and strong to go forth
- Into the wilds and the ways of the bold;
- Red blood that pulses and throbs in the veins,
- Ears that love silences better than noise;
- Strength of the forest and health of the plains;
- These the rewards that the hunter enjoys.
-
- Forests were ever the cradles of men;
- Manhood is born of a kinship with trees.
- Whence shall come brave hearts and stout
- muscles, when
- Woods have made way for our cities of ease?
- Oh, do you wonder that stalwarts return
- Yearly to hark to the whispering oaks?
- 'Tis for the brave days of old that they yearn:
- These are the splendors the hunter invokes.
-
- IT'S SEPTEMBER
-
- It's September, and the orchards are afire with
- red and gold,
- And the nights with dew are heavy, and the
- morning's sharp with cold;
- Now the garden's at its gayest with the salvia
- blazing red
- And the good old-fashioned asters laughing
- at us from their bed;
- Once again in shoes and stockings are the chil-
- dren's little feet,
- And the dog now does his snoozing on the
- bright side of the street.
-
- It's September, and the cornstalks are as high
- as they will go,
- And the red cheeks of the apples everywhere
- begin to show;
- Now the supper's scarcely over ere the dark-
- ness settles down
- And the moon looms big and yellow at the
- edges of the town;
- Oh, it's good to see the children, when their
- little prayers are said,
- Duck beneath the patchwork covers when they
- tumble into bed.
-
- It's September, and a calmness and a sweetness
- seem to fall
- Over everything that's living, just as though it
- hears the call
- Of Old Winter, trudging slowly, with his pack
- of ice and snow,
- In the distance over yonder, and it somehow
- seems as though
- Every tiny little blossom wants to look its very
- best
- When the frost shall bite its petals and it droops
- away to rest.
-
- It's September! It's the fullness and the ripe-
- ness of the year;
- All the work of earth is finished, or the final
- tasks are near,
- But there is no doleful wailing; every living
- thing that grows,
- For the end that is approaching wears the
- finest garb it knows.
- And I pray that I may proudly hold my head
- up high and smile
- When I come to my September in the golden
- afterwhile.
-
- HOW DO YOU TACKLE YOUR WORK?
-
- How do you tackle your work each day?
- Are you scared of the job you find?
- Do you grapple the task that comes your way
- With a confident, easy mind?
- Do you stand right up to the work ahead
- Or fearfully pause to view it?
- Do you start to toil with a sense of dread
- Or feel that you're going to do it?
-
- You can do as much as you think you can,
- But you'll never accomplish more;
- If you're afraid of yourself, young man,
- There's little for you in store.
- For failure comes from the inside first,
- It's there if we only knew it,
- And you can win, though you face the worst,
- If you feel that you're going to do it.
-
- Success! It's found in the soul of you,
- And not in the realm of luck!
- The world will furnish the work to do,
- But you must provide the pluck.
- You can do whatever you think you can,
- It's all in the way you view it.
- It's all in the start that you make, young man:
- You must feel that you're going to do it.
-
- How do you tackle your work each day?
- With confidence clear, or dread?
- What to yourself do you stop and say
- When a new task lies ahead?
- What is the thought that is in your mind?
- Is fear ever running through it?
- If so, just tackle the next you find
- By thinking you're going to do it.
-
- LIFE
-
- Life is a gift to be used every day,
- Not to be smothered and hidden away;
- It isn't a thing to be stored in the chest
- Where you gather your keepsakes and treasure
- your best;
- It isn't a joy to be sipped now and then
- And promptly put back in a dark place again.
-
- Life is a gift that the humblest may boast of
- And one that the humblest may well make the
- most of.
- Get out and live it each hour of the day,
- Wear it and use it as much as you may;
- Don't keep it in niches and corners and grooves,
- You'll find that in service its beauty improves.
-
- STORY TELLING
-
- Most every night when they're in bed,
- And both their little prayers have said,
- They shout for me to come upstairs
- And tell them tales of gypsies bold,
- And eagles with the claws that hold
- A baby's weight, and fairy sprites
- That roam the woods on starry nights.
-
- And I must illustrate these tales,
- Must imitate the northern gales
- That toss the Indian's canoe,
- And show the way he paddles, too.
- If in the story comes a bear,
- I have to pause and sniff the air
- And show the way he climbs the trees
- To steal the honey from the bees.
-
- And then I buzz like angry bees
- And sting him on his nose and knees
- And howl in pain, till mother cries:
- "That pair will never shut their eyes,
- While all that noise up there you make;
- You're simply keeping them awake."
- And then they whisper: "Just one more,"
- And once again I'm forced to roar.
-
- New stories every night they ask.
- And that is not an easy task;
- I have to be so many things,
- The frog that croaks, the lark that sings,
- The cunning fox, the frightened hen;
- But just last night they stumped me, when
- They wanted me to twist and squirm
- And imitate an angle worm.
-
- At last they tumble off to sleep,
- And softly from their room I creep
- And brush and comb the shock of hair
- I tossed about to be a bear.
- Then mother says: "Well, I should say
- You're just as much a child as they."
- But you can bet I'll not resign
- That story telling job of mine.
-
- CANNING TIME
-
- There's a wondrous smell of spices
- In the kitchen,
- Most bewitchin';
- There are fruits cut into slices
- That just set the palate itchin';
- There's the sound of spoon on platter
- And the rattle and the clatter;
- And a bunch of kids are hastin'
- To the splendid joy of tastin':
- It's the frangrant time of year
- When fruit-cannin' days are here.
-
- There's a good wife gayly smilin'
- And perspirin'
- Some, and tirin';
- And while jar on jar she's pilin'
- And the necks o' them she's wirin'
- I'm a-sittin' here an' dreamin'
- Of the kettles that are steamin',
- And the cares that have been troublin'
- All have vanished in the bubblin'.
- I am happy that I'm here
- At the cannin' time of year.
-
- Lord, I'm sorry for the feller
- That is missin'
- All the hissin'
- Of the juices, red and yeller,
- And can never sit and listen
- To the rattle and the clatter
- Of the sound of spoon on platter.
- I am sorry for the single,
- For they miss the thrill and tingle
- Of the splendid time of year
- When the cannin' days are here.
-
- THE DULL ROAD
-
- It's the dull road that leads to the gay road;
- The practice that leads to success;
- The work road that leads to the play road;
- It is trouble that breeds happiness.
-
- It's the hard work and merciless grinding
- That purchases glory and fame;
- It's repeatedly doing, nor minding
- The drudgery drear of the game.
-
- It's the passing up glamor or pleasure
- For the sake of the skill we may gain,
- And in giving up comfort or leisure
- For the joy that we hope to attain.
-
- It's the hard road of trying and learning,
- Of toiling, uncheered and alone,
- That wins us the prizes worth earning,
- And leads us to goals we would own.
-
- THE APPLE TREE
-
- When an apple tree is ready for the world to
- come and eat,
- There isn't any structure in the land that's
- "got it beat."
- There's nothing man has builded with the
- beauty or the charm
- That can touch the simple grandeur of the
- monarch of the farm.
- There's never any picture from a human
- being's brush
- That has ever caught the redness of a single apple's blush.
-
- When an apple tree's in blossom it is glorious
- to see,
- But that's just a hint, at springtime, of the
- better things to be;
- That is just a fairy promise from the Great
- Magician's wand
- Of the wonders and the splendors that are
- waiting just beyond
- The distant edge of summer; just a forecast
- of the treat
- When the apple tree is ready for the world
- to come and eat.
-
- Architects of splendid vision long have labored
- on the earth,
- And have raised their dreams in marble and
- we've marveled at their worth;
- Long the spires of costly churches have looked
- upward at the sky;
- Rich in promise and in the beauty, they have
- cheered the passer-by.
- But I'm sure there's nothing finer for the eye
- of man to meet
- Than an apple tree that's ready for the world
- to come and eat.
-
- There's the promise of the apples, red and
- gleaming in the sun,
- Like the medals worn by mortals as rewards
- for labors done;
- And the big arms stretched wide open, with a
- welcome warm and true
- In a way that sets you thinking it's intended
- just for you.
- There is nothing with a beauty so entrancing,
- so complete,
- As an apple tree that's ready for the world to
- come and eat.
-
- THE HOME-TOWN
-
- Some folks leave home for money
- And some leave home for fame,
- Some seek skies always sunny,
- And some depart in shame.
- I care not what the reason
- Men travel east and west,
- Or what the month or season --
- The home-town is the best.
-
- The home-town is the glad town
- Where something real abides;
- 'Tis not the money-mad town
- That all its spirit hides.
- Though strangers scoff and flout it
- And even jeer its name,
- It has a charm about it
- No other town can claim.
-
- The home-town skies seem bluer
- Than skies that stretch away,
- The home-town friends seem truer
- And kinder through the day;
- And whether glum or cheery
- Light-hearted or depressed,
- Or struggle-fit or weary,
- I like the home-town best.
-
- Let him who will, go wander
- To distant towns to live,
- Of some things I am fonder
- Than all they have to give.
- The gold of distant places
- Could not repay me quite
- For those familiar faces
- That keep the home-town bright.
-
- TAKE HOME A SMILE
-
- Take home a smile; forget the petty cares,
- The dull, grim grind of all the day's affairs;
- The day is done, come be yourself awhile:
- To-night, to those who wait, take home a smile.
-
- Take home a smile; don't scatter grief and gloom
- Where laughter and light hearts should always
- bloom;
- What though you've traveled many a dusty mile,
- Footsore and weary, still take home a smile.
-
- Take home a smile -- it is not much to do,
- But much it means to them who wait for you;
- You can be brave for such a little while;
- The day of doubt is done -- take home a smile.
-
- COURAGE
-
- Courage isn't a brilliant dash,
- A daring deed in a moment's flash;
- It isn't an instantaneous thing
- Born of despair with a sudden spring
- It isn't a creature of flickered hope
- Or the final tug at a slipping rope;
- But it's something deep in the soul of man
- That is working always to serve some plan.
-
- Courage isn't the last resort
- In the work of life or the game of sport;
- It isn't a thing that a man can call
- At some future time when he's apt to fall;
- If he hasn't it now, he will have it not
- When the strain is great and the pace is hot.
- For who would strive for a distant goal
- Must always have courage within his soul.
-
- Courage isn't a dazzling light
- That flashes and passes away from sight;
- It's a slow, unwavering, ingrained trait
- With the patience to work and the strength to
- wait.
- It's part of a man when his skies are blue,
- It's part of him when he has work to do.
- The brave man never is freed of it.
- He has it when there is no need of it.
-
- Courage was never designed for show;
- It isn't a thing that can come and go;
- It's written in victory and defeat
- And every trial a man may meet.
- It's part of his hours, his days and his years,
- Back of his smiles and behind his tears.
- Courage is more than a daring deed:
- It's the breath of life and a strong man's creed.
-
- GREATNESS
-
- We can be great by helping one another;
- We can be loved for very simple deeds;
- Who has the grateful mention of a brother
- Has really all the honor that he needs.
-
- We can be famous for our works of kindness --
- Fame is not born alone of strength or skill;
- It sometimes comes from deafness and from
- blindness
- To petty words and faults, and loving still.
-
- We can be rich in gentle smiles and sunny:
- A jeweled soul exceeds a royal crown.
- The richest men sometimes have little money,
- And Croesus oft's the poorest man in town.
-
- THE EPICURE
-
- 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.
-
- THE GENTLE GARDENER
-
- I'd like to leave but daffodills to mark my little
- way,
- To leave but tulips red and white behind me as
- I stray;
- I'd like to pass away from earth and feel I'd
- left behind
- But roses and forget-me-nots for all who come
- to find.
-
- I'd like to sow the barren spots with all the
- flowers of earth,
- To leave a path where those who come should
- find but gentle mirth;
- And when at last I'm called upon to join the
- heavenly throng
- I'd like to feel along my way I'd left no sign
- of wrong.
-
- And yet the cares are many and the hours of
- toil are few;
- There is not time enough on earth for all I'd
- like to do;
- But, having lived and having toiled, I'd like the
- world to find
- Some little touch of beauty that my soul had
- left behind.
-
- THE FINEST AGE
-
- When he was only nine months old,
- And plump and round and pink of cheek,
- A joy to tickle and to hold,
- Before he'd even learned to speak,
- His gentle mother used to say:
- "It is too bad that he must grow.
- If I could only have my way
- His baby ways we'd always know."
-
- And then the year was turned, and he
- Began to toddle round the floor
- And name the things that he could see
- And soil the dresses that he wore.
- Then many a night she whispered low:
- "Our baby now is such a joy
- I hate to think that he must grow
- To be a wild and heedless boy."
-
- But on he went and sweeter grew,
- And then his mother, I recall,
- Wished she could keep him always two,
- For that's the finest age of all.
- She thought the selfsame thing at three,
- And now that he is four, she sighs
- To think he cannot always be
- The youngster with the laughing eyes.
-
- Oh, little boy, my wish is not
- Always to keep you four years old.
- Each night I stand beside your cot
- And think of what the years may hold;
- And looking down on you I pray
- That when we've lost our baby small,
- The mother of our man will say
- "This is the finest age of all."
-
- SUCCESS AND FAILURE
-
- I do not think all failure's undeserved,
- And all success is merely someone's luck;
- Some men are down because they were unnerved,
- And some are up because they kept their pluck.
- Some men are down because they chose to shirk;
- Some men are high because they did their work.
-
- I do not think that all the poor are good,
- That riches are the uniform of shame;
- The beggar might have conquered if he would,
- And that he begs, the world is not to blame.
- Misfortune is not all that comes to mar;
- Most men, themselves, have shaped the things
- they are.
-
- CARE-FREE YOUTH
-
- The skies are blue and the sun is out and the
- grass is green and soft
- And the old charm's back in the apple tree
- and it calls a boy aloft;
- And the same low voice that the old don't hear,
- but the care-free youngsters do,
- Is calling them to the fields and streams and
- the joys that once I knew.
- And if youth be wild desire for play and care
- is the mark of men,
- Beneath the skin that Time has tanned I'm a
- madcap youngster then.
-
- Far richer than king with his crown of gold and
- his heavy weight of care
- Is the sunburned boy with his stone-bruised feet
- and his tousled shock of hair;
- For the king can hear but the cry of hate or the
- sickly sound of praise,
- And lost to him are the voices sweet that called
- in his boyhood days.
- Far better than ruler, with pomp and power
- and riches, is it to be
- The urchin gay in his tattered clothes that is
- climbing the apple tree.
-
- Oh, once I heard all the calls that come to the
- quick, glad ears of boys,
- And a certain spot on the river bank told me of
- its many joys,
- And certain fields and certain trees were loyal
- friends to me,
- And I knew the birds, and I owned a dog, and
- we both could hear and see.
- Oh, never from tongues of men have dropped
- such messages wholly glad
- As the things that live in the great outdoors
- once told to a little lad.
-
- And I'm sorry for him who cannot hear what
- the tall trees have to say,
- Who is deaf to the call of a running stream
- and the lanes that lead to play.
- The boy that shins up the faithful elm or
- sprawls on a river bank
- Is more richly blessed with the joys of life than
- any old man of rank.
- For youth is the golden time of life, and this
- battered old heart of mine
- Beats fast to the march of its old-time joys,
- when the sun begins to shine.
-
- MY PAW SAID SO
-
- Foxes can talk if you know how to listen,
- My Paw said so.
- Owls have big eyes that sparkle an' glisten,
- My Paw said so.
- Bears can turn flip-flaps an' climb ellum trees,
- An' steal all the honey away from the bees,
- An' they never mind winter becoz they don't
- freeze;
- My Paw said so.
-
- Girls is a-scared of a snake, but boys ain't,
- My Paw said so.
- They holler an' run; an' sometimes they faint,
- My Paw said so.
- But boys would be 'shamed to be frightened
- that way
- When all that the snake wants to do is to play;
- You've got to believe every word that I say,
- My Paw said so.
-
- Wolves ain't so bad if you treat 'em all right,
- My Paw said so.
- They're as fond of a game as they are of a fight,
- My Paw said so.
- An' all of the animals found in the wood
- Ain't always ferocious. Most times they are
- good.
-
- The trouble is mostly they're misunderstood,
- My Paw said so.
- You can think what you like, but I stick to it
- when
- My Paw said so.
- An' I'll keep right on sayin', again an' again,
- My Paw said so.
- Maybe foxes don't talk to such people as you,
- An' bears never show you the tricks they can do,
- But I know that the stories I'm tellin' are true,
- My Paw said so.
-
- LIFE'S TESTS
-
- If never a sorrow came to us, and never a care
- we knew;
- If every hope were realized, and every dream
- came true;
- If only joy were found on earth, and no one
- ever sighed,
- And never a friend proved false to us, and never
- a loved one died,
- And never a burden bore us down, soul-sick and
- weary, too,
- We'd yearn for tests to prove our worth and
- tasks for us to do.
-
- THE PEACEFUL WARRIORS
-
- Let others sing their songs of war
- And chant their hymns of splendid death,
- Let others praise the soldiers' ways
- And hail the cannon's flaming breath.
- Let others sing of Glory's fields
- Where blood for Victory is paid,
- I choose to sing some simple thing
- To those who wield not gun or blade --
- The peaceful warriors of trade.
-
- Let others choose the deeds of war
- For symbols of our nation's skill,
- The blood-red coat, the rattling throat,
- The regiment that charged the hill,
- The boy who died to serve the flag,
- Who heard the order and obeyed,
- But leave to me the gallantry
- Of those who labor unafraid --
- The peaceful warriors of trade.
-
- Aye, let me sing the splendid deeds
- Of those who toil to serve mankind,
- The men who break old ways and make
- New paths for those who come behind.
- And face their problems, unafraid,
- Who think and plan to lift for man
- The burden that on him is laid --
- The splendid warriors of trade.
-
- I sing of battles with disease
- And victories o'er death and pain,
- Of ships that fly the summer sky,
- And glorious deeds of strength and brain.
- The call for help that rings through space
- By which a vessel's course is stayed,
- Thrills me far more than fields of gore,
- Or heroes decked in golden braid --
- I sing the warriors of trade.
-
- FAILURES
-
- 'Tis better to have tried in vain,
- Sincerely striving for a goal,
- Than to have lived upon the plain
- An idle and a timid soul.
-
- 'Tis better to have fought and spent
- Your courage, missing all applause,
- Than to have lived in smug content
- And never ventured for a cause.
-
- For he who tries and fails may be
- The founder of a better day;
- Though never his the victory,
- From him shall others learn the way.
-
- RAISIN PIE
-
- 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 appe-
- tite
- 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.
-
- PREPAREDNESS
-
- Right must not live in idleness,
- Nor dwell in smug content;
- It must be strong, against the throng
- Of foes, on evil bent.
-
- Justice must not a weakling be
- But it must guard its own,
- And live each day, that none can say
- Justice is overthrown.
-
- Peace, the sweet glory of the world,
- Faces a duty, too;
- Death is her fate, leaves she one gate
- For war to enter through.
-
- THE READY ARTISTS
-
- The green is in the meadow and the blue is in
- the sky,
- And all of Nature's artists have their colors
- handy by;
- With a few days bright with sunshine and a
- few nights free from frost
- They will start to splash their colors quite
- regardless of the cost.
- There's an artist waiting ready at each bleak
- and dismal spot
- To paint the flashing tulip or the meek forget-
- me-not.
-
- May is lurking in the distance and her lap is
- filled with flowers,
- And the choicest of her blossoms very shortly
- will be ours.
- There is not a lane so dreary or a field so dark
- with gloom
- But that soon will be resplendent with its little
- touch of bloom.
- There's an artist keen and eager to make beau-
- tiful each scene
- And remove with colors gorgeous every trace of
- of what has been.
-
- Oh, the world is now in mourning; round about
- us all are spread
- The ruins and the symbols of the winter that
- is dead.
- But the bleak and barren picture very shortly
- now will pass,
- For the halls of life are ready for their velvet
- rugs of grass;
- And the painters now are waiting with their
- magic to replace
- This dullness with a beauty that no mortal hand
- can trace.
-
- The green is in the meadow and the blue is in
- the sky;
- The chill of death is passing, life will shortly
- greet the eye.
- We shall revel soon in colors only Nature's
- artists make
- And the humblest plant that's sleeping unto
- beauty shall awake.
- For there's not a leaf forgotten, not a twig
- neglected there,
- And the tiniest of pansies shall the royal purple
- wear.
-
- THE HAPPIEST DAYS
-
- You do not know it, little man,
- In your summer coat of tan
- And your legs bereft of hose
- And your peeling, sunburned nose,
- With a stone bruise on your toe,
- Almost limping as you go
- Running on your way to play
- Through another summer day,
- Friend of birds and streams and trees,
- That your happiest days are these.
-
- Little do you think to-day,
- As you hurry to your play,
- That a lot of us, grown old
- In the chase for fame and gold,
- Watch you as you pass along
- Gayly whistling bits of song,
- And in envy sit and dream
- Of a long-neglected stream,
- Where long buried are the joys
- We possessed when we were boys.
-
- Little chap, you cannot guess
- All your sum of happiness;
- Little value do you place
- On your sunburned freckled face;
- And if some shrewd fairy came
- Offering sums of gold and fame
- For your summer days of play,
- You would barter them away
- And believe that you had made
- There and then a clever trade.
-
- Time was we were boys like you,
- Bare of foot and sunburned, too,
- And, like you, we never guessed
- All the riches we possessed;
- We'd have traded them back then
- For the hollow joys of men;
- We'd have given them all to be
- Rich and wise and forty-three.
- For life never teaches boys
- Just how precious are their joys.
-
- Youth has fled and we are old.
- Some of us have fame and gold;
- Some of us are sorely scarred,
- For the way of age is hard;
- And we envy, little man,
- You your splendid coat of tan,
- Envy you your treasures rare,
- Hours of joy beyond compare;
- For we know, by teaching stern,
- All that some day you must learn.
-
- THE REAL BAIT
-
- To gentle ways I am inclined;
- I have no wish to kill.
- To creatures dumb I would be kind;
- I like them all, but still
- Right now I think I'd like to be
- Beside some rippling brook,
- And grab a worm I'd brought with me
- And slip him on a hook.
-
- I'd like to put my hand once more
- Into a rusty can
- And turn those squirmy creatures o'er
- Like nuggets in a pan;
- And for a big one, once again,
- With eager eyes I'd look,
- As did a boy I knew, and then
- Impale it on a hook.
-
- I've had my share of fishing joy,
- I've fished with patent bait,
- With chub and minnow, but the boy
- Is lord of sport's estate.
- And no such pleasure comes to man
- So rare as when he took
- A worm from a tomato can
- And slipped it on a hook.
-
- I'd like to gaze with glowing eyes
- Upon that precious bait,
- To view each fat worm as a prize
- To be accounted great.
- And though I've passed from boyhood's term,
- And opened age's book,
- I still would like to put a worm
- That wriggled on a hook.
-
- TRUE NOBILITY
-
- Who does his task from day to day
- And meets whatever comes his way,
- Believing God has willed it so,
- Has found real greatness here below.
-
- Who guards his post, no matter where,
- Believing God must need him there,
- Although but lowly toil it be,
- Has risen to nobility.
-
- For great and low there's but one test:
- 'Tis that each man shall do his best.
- Who works with all the strength he can
- Shall never die in debt to man.
-
- THE SULKERS
-
- The world's too busy now to pause
- To listen to a whiner's cause;
- It has no time to stop and pet
- The sulker in a peevish fret,
- Who wails he'll neither work nor play
- Because things haven't gone his way.
-
- The world keeps plodding right along
- And gives its favors right or wrong
- To all who have the grit to work
- Regardless of the fool or shirk.
- The world says this to every man:
- "Go out and do the best you can."
-
- The world's too busy to implore
- The beaten one to try once more;
- 'Twill help him if he wants to rise,
- And boost him if he bravely tries,
- And shows determination grim;
- But it won't stop to baby him.
-
- The world is occupied with men
- Who fall but quickly rise again;
- But those who whine because they're hit
- And step aside to sulk a bit
- Are doomed some day to wake and find
- The world has left them far behind.
-
- PURPOSE
-
- Not for the sake of the gold,
- Not for the sake of the fame,
- Not for the prize would I hold
- Any ambition or aim:
- I would be brave and be true
- Just for the good I can do.
-
- I would be useful on earth,
- Serving some purpose or cause,
- Doing some labor of worth,
- Giving no thought to applause.
- Thinking less of the gold or the fame
- Than the joy and the thrill of the game.
-
- Medals their brightness may lose,
- Fame be forgotten or fade,
- Any reward we may choose
- Leaves the account still unpaid.
- But little real happiness lies
- In fighting alone for a prize.
-
- Give me the thrill of the task,
- The joy of the battle and strife,
- Of being of use, and I'll ask
- No greater reward from this life.
- Better than fame or applause
- Is striving to further a cause.
-
- MOTHER'S GLASSES
-
- I've told about the times that Ma can't find
- her pocketbook,
- And how we have to hustle round for it to help
- her look,
- But there's another care we know that often
- comes our way,
- I guess it happens easily a dozen times a day.
- It starts when first the postman through the
- door a letter passes,
- And Ma says: "Goodness gracious me! Wher-
- ever are my glasses?"
-
- We hunt 'em on the mantelpiece an' by the
- kitchen sink,
- Until Ma says: "Now, children, stop, an' give
- me time to think
- Just when it was I used 'em last an' just
- exactly where.
- Yes, now I know -- the dining room. I'm sure
- you'll find 'em there."
- We even look behind the clock, we busy boys
- an' lasses,
- Until somebody runs across Ma's missing pair of
- glasses.
-
- We've found 'em in the Bible, an' we've found
- 'em in the flour,
- We've found 'em in the sugar bowl, an' once
- we looked an hour
- Before we came across 'em in the padding of
- her chair;
- An' many a time we've found 'em in the topknot
- of her hair.
- It's a search that ruins order an' the home com-
- pletely wrecks,
- For there's no place where you may not find
- poor Ma's elusive specs.
-
- But we're mighty glad, I tell you, that the
- duty's ours to do,
- An' we hope to hunt those glasses till our time
- of life is through;
- It's a little bit of service that is joyous in its
- thrill,
- It's a task that calls us daily an' we hope it
- always will.
- Rich or poor, the saddest mortals of all the
- joyless masses
- Are the ones who have no mother dear to lose
- her reading glasses.
-
- THE PRINCESS PAT'S
-
- _Written when the Canadian regi-
- ment known as the "Princess Pat's,"
- left for the front._
-
- A touch of the plain and the prairie,
- A bit of the Motherland, too;
- A strain of the fur-trapper wary,
- A blend of the old and the new;
- A bit of the pioneer splendor
- That opened the wilderness' flats,
- A touch of the home-lover, tender,
- You'll find in the boys they call Pat's.
-
- The glory and grace of the maple,
- The strength that is born of the wheat,
- The pride of a stock that is staple,
- The bronze of a midsummer heat;
- A blending of wisdom and daring,
- The best of a new land, and that's
- The regiment gallantly bearing
- The neat little title of Pat's.
-
- A bit of the man who has neighbored
- With mountains and forests and streams,
- A touch of the man who has labored
- To model and fashion his dreams;
- The strength of an age of clean living,
- Of right-minded fatherly chats,
- The best that a land could be giving
- Is there in the breasts of the Pat's.
-
- BE A FRIEND
-
- Be a friend. You don't need money;
- Just a disposition sunny;
- Just the wish to help another
- Get along some way or other;
- Just a kindly hand extended
- Out to one who's unbefriended;
- Just the will to give or lend,
- This will make you someone's friend.
-
- Be a friend. You don't need glory.
- Friendship is a simple story.
- Pass by trifling errors blindly,
- Gaze on honest effort kindly,
- Cheer the youth who's bravely trying,
- Pity him who's sadly sighing;
- Just a little labor spend
- On the duties of a friend.
-
- Be a friend. The pay is bigger
- (Though not written by a figure)
- Than is earned by people clever
- In what's merely self-endeavor.
- You'll have friends instead of neighbors
- For the profits of your labors;
- You'll be richer in the end
- Than a prince, if you're a friend.
-
- THANKSGIVING
-
- Thankful for the glory of the old Red, White
- and Blue,
- For the spirit of America that still is staunch
- and true,
- For the laughter of our children and the sun-
- light in their eyes,
- And the joy of radiant mothers and their even-
- ing lullabies;
- And thankful that our harvests wear no taint
- of blood to-day,
- But were sown and reaped by toilers who were
- light of heart and gay.
-
- Thankful for the riches that are ours to claim
- and keep,
- The joy of honest labor and the boon of happy
- sleep,
- For each little family circle where there is no
- empty chair
- Save where God has sent the sorrow for the
- loving hearts to bear;
- And thankful for the loyal souls and brave
- hearts of the past
- Who builded that contentment should be with
- us to the last.
-
- Thankful for the plenty that our peaceful land
- has blessed,
- For the rising sun that beckons every man to
- do his best,
- For the goal that lies before him and the promise
- when he sows
- That his hand shall reap the harvest, undisturbed
- by cruel foes;
- For the flaming torch of justice, symbolizing
- as it burns:
- Here none may rob the toiler of the prize he
- fairly earns.
-
- To-day our thanks we're giving for the riches
- that are ours,
- For the red fruits of the orchards and the per-
- fume of the flowers,
- For our homes with laughter ringing and our
- hearthfires blazing bright,
- For our land of peace and plenty and our land
- of truth and right;
- And we're thankful for the glory of the old
- Red, White and Blue,
- For the spirit of our fathers and a manhood
- that is true.
-
- MA AND HER CHECK BOOK
-
- Ma has a dandy little book that's full of narrow
- slips,
- An' when she wants to pay a bill a page from
- it she rips;
- She just writes in the dollars and the cents and
- signs her name
- An' that's as good as money, though it doesn't
- look the same.
- When she wants another bonnet or some
- feathers for her neck,
- She promptly goes an' gets 'em, an' she writes
- another check.
- I don't just understand it, but I know she
- sputters when
- Pa says to her at supper: "Well! You're
- overdrawn again!"
-
- Ma's not a business woman, she is much too
- kind of heart
- To squabble over pennies or to play a selfish
- part,
- An' when someone asks for money, she's not
- one to stop an' think
- Of a little piece of paper an' the cost of pen
- an' ink.
- She just tells him very sweetly if he'll only
- wait a bit
- An' be seated in the parlor, she will write a
- check for it.
- She can write one out for twenty just as easily
- as ten,
- An' forgets that Pa may grumble: "Well,
- you're overdrawn again!"
-
- Pa says it looks as though he'll have to start in
- workin' nights
- To gather in the money for the checks that
- mother writes.
- He says that every morning when he's sum-
- moned to the phone,
- He's afraid the bank is calling to make mother's
- shortage known.
- He tells his friends if ever anything our fortune
- wrecks
- They can trace it to the moment mother started
- writing checks.
- He's got so that he trembles when he sees her
- fountain pen
- An' he mutters: "Do be careful! You'll be
- overdrawn again!"
-
- THE FISHING CURE
-
- There's nothing that builds up a toil-weary soul
- Like a day on a stream,
- Back on the banks of the old fishing hole
- Where a fellow can dream.
- There's nothing so good for a man as to flee
- From the city and lie
- Full length in the shade of a whispering tree
- And gaze at the sky.
-
- Out there where the strife and the greed are
- forgot
- And the struggle for pelf,
- A man can get rid of each taint and each spot
- And clean up himself;
- He can be what he wanted to be when a boy,
- If only in dreams;
- And revel once more in the depths of a joy
- That's as real as it seems.
-
- The things that he hates never follow him
- there --
- The jar of the street,
- The rivalries petty, the struggling unfair --
- For the open is sweet.
- In purity's realm he can rest and be clean,
- Be he humble or great,
- And as peaceful his soul may become as the
- scene
- That his eyes contemplate.
-
- It is good for the world that men hunger to go
- To the banks of a stream,
- And weary of sham and of pomp and of show
- They have somewhere to dream.
- For this life would be dreary and sordid and base
- Did they not now and then
- Seek refreshment and calm in God's wide, open
- space
- And come back to be men.
-
- THE HAPPY SLOW THINKER
-
- Full many a time a thought has come
- That had a bitter meaning in it.
- And in the conversation's hum
- I lost it ere I could begin it.
-
- I've had it on my tongue to spring
- Some poisoned quip that I thought clever;
- Then something happened and the sting
- Unuttered went, and died forever.
-
- A lot of bitter thoughts I've had
- To silence fellows and to flay 'em,
- But next day always I've been glad
- I wasn't quick enough to say 'em.
-
- OUT-OF-DOORS
-
- The kids are out-of-doors once more;
- The heavy leggins that they wore,
- The winter caps that covered ears
- Are put away, and no more tears
- Are shed because they cannot go
- Until they're bundled up just so.
- No more she wonders when they're gone
- If they have put their rubbers on;
- No longer are they hourly told
- To guard themselves against a cold;
- Bareheaded now they romp and run
- Warmed only by the kindly sun.
-
- She's put their heavy clothes away
- And turned the children out to play,
- And all the morning long they race
- Like madcaps round about the place.
- The robins on the fences sing
- A gayer song of welcoming,
- And seems as though they had a share
- In all the fun they're having there.
- The wrens and sparrows twitter, too,
- A louder and a noisier crew,
- As though it pleased them all to see
- The youngsters out of doors and free.
-
- Outdoors they scamper to their play
- With merry din the livelong day,
- And hungrily they jostle in
- The favor of the maid to win;
- Then, armed with cookies or with cake,
- Their way into the yard they make,
- And every feathered playmate comes
- To gather up his share of crumbs.
- The finest garden that I know
- Is one where little children grow,
- Where cheeks turn brown and eyes are bright,
- And all is laughter and delight.
-
- Oh, you may brag of gardens fine,
- But let the children race in mine;
- And let the roses, white and red,
- Make gay the ground whereon they tread.
- And who for bloom perfection seeks,
- Should mark the color on their cheeks;
- No music that the robin spouts
- Is equal to their merry shouts;
- There is no foliage to compare
- With youngsters' sun-kissed, tousled hair:
- Spring's greatest joy beyond a doubt
- Is when it brings the children out.
-
- REAL SINGING
-
- You can talk about your music, and your
- operatic airs,
- And your phonographic record that Caruso's
- tenor bears;
- But there isn't any music that such wondrous
- joy can bring
- Like the concert when the kiddies and their
- mother start to sing.
-
- When the supper time is over, then the mother
- starts to play
- Some simple little ditty, and our concert's under
- way.
- And I'm happier and richer than a millionaire
- or king
- When I listen to the kiddies and their mother
- as they sing.
-
- There's a sweetness most appealing in the trill-
- ing of their notes:
- It is innocence that's pouring from their little
- baby throats;
- And I gaze at them enraptured, for my joy's
- a real thing
- Every evening when the kiddies and their mother
- start to sing.
-
- THE BUMPS AND BRUISES DOCTOR
-
- I'm the bumps and bruises doctor;
- I'm the expert that they seek
- When their rough and tumble playing
- Leaves a scar on leg or cheek.
- I'm the rapid, certain curer
- For the wounds of every fall;
- I'm the pain eradicator;
- I can always heal them all.
-
- Bumps on little people's foreheads
- I can quickly smooth away;
- I take splinters out of fingers
- Without very much delay.
- Little sorrows I can banish
- With the magic of my touch;
- I can fix a bruise that's dreadful
- So it isn't hurting much.
-
- I'm the bumps and bruises doctor,
- And I answer every call,
- And my fee is very simple,
- Just a kiss, and that is all.
- And I'm sitting here and wishing
- In the years that are to be,
- When they face life's real troubles
- That they'll bring them all to me.
-
- WHEN PA COUNTS
-
- Pa's not so very big or brave; he can't lift
- weights like Uncle Jim;
- His hands are soft like little girls'; most anyone
- could wallop him.
- Ma weighs a whole lot more than Pa. When
- they go swimming, she could stay
- Out in the river all day long, but Pa gets frozen
- right away.
- But when the thunder starts to roll, an' lightnin'
- spits, Ma says, "Oh, dear,
- I'm sure we'll all of us be killed. I only wish
- your Pa was here."
-
- Pa's cheeks are thin an' kinder pale; he couldn't
- rough it worth a cent.
- He couldn't stand the hike we had the day the
- Boy Scouts camping went.
- He has to hire a man to dig the garden, coz his
- back gets lame,
- An' he'd be crippled for a week, if he should
- play a baseball game.
- But when a thunder storm comes up, Ma sits an'
- shivers in the gloam
- An' every time the thunder rolls, she says: "I
- wish your Pa was home."
-
- I don't know just what Pa could do if he were
- home, he seems so frail,
- But every time the skies grow black I notice Ma
- gets rather pale.
- An' when she's called us children in, an' locked
- the windows an' the doors,
- She jumps at every lightnin' flash an' trembles
- when the thunder roars.
- An' when the baby starts to cry, she wrings her
- hands an' says: "Oh, dear,
- It's terrible! It's terrible! I only wish your
- Pa was here."
-
- PEACE
-
- A man must earn his hour of peace,
- Must pay for it with hours of strife and care,
- Must win by toil the evening's sweet release,
- The rest that may be portioned for his share;
- The idler never knows it, never can.
- Peace is the glory ever of a man.
-
- A man must win contentment for his soul,
- Must battle for it bravely day by day;
- The peace he seeks is not a near-by goal;
- To claim it he must tread a rugged way.
- The shirker never knows a tranquil breast;
- Peace but rewards the man who does his best.
-
- NO PLACE TO GO
-
- The happiest nights
- I ever know
- Are those when I've
- No place to go,
- And the missus says
- When the day is through:
- "To-night we haven't
- A thing to do."
-
- Oh, the joy of it,
- And the peace untold
- Of sitting 'round
- In my slippers old,
- With my pipe and book
- In my easy chair,
- Knowing I needn't
- Go anywhere.
-
- Needn't hurry
- My evening meal
- Nor force the smiles
- That I do not feel,
- But can grab a book
- From a near-by shelf,
- And drop all sham
- And be myself.
-
- Oh, the charm of it
- And the comfort rare;
- Nothing on earth
- With it can compare;
- And I'm sorry for him
- Who doesn't know
- The joy of having
- No place to go.
-
- DEFEAT
-
- No one is beat till he quits,
- No one is through till he stops,
- No matter how hard Failure hits,
- No matter how often he drops,
- A fellow's not down till he lies
- In the dust and refuses to rise.
-
- Fate can slam him and bang him around,
- And batter his frame till he's sore,
- But she never can say that he's downed
- While he bobs up serenely for more.
- A fellow's not dead till he dies,
- Nor beat till no longer he tries.
-
- A PATRIOTIC WISH
-
- I'd like to be the sort of man the flag could
- boast about;
- I'd like to be the sort of man it cannot live
- without;
- I'd like to be the type of man
- That really is American:
- The head-erect and shoulders-square,
- Clean-minded fellow, just and fair,
- That all men picture when they see
- The glorious banner of the free.
-
- I'd like to be the sort of man the flag now
- typifies,
- The kind of man we really want the flag to
- symbolize;
- The loyal brother to a trust,
- The big, unselfish soul and just,
- The friend of every man oppressed,
- The strong support of all that's best,
- The sturdy chap the banner's meant,
- Where'er it flies, to represent.
-
- I'd like to be the sort of man the flag's supposed
- to mean,
- The man that all in fancy see wherever it is
- seen,
- The chap that's ready for a fight
- Whenever there's a wrong to right,
- The friend in every time of need,
- The doer of the daring deed,
- The clean and generous handed man
- That is a real American.
-
- THE PRICE OF JOY
-
- You don't begrudge the labor when the roses
- start to bloom;
- You don't recall the dreary days that won you
- their perfume;
- You don't recall a single care
- You spent upon the garden there;
- And all the toil
- Of tilling soil
- Is quite forgot the day the first
- Pink rosebuds into beauty burst.
-
- You don't begrudge the trials grim when joy
- has come to you;
- You don't recall the dreary days when all your
- skies are blue;
- And though you've trod a weary mile
- The ache of it was all worth while;
- And all the stings
- And bitter flings
- Are wiped away upon the day
- Success comes dancing down the way.
-
- THE THINGS THAT MAKE A SOLDIER
- GREAT
-
- The things that make a soldier great and send
- him out to die,
- To face the flaming cannon's mouth nor ever
- question why,
- Are lilacs by a little porch, the row of tulips
- red,
- The peonies and pansies, too, the old petunia bed,
- The grass plot where his children play, the roses
- on the wall:
- 'Tis these that make a soldier great. He's fight-
- ing for them all.
-
- 'Tis not the pomp and pride of kings that make
- a soldier brave;
- 'Tis not allegiance to the flag that over him may
- wave;
- For soldiers never fight so well on land or on
- the foam
- As when behind the cause they see the little
- place called home.
- Endanger but that humble street whereon his
- children run,
- You make a soldier of the man who never bore
- a gun.
-
- What is it through the battle smoke the valiant
- solider sees?
- The little garden far away, the budding apple
- trees,
- The little patch of ground back there, the chil-
- dren at their play,
- Perhaps a tiny mound behind the simple church
- of gray.
- The golden thread of courage isn't linked to
- castle dome
- But to the spot, where'er it be -- the humblest spot
- called home.
-
- And now the lilacs bud again and all is lovely
- there
- And homesick soldiers far away know spring
- is in the air;
- The tulips come to bloom again, the grass
- once more is green,
- And every man can see the spot where all his
- joys have been.
- He sees his children smile at him, he hears the
- bugle call,
- And only death can stop him now -- he's fight-
- ing for them all.
-
- THE JOY OF A DOG
-
- Ma says no, it's too much care
- An' it will scatter germs an' hair,
- An' it's a nuisance through and through.
- An' barks when you don't want it to;
- An' carries dirt from off the street,
- An' tracks the carpets with its feet.
- But it's a sign he's growin' up
- When he is longin' for a pup.
-
- Most every night he comes to me
- An' climbs a-straddle of my knee
- An' starts to fondle me an' pet,
- Then asks me if I've found one yet.
- An' ma says: "Now don't tell him yes;
- You know they make an awful mess."
- An' starts their faults to catalogue.
- But every boy should have a dog.
-
- An' some night when he comes to me,
- Deep in my pocket there will be
- The pup he's hungry to possess
- Or else I sadly miss my guess.
- For I remember all the joy
- A dog meant to a little boy
- Who loved it in the long ago,
- The joy that's now his right to know.
-
- HOMESICK
-
- It's tough when you are homesick in a strange
- and distant place;
- It's anguish when you're hungry for an old-
- familiar face.
- And yearning for the good folks and the joys
- you used to know,
- When you're miles away from friendship, is a
- bitter sort of woe.
- But it's tougher, let me tell you, and a stiffer
- discipline
- To see them through the window, and to know
- you can't go in.
-
- Oh, I never knew the meaning of that red sign
- on the door,
- Never really understood it, never thought of it
- before;
- But I'll never see another since they've tacked
- one up on mine
- But I'll think about the father that is barred
- from all that's fine.
- And I'll think about the mother who is prisoner
- in there
- So her little son or daughter shall not miss a
- mother's care.
- And I'll share a fellow feeling with the saddest
- of my kin,
- The dad beside the gateway of the home he
- can't go in.
-
- Oh, we laugh and joke together and the mother
- tries to be
- Brave and sunny in her prison, and she thinks
- she's fooling me;
- And I do my bravest smiling and I feign a
- merry air
- In the hope she won't discover that I'm bur-
- dened down with care.
- But it's only empty laughter, and there's nothing
- in the grin
- When you're talking through the window of the
- home you can't go in.
-
- THE PERFECT DINNER TABLE
-
- A table cloth that's slightly soiled
- Where greasy little hands have toiled;
- The napkins kept in silver rings,
- And only ordinary things
- From which to eat, a simple fare,
- And just the wife and kiddies there,
- And while I serve, the clatter glad
- Of little girl and little lad
- Who have so very much to say
- About the happenings of the day.
-
- Four big round eyes that dance with glee,
- Forever flashing joys at me,
- Two little tongues that race and run
- To tell of troubles and of fun;
- The mother with a patient smile
- Who knows that she must wait awhile
- Before she'll get a chance to say
- What she's discovered through the day.
- She steps aside for girl and lad
- Who have so much to tell their dad.
-
- Our manners may not be the best;
- Perhaps our elbows often rest
- Upon the table, and at times
- That very worst of dinner crimes,
- That very shameful act and rude
- Of speaking ere you've downed your food,
- Too frequently, I fear, is done,
- So fast the little voices run.
- Yet why should table manners stay
- Those tongues that have so much to say?
-
- At many a table I have been
- Where wealth and luxury were seen,
- And I have dined in halls of pride
- Where all the guests were dignified;
- But when it comes to pleasure rare
- The perfect dinner table's where
- No stranger's face is ever known:
- The dinner hour we spend alone,
- When little girl and little lad
- Run riot telling things to dad.
-
- TO-MORROW
-
- He was going to be all that a mortal should be
- To-morrow.
- No one should be kinder or braver than he
- To-morrow.
- A friend who was troubled and weary he knew,
- Who'd be glad of a lift and who needed it, too;
- On him he would call and see what he could do
- To-morrow.
-
- Each morning he stacked up the letters he'd
- write
- To-morrow.
- And thought of the folks he would fill with
- delight
- To-morrow.
- It was too bad, indeed, he was busy to-day,
- And hadn't a minute to stop on his way;
- More time he would have to give others, he'd
- say,
- To-morrow.
-
- The greatest of workers this man would have
- been
- To-morrow.
- The world would have known him, had he ever
- seen
- To-morrow.
- But the fact is he died and he faded from view,
- And all that he left here when living was
- through
- Was a mountain of things he intended to do
- To-morrow.
-
- A PRAYER
-
- God grant me kindly thought
- And patience through the day,
- And in the things I've wrought
- Let no man living say
- That hate's grim mark has stained
- What little joy I've gained.
-
- God keep my nature sweet,
- Teach me to bear a blow,
- Disaster and defeat,
- And no resentment show.
- If failure must be mine
- Sustain this soul of mine.
-
- God grant me strength to face
- Undaunted day or night;
- To stoop to no disgrace
- To win my little fight;
- Let me be, when it is o'er,
- As manly as before.
-
- TO THE LADY IN THE ELECTRIC
-
- Lady in the show case carriage,
- Do not think that I'm a bear;
- Not for worlds would I disparage
- One so gracious and so fair;
- Do not think that I am blind to
- One who has a smile seraphic;
- You I'd never be unkind to,
- But you are impeding traffic.
-
- If I had some way of knowing
- What you are about to do,
- Just exactly where you're going,
- If I could depend on you,
- I could keep my engine churning,
- Travel on and never mind you.
- Lady, when you think of turning,
- Why not signal us behind you?
-
- Lady, free from care and worry,
- Riding in your plate-glass car,
- Some of us are in a hurry;
- Some of us must travel far.
- I, myself, am eager, very,
- To be journeying on my way;
- Lady, is it necessary
- To monopolize the highway?
-
- Lady, at the handle, steering,
- Why not keep a course that's straight?
- Know you not that wildly veering
- As you do, is tempting fate?
- Do not think my horn I'm blowing
- Just on purpose to harass you,
- It is just a signal showing
- That I'd safely like to pass you.
-
- Lady, there are times a duty
- Must be done, however saddening;
- It is hard to tell a beauty
- That she's very often maddening.
- And I would not now be saying
- Harsh and cruel words to fuss you,
- But when traffic you're delaying
- You are forcing men to cuss you.
-
- THE MAN WHO COULDN'T SAVE
-
- He spent what he made, or he gave it away,
- Tried to save money, and would for a day,
- Started a bank-account time an' again,
- Got a hundred or so for a nest egg, an' then
- Some fellow that needed it more than he did,
- Who was down on his luck, with a sick wife
- or kid,
- Came along an' he wasted no time till he went
- An' drew out the coin that for saving was
- meant.
-
- They say he died poor, and I guess that is so:
- To pile up a fortune he hadn't a show;
- He worked all the time and good money he made,
- Was known as an excellent man at his trade.
- But he saw too much, heard too much, felt too
- much here
- To save anything by the end of the year,
- An' the shabbiest wreck the Lord ever let live
- Could get money from him if he had it to give.
-
- I've seen him slip dimes to the bums on the street
- Who told him they hungered for something to
- eat,
- An' though I remarked they were going for
- drink
- He'd say: "Mebbe so. But I'd just hate to
- think
- That fellow was hungry an' I'd passed him by;
- I'd rather be fooled twenty times by a lie
- Than wonder if one of 'em I wouldn't feed
- Had told me the truth an' was really in need."
-
- Never stinted his family out of a thing:
- They had everything that his money could bring;
- Said he'd rather be broke and just know they
- were glad,
- Than rich, with them pining an' wishing they had
- Some of the pleasures his money would buy;
- Said he never could look a bank book in the eye
- If he knew it had grown on the pleasures and
- joys
- That he'd robbed from his wife and his girls
- and his boys.
-
- Queer sort of notion he had, I confess,
- Yet many a rich man on earth is mourned less.
- All who had known him came back to his side
- To honor his name on the day that he died.
- Didn't leave much in the bank, it is true,
- But did leave a fortune in people who knew
- The big heart of him, an' I'm willing to swear
- That to-day he is one of the richest up there.
-
- ANSWERING HIM
-
- "When shall I be a man?" he said,
- As I was putting him to bed.
- "How many years will have to be
- Before Time makes a man of me?
- And will I be a man when I
- Am grown up big? I heaved a sigh,
- Because it called for careful thought
- To give the answer that he sought.
-
- And so I sat him on my knee,
- And said to him: "A man you'll be
- When you have learned that honor brings
- More joy than all the crowns of kings;
- That it is better to be true
- To all who know and trust in you
- Than all the gold of earth to gain
- If winning it shall leave a stain.
-
- "When you can fight for victory sweet,
- Yet bravely swallow down defeat,
- And cling to hope and keep the right,
- Nor use deceit instead of might;
- When you are kind and brave and clean,
- And fair to all and never mean;
- When there is good in all you plan,
- That day, my boy, you'll be a man.
-
- "Some of us learn this truth too late;
- That years alone can't make us great;
- That many who are three-score, ten
- Have fallen short of being men,
- Because in selfishness they fought
- And toiled without refining thought;
- And whether wrong or whether right
- They lived but for their own delight.
-
- "When you have learned that you must hold
- Your honor dearer far than gold;
- That no ill-gotten wealth or fame
- Can pay you for your tarnished name;
- And when in all you say or do
- Of others you're considerate, too,
- Content to do the best you can
- By such a creed, you'll be a man."
-
- FATHER AND SON
-
- Be more than his dad,
- Be a chum to the lad;
- Be a part of his life
- Every hour of the day;
- Find time to talk with him,
- Take time to walk with him,
- Share in his studies
- And share in his play;
- Take him to places,
- To ball games and races,
- Teach him the things
- That you want him to know;
- Don't live apart from him,
- Don't keep your heart from him,
- Be his best comrade,
- He's needing you so!
-
- Never neglect him,
- Though young, still respect him,
- Hear his opinions
- With patience and pride;
- Show him his error,
- But be not a terror,
- Grim-visaged and fearful,
- When he's at your side.
- Know what his thoughts are,
- Know what his sports are,
- Know all his playmates,
- It's easy to learn to;
- Be such a father
- That when troubles gather
- You'll be the first one
- For counsel, he'll turn to.
-
- You can inspire him
- With courage, and fire him
- Hot with ambition
- For deeds that are good;
- He'll not betray you
- Nor illy repay you,
- If you have taught him
- The things that you should.
- Father and son
- Must in all things be one --
- Partners in trouble
- And comrades in joy.
- More than a dad
- Was the best pal you had;
- Be such a chum
- As you knew, to your boy.
-
- THE JUNE COUPLE
-
- She is fair to see and sweet,
- Dainty from her head to feet,
- Modest, as her blushing shows,
- Happy, as her smiles disclose,
- And the young man at her side
- Nervously attempts to hide
- Underneath a visage grim
- That the fuss is bothering him.
-
- Pause a moment, happy pair!
- This is not the station where
- Romance ends, and wooing stops
- And the charm from courtship drops;
- This is but the outward gate
- Where the souls of mortals mate,
- But the border of the land
- You must travel hand in hand.
-
- You who come to marriage, bring
- All your tenderness, and cling
- Steadfastly to all the ways
- That have marked your wooing days.
- You are only starting out
- On life's roadways, hedged about
- Thick with roses and with tares,
- Sweet delights and bitter cares.
-
- Heretofore you've only played
- At love's game, young man and maid;
- Only known it at its best;
- Now you'll have to face its test.
- You must prove your love worth while,
- Something time cannot defile,
- Something neither care nor pain
- Can destroy or mar or stain.
-
- You are now about to show
- Whether love is real or no;
- Yonder down the lane of life
- You will find, as man and wife,
- Sorrows, disappointments, doubt,
- Hope will almost flicker out;
- But if rightly you are wed
- Love will linger where you tread.
-
- There are joys that you will share,
- Joys to balance every care;
- Arm in arm remain, and you
- Will not fear the storms that brew,
- If when you are sorest tried
- You face your trials, side by side.
- Now your wooing days are done,
- And your loving years begun.
-
- AT THE DOOR
-
- He wiped his shoes before his door,
- But ere he entered he did more;
- 'Twas not enough to cleanse his feet
- Of dirt they'd gathered in the street;
- He stood and dusted off his mind
- And left all trace of care behind.
- "In here I will not take," said he,
- "The stains the day has brought to me.
-
- "Beyond this door shall never go
- The burdens that are mine to know;
- The day is done, and here I leave
- The petty things that vex and grieve;
- What clings to me of hate and sin
- To them I will not carry in;
- Only the good shall go with me
- For their devoted eyes to see.
-
- "I will not burden them with cares,
- Nor track the home with grim affairs;
- I will not at my table sit
- With soul unclean, and mind unfit;
- Beyond this door I will not take
- The outward signs of inward ache;
- I will not take a dreary mind
- Into this house for them to find."
-
- He wiped his shoes before his door,
- But paused to do a little more.
- He dusted off the stains of strife,
- The mud that's incident to life,
- The blemishes of careless thought,
- The traces of the fight he'd fought,
- The selfish humors and the mean,
- And when he entered he was clean.
-
- DUTY
-
- To do your little bit of toil,
- To play life's game with head erect;
- To stoop to nothing that would soil
- Your honor or your self-respect;
- To win what gold and fame you can,
- But first of all to be a man.
-
- To know the bitter and the sweet,
- The sunshine and the days of rain;
- To meet both victory and defeat,
- Nor boast too loudly nor complain;
- To face whatever fates befall
- And be a man throughout it all.
-
- To seek success in honest strife,
- But not to value it so much
- That, winning it, you go through life
- Stained by dishonor's scarlet touch.
- What goal or dream you choose, pursue,
- But be a man whate'er you do!
-
- A BEAR STORY
-
- There was a bear -- his name was Jim,
- An' children weren't askeered of him,
- An' he lived in a cave, where he
- Was confortubbul as could be,
- An' in that cave, so my Pa said,
- Jim always kept a stock of bread
- An' honey, so that he could treat
- The boys an' girls along his street.
-
- An' all that Jim could say was "Woof!"
- An' give a grunt that went like "Soof!"
- An' Pa says when his grunt went off
- It sounded jus' like Grandpa's cough,
- Or like our Jerry when he's mad
- An' growls at peddler men that's bad.
- While grown-ups were afraid of Jim,
- Kids could do anything with him.
-
- One day a little boy like me
- That had a sister Marjorie,
- Was walking through the woods, an' they
- Heard something "woofing" down that way,
- An' they was scared an' stood stock still
- An' wished they had a gun to kill
- Whatever 'twas, but little boys
- Don't have no guns that make a noise.
-
- An' soon the "woofing" closer grew,
- An' then a bear came into view,
- The biggest bear you ever saw --
- Ma's muff was smaller than his paw.
- He saw the children an' he said:
- "I ain't a-goin' to kill you dead;
- You needn't turn away an' run;
- I'm only scarin' you for fun."
-
- An' then he stood up just like those
- Big bears in circuses an' shows,
- An' danced a jig, an' rolled about
- An' said "Woof! Woof!" which meant "Look
- out!"
- An' turned a somersault as slick
- As any boy can do the trick.
- Those children had been told of Jim
- An' they decided it was him.
-
- They stroked his nose when they got brave,
- An' followed him into his cave,
- An' Jim asked them if they liked honey,
- They said they did. Said Jim: "That's funny.
- I've asked a thousand boys or so
- That question, an' not one's said no."
- What happened then I cannot say
- 'Cause next I knew 'twas light as day.
-
- AUTUMN AT THE ORCHARD
-
- The sumac's flaming scarlet on the edges o' the
- lake,
- An' the pear trees are invitin' everyone t' come
- an' shake.
- Now the gorgeous tints of autumn are appearin'
- everywhere
- Till it seems that you can almost see the Master
- Painter there.
- There's a solemn sort o' stillness that's pervadin'
- every thing,
- Save the farewell songs to summer that the
- feathered tenors sing,
- An' you quite forget the city where disgruntled
- folks are kickin'
- Off yonder with the Pelletiers, when spies are
- ripe for pickin'.
-
- The Holsteins are a-posin' in a clearin' near a
- wood,
- Very dignified an' stately, just as though they
- understood
- That they're lending to life's pictures just the
- touch the Master needs,
- An' they're preachin' more refinement than a lot
- o' printed creeds.
- The orchard's fairly groanin' with the gifts o'
- God to man,
- Just as though they meant to shame us who
- have doubted once His plan.
- Oh, there's somethin' most inspirin' to a soul in
- need o' prickin'
- Off yonder with the Pelletiers when spies are
- ripe fer pickin'.
-
- The frisky little Shetlands now are growin'
- shaggy coats
- An' acquirin' silken mufflers of their own to
- guard their throats;
- An' a Russian wolf-hound puppy left its mother
- yesterday,
- An' a tinge o' sorrow touched us as we saw it
- go away.
- For the sight was full o' meanin', an' we knew,
- when it had gone,
- 'Twas a symbol of the partin's that the years are
- bringin' on.
- Oh, a feller must be better -- to his faith he can't
- help stickin'
- Off yonder with the Pelletiers when spies are ripe
- fer pickin'.
-
- The year is almost over, now at dusk the valleys
- glow
- With the misty mantle chillin', that is hangin'
- very low.
- An' each mornin' sees the maples just a little
- redder turned
- Than they were the night we left 'em, an' the
- elms are browner burned.
- An' a feller can't help feelin', an' I don't care
- who it is,
- That the mind that works such wonders has a
- greater power than his.
- Oh, I know that I'll remember till life's last few
- sparks are flickin'
- The lessons out at Pelletiers when spies were ripe
- for pickin'.
-
- WHEN PA COMES HOME
-
- When Pa comes home, I'm at the door,
- An' then he grabs me off the floor
- An' throws me up an' catches me
- When I come down, an' then, says he:
- "Well, how'd you get along to-day?
- An' were you good, an' did you play,
- An' keep right out of mamma's way?
- An' how'd you get that awful bump
- Above your eye? My, what a lump!
- An' who spilled jelly on your shirt?
- An' where'd you ever find the dirt
- That's on your hands? And my! Oh, my!
- I guess those eyes have had a cry,
- They look so red. What was it, pray?
- What has been happening here to-day?
-
- An' then he drops his coat an' hat
- Upon a chair, an' says: "What's that?
- Who knocked that engine on its back
- An' stepped upon that piece of track?"
- An' then he takes me on his knee
- An' says: "What's this that now I see?
- Whatever can the matter be?
- Who strewed those toys upon the floor,
- An' left those things behind the door?
- Who upset all those parlor chairs
- An' threw those blocks upon the stairs?
- I guess a cyclone called to-day
- While I was workin' far away.
- Who was it worried mamma so?
- It can't be anyone I know."
-
- An' then I laugh an' say: "It's me!
- Me did most ever'thing you see.
- Me got this bump the time me tripped.
- An' here is where the jelly slipped
- Right off my bread upon my shirt,
- An' when me tumbled down it hurt.
- That's how me got all over dirt.
- Me threw those building blocks downstairs,
- An' me upset the parlor chairs,
- Coz when you're playin' train you've got
- To move things 'round an awful lot."
- An' then my Pa he kisses me
- An' bounces me upon his knee
- An' says: "Well, well, my little lad,
- What glorious fun you must have had!"
-
- MOTHER'S DAY
-
- Gentle hands that never weary toiling in love's
- vineyard sweet,
- Eyes that seem forever cheery when our eyes
- they chance to meet,
- Tender, patient, brave, devoted, this is always
- mother's way,
- Could her worth in gold be quoted as you think
- of her to-day?
-
- There shall never be another quite so tender,
- quite so kind
- As the patient little mother; nowhere on this
- earth you'll find
- Her affection duplicated; none so proud if you
- are fine.
- Could her worth be overstated? Not by any
- words of mine.
-
- Death stood near the hour she bore us, agony
- was hers to know,
- Yet she bravely faced it for us, smiling in her
- time of woe;
- Down the years how oft we've tried her, often
- selfish, heedless, blind,
- Yet with love alone to guide her she was never
- once unkind.
-
- Vain are all our tributes to her if in words
- alone they dwell.
- We must live the praises due her; there's no
- other way to tell
- Gentle mother that we love her. Would you say,
- as you recall
- All the patient service of her, you've been
- worthy of it all?
-
- DIVISION
-
- You cannot gather every rose,
- Nor every pleasure claim,
- Nor bask in every breeze that blows,
- Nor play in every game.
-
- No millionaire could ever own
- The world's supply of pearls,
- And no man here has ever known
- All of the pretty girls.
-
- So take what joy may come your way,
- And envy not your brothers;
- Enjoy your share of fun each day,
- And leave the rest for others.
-
- A MAN
-
- A man doesn't whine at his losses,
- A man doesn't whimper and fret,
- Or rail at the weight of his crosses
- And ask life to rear him a pet.
- A man doesn't grudgingly labor
- Or look upon toil as a blight;
- A man doesn't sneer at his neighbor
- Or sneak from a cause that is right.
-
- A man doesn't sulk when another
- Succeeds where his efforts have failed;
- Doesn't keep all his praise for the brother
- Whose glory is publicly hailed;
- And pass by the weak and the humble
- As though they were not of his clay;
- A man doesn't ceaselessly grumble
- When things are not going his way.
-
- A man looks on woman as tender
- And gentle, and stands at her side
- At all times to guard and defend her,
- And never to scorn or deride.
- A man looks on life as a mission.
- To serve, just so far as he can;
- A man holds his noblest ambition
- On earth is to live as a man.
-
- A VOW
-
- I might not ever scale the mountain heights
- Where all the great men stand in glory now;
- I may not ever gain the world's delights
- Or win a wreath of laurel for my brow;
- I may not gain the victories that men
- Are fighting for, nor do a thing to boast of;
- I may not get a fortune here, but then,
- The little that I have I'll make the most of.
-
- I'll make my little home a palace fine,
- My little patch of green a garden fair,
- And I shall know each humble plant and vine
- As rich men know their orchid blossoms rare.
- My little home may not be much to see;
- Its chimneys may not tower far above;
- But it will be a mansion great to me,
- For in its walls I'll keep a hoard of love.
-
- I will not pass my modest pleasures by
- To grasp at shadows of more splendid things,
- Disdaining what of joyousness is nigh
- Because I am denied the joy of kings.
- But I will laugh and sing my way along,
- I'll make the most of what is mine to-day,
- And if I never rise above the throng,
- I shall have lived a full life anyway.
-
- TREASURES
-
- Some folks I know, when friends drop in
- To visit for awhile and chin,
- Just lead them round the rooms and halls
- And show them pictures on their walls,
- And point to rugs and tapestries
- The works of men across the seas;
- Their loving cups they show with pride,
- To eyes that soon are stretching wide
- With wonder at the treasures rare
- That have been bought and gathered there.
-
- But when folks come to call on me,
- I've no such things for them to see.
- No picture on my walls is great;
- I have no ancient family plate;
- No tapestry of rare design
- Or costly woven rugs are mine;
- I have no loving cup to show,
- Or strange and valued curio;
- But if my treasures they would see,
- I bid them softly follow me.
-
- And then I lead them up the stairs
- Through trains of cars and Teddy bears,
- And to a little room we creep
- Where both my youngsters lie asleep,
- Close locked in one another's arms.
- I let them gaze upon their charms,
- I let them see the legs of brown
- Curled up beneath a sleeping gown,
- And whisper in my happiness:
- "Behold the treasures I possess."
-
- CHALLENGE
-
- Life is a challenge to the bold,
- It flings its gauntlet down
- And bids us, if we seek for gold
- And glory and renown,
- To come and _take_ them from its store,
- It will not meekly hand them o'er.
-
- Life is a challenge all must meet,
- And nobly must we dare;
- Its gold is tawdry when we cheat,
- Its fame a bitter snare
- If it be stolen from life's clutch;
- Men must be true to prosper much.
-
- Life is a challenge and its laws
- Are rigid ones and stern;
- The splendid joy of real applause
- Each man must nobly earn.
- It makes us win its jewels rare,
- But gives us paste, if we're unfair.
-
- A TOAST TO HAPPINESS
-
- To happiness I raise my glass,
- The goal of every human,
- The hope of every clan and class
- And every man and woman.
- The daydreams of the urchin there,
- The sweet theme of the maiden's prayer,
- The strong man's one ambition,
- The sacred prize of mothers sweet,
- The tramp of soldiers on the street
- Have all the selfsame mission.
- Life here is nothing more or less
- Than just a quest for happiness.
-
- Some seek it on the mountain top,
- And some within a mine;
- The widow in her notion shop
- Expects its sun to shine.
- The tramp that seeks new roads to fare,
- Is one with king and millionaire
- In this that each is groping
- On different roads, in different ways,
- To come to glad, contented days,
- And shares the common hoping.
- The sound of martial fife and drum
- Is born of happiness to come.
-
- Yet happiness is always here
- Had we the eyes to see it;
- No breast but holds a fund of cheer
- Had man the will to free it.
- 'Tis there upon the mountain top,
- Or in the widow's notion shop,
- 'Tis found in homes of sorrow;
- 'Tis woven in the memories
- Of happier, brighter days than these,
- The gift, not of to-morrow
- But of to-day, and in our tears
- Some touch of happiness appears.
-
- 'Tis not a joy that's born of wealth:
- The poor man may possess it.
- 'Tis not alone the prize of health:
- No sickness can repress it.
- 'Tis not the end of mortal strife,
- The sunset of the day of life,
- Or but the old should find it;
- It is the bond twixt God and man,
- The touch divine in all we plan,
- And has the soul behind it.
- And so this toast to happiness,
- The seed of which we all possess.
-
- GUESSING TIME
-
- It's guessing time at our house; every evening
- after tea
- We start guessing what old Santa's going to
- leave us on our tree.
- Everyone of us holds secrets that the others try
- to steal,
- And that eyes and lips are plainly having trouble
- to conceal.
- And a little lip that quivered just a bit the other
- night
- Was a sad and startling warning that I mustn't
- guess it right.
-
- "Guess what you will get for Christmas!" is the
- cry that starts the fun.
- And I answer: "Give the letter with which the
- name's begun."
- Oh, the eyes that dance around me and the joy-
- ous faces there
- Keep me nightly guessing wildly: "Is it some-
- thing I can wear?"
- I implore them all to tell me in a frantic sort
- of way
- And pretend that I am puzzled, just to keep them
- feeling gay.
-
- Oh, the wise and knowing glances that across the
- table fly
- And the winks exchanged with mother, that they
- think I never spy;
- Oh, the whispered confidences that are poured
- into her ear,
- And the laughter gay that follows when I try
- my best to hear!
- Oh, the shouts of glad derision when I bet that
- it's a cane,
- And the merry answering chorus: "No, it's
- not. Just guess again!"
-
- It's guessing time at our house, and the fun is
- running fast,
- And I wish somehow this contest of delight
- could always last,
- For the love that's in their faces and their laugh-
- ter ringing clear
- Is their dad's most precious present when the
- Christmas time is near.
- And soon as it is over, when the tree is bare
- and plain,
- I shall start in looking forward to the time to
- guess again.
-
- UNDERSTANDING
-
- When I was young and frivolous and never
- stopped to think,
- When I was always doing wrong, or just upon
- the brink;
- When I was just a lad of seven and eight and
- nine and ten,
- It seemed to me that every day I got in trouble
- then,
- And strangers used to shake their heads and say
- I was no good,
- But father always stuck to me -- it seems he
- understood.
-
- I used to have to go to him 'most every night
- and say
- The dreadful things that I had done to worry
- folks that day.
- I know I didn't mean to be a turmoil round the
- place,
- And with the womenfolks about forever in dis-
- grace;
- To do the way they said I should, I tried the
- best I could,
- But though they scolded me a lot -- my father
- understood.
-
- He never seemed to think it queer that I should
- risk my bones,
- Or fight with other boys at times, or pelt a cat
- with stones;
- An' when I'd break a window pane, it used to
- make him sad,
- But though the neighbors said I was, he never
- thought me bad;
- He never whipped me, as they used to say to me
- he should;
- That boys can't always do what's right -- it
- seemed he understood.
-
- Now there's that little chap of mine, just full of
- life and fun,
- Comes up to me with solemn face to tell the
- bad he's done.
- It's natural for any boy to be a roguish elf,
- He hasn't time to stop and think and figure for
- himself,
- And though the womenfolks insist that I should
- take a hand,
- They've never been a boy themselves, and they
- don't understand.
-
- Some day I've got to go up there, and make a
- sad report
- And tell the Father of us all where I have fallen
- short;
- And there will be a lot of wrong I never meant
- to do,
- A lot of smudges on my sheet that He will have
- to view.
- And little chance for heavenly bliss, up there,
- will I command,
- Unless the Father smiles and says: "My boy,
- I understand."
-
- PEOPLE LIKED HIM
-
- People liked him, not because
- He was rich or known to fame;
- He had never won applause
- As a star in any game.
- His was not a brilliant style,
- His was not a forceful way,
- But he had a gentle smile
- And a kindly word to say.
-
- Never arrogant or proud,
- On he went with manner mild;
- Never quarrelsome or loud,
- Just as simple as a child;
- Honest, patient, brave and true:
- Thus he lived from day to day,
- Doing what he found to do
- In a cheerful sort of way.
-
- Wasn't one to boast of gold
- Or belittle it with sneers,
- Didn't change from hot to cold,
- Kept his friends throughout the years,
- Sort of man you like to meet
- Any time or any place.
- There was always something sweet
- And refreshing in his face.
-
- Sort of man you'd like to be:
- Balanced well and truly square;
- Patient in adversity,
- Generous when his skies were fair.
- Never lied to friend or foe,
- Never rash in word or deed,
- Quick to come and slow to go
- In a neighbor's time of need.
-
- Never rose to wealth or fame,
- Simply lived, and simply died,
- But the passing of his name
- Left a sorrow, far and wide.
- Not for glory he'd attained,
- Nor for what he had of pelf,
- Were the friends that he had gained,
- But for what he was himself.
-
- WHEN FATHER SHOOK THE STOVE
-
- 'Twas not so many years ago,
- Say, twenty-two or three,
- When zero weather or below
- Held many a thrill for me.
- Then in my icy room I slept
- A youngster's sweet repose,
- And always on my form I kept
- My flannel underclothes.
- Then I was roused by sudden shock
- Though still to sleep I strove,
- I knew that it was seven o'clock
- When father shook the stove.
-
- I never heard him quit his bed
- Or his alarm clock ring;
- I never heard his gentle tread,
- Or his attempts to sing;
- The sun that found my window pane
- On me was wholly lost,
- Though many a sunbeam tried in vain
- To penetrate the frost.
- To human voice I never stirred,
- But deeper down I dove
- Beneath the covers, when I heard
- My father shake the stove.
-
- To-day it all comes back to me
- And I can hear it still;
- He seemed to take a special glee
- In shaking with a will.
- He flung the noisy dampers back,
- Then rattled steel on steel,
- Until the force of his attack
- The building seemed to feel.
- Though I'd a youngster's heavy eyes
- All sleep from them he drove;
- It seemed to me the dead must rise
- When father shook the stove.
-
- Now radiators thump and pound
- And every room is warm,
- And modern men new ways have found
- To shield us from the storm.
- The window panes are seldom glossed
- The way they used to be;
- The pictures left by old Jack Frost
- Our children never see.
- And now that he has gone to rest
- In God's great slumber grove,
- I often think those days were best
- When father shook the stove.
-
- HOUSE-HUNTING
-
- Time was when spring returned we went
- To find another home to rent;
- We wanted fresher, cleaner walls,
- And bigger rooms and wider halls,
- And open plumbing and the dome
- That made the fashionable home.
-
- But now with spring we want to sell,
- And seek a finer place to dwell.
- Our thoughts have turned from dens and domes;
- We want the latest thing in homes;
- To life we'll not be reconciled
- Until we have a bathroom tiled.
-
- A butler's pantry we desire,
- Although no butler do we hire;
- Nell's life will be one round of gloom
- Without a closet for the broom,
- And mine will dreary be and sour
- Unless the bathroom has a shower.
-
- For months and months we've sat and dreamed
- Of paneled walls and ceilings beamed
- And built-in cases for the books,
- An attic room to be the cook's.
- No house will she consent to view
- Unless it has a sun room, too.
-
- There must be wash bowls here and there
- To save much climbing of the stair;
- A sleeping porch we both demand --
- This fad has swept throughout the land --
- And, Oh, 'twill give her heart a wrench
- Not to possess a few doors, French.
-
- I want to dig and walk around
- At least full fifty feet of ground;
- She wants the latest style in tubs;
- I want more room for trees and shrubs,
- And a garage, with light and heat,
- That can be entered from the street.
-
- The trouble is the things we seek
- Cannot be bought for ten-a-week.
- And all the joys for which we sigh
- Are just too rich for us to buy.
- We have the taste to cut a dash:
- The thing we're lacking most is cash.
-
- AN EASY WORLD
-
- It's an easy world to live in if you choose to
- make it so;
- You never need to suffer, save the griefs that
- all must know;
- If you'll stay upon the level and will do the
- best you can
- You will never lack the friendship of a kindly
- fellow man.
-
- Life's an easy road to travel if you'll only walk
- it straight;
- When the clouds begin to gather and your hopes
- begin to fade,
- If you've only toiled in honor you won't have
- to call for aid.
-
- But if you've bartered friendship and the faith
- on which it rests
- For a temporary winning; if you've cheated in
- the tests,
- If with promises you've broken, you have chilled
- the hearts of men;
- It is vain to look for friendship for it will not
- come again.
-
- Oh, the world is full of kindness, thronged with
- men who want to be
- Of some service to their neighbors and they'll
- run to you or me
- When we're needing their assistance if we've
- lived upon the square,
- But they'll spurn us in our trouble if we've
- always been unfair.
-
- It's an easy world to live in; all you really need
- to do
- Is the decent thing and proper and then friends
- will flock to you;
- But let dishonor trail you and some stormy day
- you'll find
- To your heart's supremest sorrow that you've
- made the world unkind.
-
- THE STATES
-
- There is no star within the flag
- That's brighter than its brothers,
- And when of Michigan I brag,
- I'm boasting of the others.
- Just which is which no man can say --
- One star for every state
- Gleams brightly on our flag to-day,
- And every one is great.
-
- The stars that gem the skies at night
- May differ in degree,
- And some are pale and some are bright,
- But in our flag we see
- A sky of blue wherein the stars
- Are equal in design;
- Each has the radiance of Mars
- And all are yours and mine.
-
- The glory that is Michigan's
- Is Colorado's too;
- The same sky Minnesota spans,
- The same sun warms it through;
- And all are one beneath the flag,
- A common hope is ours;
- Our country is the mountain crag,
- The valley and its flowers.
-
- The land we love lies far away
- As well as close at hand;
- He has no vision who would say:
- _This_ state's my native land.
- Though sweet the charms he knows the best,
- Deep down within his heart
- The farthest east, the farthest west
- Of him must be a part.
-
- There is no star within the flag
- That's brighter than its brothers;
- So when of Michigan I brag
- I'm boasting of the others.
- We share alike one purpose true;
- One common end awaits;
- We must in all we dream or do
- Remain _United_ States.
-
- THE OBLIGATION OF FRIENDSHIP
-
- You ought to be fine for the sake of the folks
- Who think you are fine.
- If others have faith in you doubly you're bound
- To stick to the line.
- It's not only on you that dishonor descends:
- You can't hurt yourself without hurting your
- friends.
-
- You ought to be true for the sake of the folks
- Who believe you are true.
- You never should stoop to a deed that your
- friends
- Think you wouldn't do.
- If you're false to yourself, be the blemish but
- small,
- You have injured your friends; you've been false
- to them all.
-
- For friendship, my boy, is a bond between men
- That is founded on truth:
- It believes in the best of the ones that it loves,
- Whether old man or youth;
- And the stern rule it lays down for me and for
- you
- Is to be what our friends think we are, through
- and through.
-
- UNDER THE SKIN OF MEN
-
- Did you ever sit down and talk with men
- In a serious sort of a way,
- On their views of life and ponder then
- On all that they have to say?
- If not, you should in some quiet hour;
- It's a glorious thing to do:
- For you'll find that back of the pomp and power
- Most men have a goal in view.
-
- They'll tell you then that their aim is not
- The clink of the yellow gold;
- That not in the worldly things they've got
- Would they have their stories told.
- They'll say the joys that they treasure most
- Are their good friends, tried and true,
- And an honest name for their own to boast
- And peace when the day is through.
-
- I've talked with men and I think I know
- What's under the toughened skin.
- I've seen their eyes grow bright and glow
- With the fire that burns within.
- And back of the gold and back of the fame
- And back of the selfish strife,
- In most men's breasts you'll find the flame
- Of the nobler things of life.
-
- THE FINER THOUGHT
-
- How fine it is at night to say:
- "I have not wronged a soul to-day.
- I have not by a word or deed,
- In any breast sowed anger's seed,
- Or caused a fellow being pain;
- Nor is there on my crest a stain
- That shame has left. In honor's way,
- With head erect, I've lived this day."
-
- When night slips down and day departs
- And rest returns to weary hearts,
- How fine it is to close the book
- Of records for the day, and look
- Once more along the traveled mile
- And find that all has been worth while;
- To say: "In honor I have toiled;
- My plume is spotless and unsoiled."
-
- Yet cold and stern a man may be
- Retaining his integrity;
- And he may pass from day to day
- A spirit dead, in living clay,
- Observing strictly morals, laws,
- Yet serving but a selfish cause;
- So it is not enough to say:
- "I have not stooped to shame to-day!"
-
- It is a finer, nobler thought
- When day is done and night has brought
- The contemplative hours and sweet,
- And rest to weary hearts and feet,
- If man can stand in truth and say:
- "I have been useful here to-day.
- Back there is one I chanced to see
- With hope newborn because of me.
-
- "This day in honor I have toiled;
- My shining crest is still unsoiled;
- But on the mile I leave behind
- Is one who says that I was kind;
- And someone hums a cheerful song
- Because I chanced to come along."
- Sweet rest at night that man shall own
- Who has not lived his day alone.
-
- STUCK
-
- I'm up against it day by day,
- My ignorance is distressing;
- The things I don't know on the way
- I'm busily confessing.
- Time was I used to think I knew
- Some useful bits of knowledge
- And could be sure of one or two
- Real facts I'd gleaned in college.
- But I'm unfitted for the task
- Of answering things my boy can ask.
-
- Now, who can answer queries queer
- That four-year-olds can think up?
- And tell in simple phrase and clear
- Why fishes do not drink up
- The water in the streams and lakes,
- Or where the wind is going,
- And tell exactly how God makes
- The roses that are growing?
- I'm sure I cannot satisfy
- Each little when, and how, and why.
-
- Had I the wisdom of a sage
- Possessed of all the learning
- That can be gleaned from printed page
- From bookworm's closest turning,
- That eager knowledge-seeking lad
- That questions me so gayly
- Could still go round and boast he had
- With queries floored me daily.
- He'll stick, I'll bet, in less than five
- Brief minutes any man alive.
-
- ETERNAL FRIENDSHIP
-
- Who once has had a friend has found
- The link 'twixt mortal and divine;
- Though now he sleeps in hallowed ground,
- He lives in memory's sacret shrine;
- And there he freely moves about,
- A spirit that has quit the clay,
- And in the times of stress and doubt
- Sustains his friend throughout the day.
-
- No friend we love can ever die;
- The outward form but disappears;
- I know that all my friends are nigh
- Whenever I am moved to tears.
- And when my strength and hope are gone,
- The friends, no more, that once I knew,
- Return to cheer and urge me on
- Just as they always used to do.
-
- They whisper to me in the dark
- Kind words of counsel and of cheer;
- When hope has flickered to a spark
- I feel their gentle spirits near.
- And Oh! because of them I strive
- With all the strength that I can call
- To keep their friendship still alive
- And to be worthy of them all.
-
- Death does not end our friendships true;
- We all are debtors to the dead;
- There, wait on everything we do
- The splendid souls who've gone ahead.
- To them I hold that we are bound
- By double pledges to be fine.
- Who once has had a friend has found
- The link 'twixt mortal and divine.
-
- FAITH
-
- I believe in the world and its bigness and
- splendor:
- That most of the hearts beating round us are
- tender;
- That days are but footsteps and years are but
- miles
- That lead us to beauty and singing and smiles:
- That roses that blossom and toilers that plod
- Are filled with the glorious spirit of God.
-
- I believe in the purpose of everything living:
- That taking is but the forerunner of giving;
- That strangers are friends that we some day
- may meet;
- And not all the bitter can equal the sweet;
- That creeds are but colors, and no man has
- said
- That God loves the yellow rose more than the
- red.
-
- I believe in the path that to-day I am treading,
- That I shall come safe through the dangers I'm
- dreading;
- That even the scoffer shall turn from his ways
- And some day be won back to trust and to
- praise;
- That the leaf on the tree and the thing we call
- Man
- Are sharing alike in His infinite plan.
-
- I believe that all things that are living and
- breathing
- Some richness of beauty to earth are bequeath-
- ing;
- That all that goes out of this world leaves
- behind
- Some duty accomplished for mortals to find;
- That the humblest of creatures our praise is
- deserving,
- For it, with the wisest, the Master is serving.
-
- I
-
- Nobody hates me more than I;
- No enemy have I to-day
- That I so bravely must defy;
- There are no foes along my way,
- However bitter they may be,
- So powerful to injure me
- As I am, nor as quick to spoil
- The beauty of my bit of toil.
-
- Nobody harms me more than I;
- No one is meaner unto me;
- Of all the foes that pass me by
- I am the worst one that I see.
- I am the dangerous man to fear;
- I am the cause of sorrow here;
- Of all men 'gainst my hopes inclined
- I am myself the most unkind.
-
- I do more harmful things to me
- Than all the men who seem to hate;
- I am the fellow that should be
- More dreaded than the works of fate.
- I am the one that I must fight
- With all my will and all my might;
- My foes are better friends to me
- Than I have ever proved to be.
-
- I am the careless foe and mean;
- I am the selfish rival too;
- My enmity to me is seen
- In almost everything I do.
- More courage it requires to beat
- Myself, than all the foes I meet;
- I am more traitorous to me
- Than other men could ever be.
-
- In every struggle I have lost
- I am the one that was to blame;
- My weaknesses cannot be glossed
- By glib excuses. I was lame.
- I that would dare for fame or pelf
- Am far less daring with myself.
- I care not who my foes may be,
- I am my own worst enemy.
-
- THE THINGS THAT HAVEN'T BEEN
- DONE BEFORE
-
- The things that haven't been done before,
- Those are the things to try;
- Columbus dreamed of an unknown shore
- At the rim of the far-flung sky,
- And his heart was bold and his faith was strong
- As he ventured in dangers new,
- And he paid no heed to the jeering throng
- Or the fears of the doubting crew.
-
- The many will follow the beaten track
- With guideposts on the way,
- They live and have lived for ages back
- With a chart for every day.
- Someone has told them it's safe to go
- On the road he has traveled o'er.
- And all that they ever strive to know
- Are the things that were known before.
-
- A few strike out, without map or chart,
- Where never a man has been,
- From the beaten paths they draw apart
- To see what no man has seen.
- There are deeds they hunger alone to do;
- Though battered and bruised and sore,
- They blaze the path for the many, who
- Do nothing not done before.
-
- The things that haven't been done before,
- Are the tasks worth while to-day;
- Are you one of the flock that follows, or
- Are you one that shall lead the way?
- Are you one of the timid souls that quail
- At the jeers of a doubting crew,
- Or dare you, whether you win or fail,
- Strike out for a goal that's new?
-
- REVENGE
-
- If I had hatred in my heart toward my fellow
- man,
- If I were pressed to do him ill, to conjure up a
- plan
- To wound him sorely and to rob his days of all
- their joy,
- I'd wish his wife would go away and take their
- little boy.
-
- I'd waste no time on curses vague, nor try to
- take his gold,
- Nor seek to shatter any plan that he might
- dearly hold.
- A crueler revenge than that for him I would
- bespeak:
- I'd wish his wife and little one might leave him
- for a week.
-
- I'd wish him all the loneliness that comes with
- loss of those
- Who fill his life with laughter and contentment
- and repose.
- I'd wish him empty rooms at night and mocking
- stairs to squeak
- That neither wife nor little boy will greet him
- for a week.
-
- If I despised my fellow man, I'd make my
- hatred known
- By wishing him a week or two of living all
- alone;
- I'd let him know the torture that is mine to
- bear to-day,
- For Buddy and his mother now are miles and
- miles away.
-
- PROMOTION
-
- Promotion comes to him who sticks
- Unto his work and never kicks,
- Who watches neither clock nor sun
- To tell him when his task is done;
- Who toils not by a stated chart,
- Defining to a jot his part,
- But gladly does a little more
- Than he's remunerated for.
- The man, in factory or shop,
- Who rises quickly to the top,
- Is he who gives what can't be bought:
- Intelligent and careful thought.
-
- No one can say just when begins
- The service that promotion wins,
- Or when it ends; 'tis not defined
- By certain hours or any kind
- Of system that has been devised;
- Merit cannot be systemized.
- It is at work when it's at play;
- It serves each minute of the day;
- 'Tis always at its post, to see
- New ways of help and use to be.
- Merit from duty never slinks,
- Its cardinal virtue is -- it thinks!
-
- Promotion comes to him who tries
- Not solely for a selfish prize,
- But day by day and year by year
- Holds his employer's interests dear.
- Who measures not by what he earns
- The sum of labor he returns,
- Nor counts his day of toiling through
- Till he's done all that he can do.
- His strength is not of muscle bred,
- But of the heart and of the head.
- The man who would the top attain
- Must demonstrate he has a brain.
-
- EXPECTATION
-
- Most folks, as I've noticed, in pleasure an'
- strife,
- Are always expecting too much out of life.
- They wail an' they fret
- Just because they don't get
- The best o' the sunshine, the fairest o' flowers,
- The finest o' features, the strongest o' powers;
- They whine an' they whimper an' curse an'
- condemn,
- Coz life isn't always being' partial to them.
-
- Notwithstandin' the pain an' the sufferin' they
- see,
- They cling to the notion that they should go
- free:
- That they shouldn't share
- In life's trouble an' care
- But should always be happy an' never perplexed,
- An' never discouraged or beaten or vexed.
- When life treats 'em roughly an' jolts 'em with
- care,
- They seem to imagine it's bein' unfair.
-
- It's a curious notion folks hold in their pride,
- That their souls should never be tested or tried;
- That others must mourn
- An' be sick an' forlorn
- An' stand by the biers of their loved ones an'
- weep,
- But life from such sorrows their bosoms must
- keep.
- Oh, they mustn't know what it means to be sad,
- Or they'll wail that the treatment they're gettin'
- is bad.
-
- Now life as I view it means pleasure an' pain,
- An' laughter an' weepin' an' sunshine an' rain,
- An' takin' an' givin';
- An' all who are livin'
- Must face it an' bear it the best that they can
- Believin' great Wisdom is workin' the plan.
- An' no one should ever complain it's unfair
- Because at the moment he's tastin' despair.
-
- HARD WORK
-
- One day, in ages dark and dim,
- A toiler, weary, worn and faint,
- Who found his task too much for him,
- Gave voice unto a sad complaint.
- And seeking emphasis to give
- Unto his trials (day-starred!)
- Coupled to "work" this adjective,
- This little word of terror: _Hard_.
-
- And from that day to this has work
- Its frightening description worn;
- 'Tis spoken daily by the shirk,
- The first cloud on the sky at morn.
- To-day when there are tasks to do,
- Save that we keep ourselves on guard
- With fearful doubtings them we view,
- And think and speak of them as hard.
-
- That little but ill-chosen word
- Has wrought great havoc with men's souls,
- Has chilled the hearts ambition stirred
- And held the pass to splendid goals.
- Great dreams have faded and been lost,
- Fine youth by it been sadly marred
- As plants beneath a withering frost,
- Because men thought and whispered: "Hard."
-
- Let's think of work in terms of hope
- And speak of it with words of praise,
- And tell the joy it is to grope
- Along the new, untrodden ways!
- Let's break this habit of despair
- And cheerfully our task regard;
- The road to happiness lies there:
- Why think or speak of it as hard?
-
- GRATITUDE
-
- Be grateful for the kindly friends that walk
- along your way;
- Be grateful for the skies of blue that smile
- from day to day;
- Be grateful for the health you own, the work
- you find to do,
- For round about you there are men less fortu-
- nate than you.
-
- Be grateful for the growing trees, the roses
- soon to bloom,
- The tenderness of kindly hearts that shared your
- days of gloom;
- Be grateful for the morning dew, the grass
- beneath your feet,
- The soft caresses of your babes and all their
- laughter sweet.
-
- Acquire the grateful habit, learn to see how blest
- you are,
- How much there is to gladden life, how little
- life to mar!
- And what if rain shall fall to-day and you with
- grief are sad;
- Be grateful that you can recall the joys that
- you have had.
-
- A REAL MAN
-
- Men are of two kinds, and he
- Was of the kind I'd like to be.
- Some preach their virtues, and a few
- Express their lives by what they do.
- That sort was he. No flowery phrase
- Or glibly spoken words of praise
- Won friends for him. He wasn't cheap
- Or shallow, but his course ran deep,
- And it was pure. You know the kind.
- Not many in a life you find
- Whose deeds outrun their words so far
- That more than what they seem they are.
-
- There are two kinds of lies as well:
- The kind you live, the ones you tell.
- Back through his years from age to youth
- He never acted one untruth.
- Out in the open light he fought
- And didn't care what others thought
- Nor what they said about his fight
- If he believed that he was right.
- The only deeds he ever hid
- Were acts of kindness that he did.
-
- What speech he had was plain and blunt.
- His was an unattractive front.
- Yet children loved him; babe and boy
- Played with the strength he could employ,
- Without one fear, and they are fleet
- To sense injustice and deceit.
- No back door gossip linked his name
- With any shady tale of shame.
- He did not have to compromise
- With evil-doers, shrewd and wise,
- And let them ply their vicious trade
- Because of some past escapade.
-
- Men are of two kinds, and he
- Was of the kind I'd like to be.
- No door at which he ever knocked
- Against his manly form was locked.
- If ever man on earth was free
- And independent, it was he.
- No broken pledge lost him respect,
- He met all men with head erect,
- And when he passed I think there went
- A soul to yonder firmament
- So white, so splendid and so fine
- It came almost to God's design.
-
- THE NEIGHBORLY MAN
-
- Some are eager to be famous, some are striving
- to be great,
- Some are toiling to be leaders of their nation
- or their state,
- And in every man's ambition, if we only under-
- stood,
- There is much that's fine and splendid; every
- hope is mostly good.
- So I cling unto the notion that contented I
- will be
- If the men upon life's pathway find a needed
- friend in me.
-
- I rather like to putter 'round the walks and
- yards of life,
- To spray at night the roses that are burned and
- browned with strife;
- To eat a frugal dinner, but always to have a
- chair
- For the unexpected stranger that my simple
- meal would share.
- I don't care to be a traveler, I would rather be
- the one
- Sitting calmly by the roadside helping weary
- travelers on.
-
- I'd like to be a neighbor in the good old-fash-
- ioned way,
- Finding much to do for others, but not over
- much to say.
- I like to read the papers, but I do not yearn
- to see
- What the journal of the morning has been
- moved to say of me;
- In the silences and shadows I would live my
- life and die
- And depend for fond remembrance on some
- grateful passers-by.
-
- I guess I wasn't fashioned for the brilliant
- things of earth,
- Wasn't gifted much with talent or designed for
- special worth,
- But was just sent here to putter with life's little
- odds and ends
- And keep a simple corner where the stirring
- highway bends,
- And if folks should chance to linger, worn and
- weary through the day,
- To do some needed service and to cheer them
- on their way.
-
- ROSES
-
- When God first viewed the rose He'd made
- He smiled, and thought it passing fair;
- Upon the bloom His hands He laid,
- And gently blessed each petal there.
- He summoned in His artists then
- And bade them paint, as ne'er before,
- Each petal, so that earthly men
- Might love the rose for evermore.
-
- With Heavenly brushes they began
- And one with red limned every leaf,
- To signify the love of man;
- The first rose, white, betokened grief;
- "My rose shall deck the bride," one said
- And so in pink he dipped his brush,
- "And it shall smile beside the dead
- To typify the faded blush."
-
- And then they came unto His throne
- And laid the roses at His feet,
- The crimson bud, the bloom full blown,
- Filling the air with fragrance sweet.
- "Well done, well done!" the Master spake;
- "Henceforth the rose shall bloom on earth:
- One fairer blossom I will make,"
- And then a little babe had birth.
-
- On earth a loving mother lay
- Within a rose-decked room and smiled,
- But from the blossoms turned away
- To gently kiss her little child,
- And then she murmured soft and low,
- "For beauty, here, a mother seeks.
- None but the Master made, I know,
- The roses in a baby's cheeks."
-
- THE JUNK BOX
-
- My father often used to say:
- "My boy don't throw a thing away:
- You'll find a use for it some day."
-
- So in a box he stored up things,
- Bent nails, old washers, pipes and rings,
- And bolts and nuts and rusty springs.
-
- Despite each blemish and each flaw,
- Some use for everything he saw;
- With things material, this was law.
-
- And often when he'd work to do,
- He searched the junk box through and through
- And found old stuff as good as new.
-
- And I have often thought since then,
- That father did the same with men;
- He knew he'd need their help again.
-
- It seems to me he understood
- That men, as well as iron and wood,
- May broken be and still be good.
-
- Despite the vices he'd display
- He never threw a man away,
- But kept him for another day.
-
- A human junk box is this earth
- And into it we're tossed at birth,
- To wait the day we'll be of worth.
-
- Though bent and twisted, weak of will,
- And full of flaws and lacking skill,
- Some service each can render still.
-
- THE BOY THAT WAS
-
- When the hair about the temples starts to show
- the signs of gray,
- And a fellow realizes that he's wandering far
- away
- From the pleasures of his boyhood and his
- youth, and never more
- Will know the joy of laughter as he did in days
- of yore,
- Oh, it's then he starts to thinking of a stubby
- little lad
- With a face as brown as berries and a soul
- supremely glad.
-
- When a gray-haired dreamer wanders down the
- lanes of memory
- And forgets the living present for the time of
- "used-to-be,"
- He takes off his shoes and stockings, and he
- throws his coat away,
- And he's free from all restrictions, save the rules
- of manly play.
- He may be in richest garments, but bareheaded
- in the sun
- He forgets his proud successes and the riches
- he has won.
-
- Oh, there's not a man alive but that would give
- his all to be
- The stubby little fellow that in dreamland he
- can see,
- And the splendors that surround him and the
- joys about him spread
- Only seem to rise to taunt him with the boyhood
- that has fled.
- When the hair about the temples starts to show
- Time's silver stain,
- Then the richest man that's living yearns to be
- a boy again.
-
- AS FALL THE LEAVES
-
- As fall the leaves, so drop the days
- In silence from the tree of life;
- Born for a little while to blaze
- In action in the heat of strife,
- And then to shrivel with Time's blast
- And fade forever in the past.
-
- In beauty once the leaf was seen;
- To all it offered gentle shade;
- Men knew the splendor of its green
- That cheered them so, would quickly fade:
- And quickly, too, must pass away
- All that is splendid of to-day.
-
- To try to keep the leaves were vain:
- Men understand that they must fall;
- Why should they bitterly complain
- When sorrows come to one and all?
- Why should they mourn the passing day
- That must depart along the way?
-
-
- INDEX
-
- Answering Him....................... 126
- Apple Tree, The..................... 68
- As Fall the Leaves.................. 188
- At the Door......................... 132
- Autumn at the Orchard............... 136
-
- Be a Friend......................... 97
- Bear Story, A....................... 134
- Boy That Was, The................... 186
- Breakfast Time, At.................. 50
- Bumps and Bruises Doctor, The....... 107
-
- Canning Time........................ 66
- Can't............................... 52
- Care-Free Youth..................... 78
- Challenge........................... 145
- Courage............................. 72
-
- Defeat.............................. 111
- Division............................ 141
- Dull Road, The...................... 67
- Duty................................ 133
- Duty to Our Flag, Our............... 58
-
- Easy World, An...................... 158
- Epicure, The........................ 74
- Eternal Friendship.................. 167
- Expectation......................... 176
-
- Failures............................ 83
- Faith............................... 168
- Father.............................. 46
- Father and Son...................... 128
- Fishing Cure, The................... 102
- Finer Thought, The.................. 164
- Finest Age, The..................... 76
- Folks............................... 36
- Friend's Greeting, A................ 32
-
- Gentle Gardener, The................ 75
- Going Home for Christmas, On........ 24
- Gratitude........................... 179
- Greatness........................... 73
- Guessing Time....................... 148
-
- Happiest Days, The.................. 88
- Happy Slow Thinker, The............. 103
- Hard Knocks......................... 43
- Hard Work........................... 177
- Home................................ 28
- Homesick............................ 117
- Home Town, The...................... 70
- House-Hunting....................... 156
- How Do You Tackle Your Work?........ 62
- Hunter, The......................... 59
-
- I................................... 170
- It Isn't Costly..................... 14
- It's September...................... 60
-
- James Whitcomb Riley................ 54
- Joy of a Dog, The................... 116
- June Couple, The.................... 130
- Junk Box, The....................... 185
-
- Laddies............................. 48
- Lady in the Electric, To the........ 122
- Life................................ 63
- Life's Tests........................ 85
- Little Master Mischievous........... 38
- Living Beauties, The................ 49
-
- Ma and Her Check Book............... 100
- Ma and the Auto..................... 22
- Man, A.............................. 142
- Man, A Real......................... 180
- Man Who Couldn't Save, The.......... 124
- Mother.............................. 19
- Mother's Day........................ 140
- Mother's Glasses.................... 94
- My Creed............................ 15
- My Paw Said So...................... 80
-
- Neighborly Man, The................. 182
- No Place to Go...................... 110
-
- Obligation of Friendship, The....... 162
- Old Friends......................... 34
- Only a Dad.......................... 42
- Opportunity......................... 39
- Other Fellow, The................... 57
- Out-of-Doors........................ 104
-
- Path That Leads to Home, The........ 30
- Patriotic Wish, A................... 112
- Peace............................... 109
- Peaceful Warriors, The.............. 82
- People Liked Him.................... 152
- Perfect Dinner Table, The........... 118
- Prayer, A........................... 121
- Preparedness........................ 81
- Price of Joy, The................... 113
- Princess Pat's, The................. 96
- Promotion........................... 174
- Purpose............................. 93
-
- Raisin Pie.......................... 84
- Ready Artists, The.................. 86
- Real Bait, The...................... 90
- Real Singing........................ 106
- Results and Roses................... 56
- Revenge............................. 173
- Rich................................ 21
- Roses............................... 184
- Rough Little Rascal, The............ 13
-
- Selfish............................. 20
- Song, A............................. 33
- Sorrow Tugs, The.................... 40
- Spring in the Trenches.............. 44
- States, The......................... 160
- Story Telling....................... 64
- Stuck............................... 166
- Success and Failure................. 77
- Sugar Camp, At...................... 26
- Sulkers, The........................ 92
-
- Take Home a Smile................... 71
- Thanksgiving........................ 98
- Things That Haven't Been Done Before 172
- Things That Make Soldier Great, The. 114
- Toast to Happiness, A............... 146
- To-morrow........................... 120
- Treasures........................... 144
- True Nobility....................... 91
-
- Understanding....................... 150
- Under the Skin of Men............... 163
-
- Vow, A.............................. 143
-
- Wish, A............................. 16
- What a Baby Costs................... 18
- When Father Shook the Stove......... 154
- When Pa Comes Home.................. 138
- When Pa Counts...................... 108
- When You Know a Fellow.............. 11
-
-
-
-
- INDEX OF FIRST LINES
-
- A man doesn't whine at his losses............. 142
- A man must earn his hour of peace............. 109
- Are you fond of your wife and your children... 57
- As fall the leaves, so drop the days.......... 188
- A smudge on his nose and a smear on his
- cheek....................................... 13
- A table cloth that slightly soiled............ 118
- A touch of the plain and the prairie.......... 96
- At Sugar Camp the cook is kind................ 26
-
- Be a friend. You don't need money............. 97
- Before we take an auto ride Pa says to Ma..... 22
- Be grateful for the kindly friends............ 179
- Be more than his dad.......................... 128
-
- Can't is the worst word that's written........ 52
- Cheek that is tanned by the wind of the north. 59
- Courage isn't a brilliant dash................ 72
-
- Did you ever sit down and talk with men....... 163
- Does the grouch get richer quicker............ 14
-
- Foxes can talk if you know how to listen...... 80
- Full many a time a thought has come........... 103
-
- Gentle hands that never weary................. 140
- God grant me kindly thought................... 121
-
- He little knew the sorrow that was in his
- vacant chair................................ 24
- He spent what he made, or he gave it away..... 124
- He was going to be all that a mortal should... 120
- He wiped his shoes before his door............ 132
- How do you tackle your work each day.......... 62
- How fine it is at night to say................ 164
- "How much do babies cost?" said he............ 18
-
- I am selfish in my wishin' every sort o' joy.. 20
- I believe in the world........................ 168
- I'd like to be a boy again.................... 16
- I'd like to be the sort of friend............. 32
- I'd like to be the sort of man................ 112
- I'd like to leave but daffodills.............. 75
- I do not say new friends are not considerate.. 34
- I do not think all failure's undeserved....... 77
- If I had hatred in my heart................... 173
- If never a sorrow came to us.................. 85
- I might not ever scale the mountain heights... 143
- I'm not the man to say that failure's sweet... 43
- I'm the bumps and bruises doctor.............. 107
- I'm up against it day by day.................. 166
- I never knew, until they went................. 49
- It's an easy world to live in if you choose... 158
- It's coming time for planting................. 44
- It's guessing time at our house............... 148
- It's September, and the orchards are afire.... 60
- It's the dull road that leads to the gay road. 67
- It's tough when you are homesick.............. 117
- It takes a heap o' livin' in a house to make
- it home..................................... 28
- I've sipped a rich man's sparkling wine....... 74
- I've told about the times that Ma can't find
- her pocketbook.............................. 94
-
- Lady in the show case carriage................ 122
- Less hate and greed........................... 58
- Let others sing their songs of war............ 82
- Life is a challenge to the bold............... 145
- Life is a gift to be used every day........... 63
- Little Master Mischievous, that's the name.... 38
-
- Ma has a dandy little book.................... 100
- Ma says no, it's too much care................ 116
- Men are of two kind, and he................... 180
- Most every night when they're in bed.......... 64
- Most folks, as I've noticed, in pleasure an'
- strife...................................... 176
- My father often used to say................... 185
- My Pa he eats his breakfast................... 50
-
- Never a sigh for the cares that she bore...... 19
- Nobody hates me more than I................... 170
- None knows the day that friends must part..... 33
- No one is beat till he quits.................. 111
- Not for the sake of the gold.................. 93
-
- One day, in ages dim and dark................. 177
- Only a dad with a tired face.................. 42
-
- Pa's not so very big or brave................. 108
- People liked him, not because................. 152
- Promotion comes to him who sticks............. 174
-
- Right must not live in idleness............... 85
-
- She is fair to see and sweet.................. 130
- So long as men shall be on earth.............. 39
- Some are eager to be famous................... 182
- Some folks leave home for money............... 70
- Some folks I know, when friends drop in....... 144
-
- Take home a smile; forget the petty cares..... 71
- Thankful for the glory of the old Red, White
- and Blue.................................... 98
- The happiest nights........................... 110
- The green is in the meadow.................... 86
- The kids are out-of-doors once more........... 104
- The little path that leads to home............ 30
- The man who wants a garden fair............... 56
- There is no star within the flag.............. 160
- There must be great rejoicin' on the Golden
- Shore to-day................................ 54
- There's a heap of pent-up goodness............ 84
- There's a lot of joy in the smiling world..... 40
- There's a wondrous smell of spices............ 66
- There's nothing that builds up a toil-weary
- soul........................................ 102
- There was a bear -- his name was Jim.......... 134
- The skies are blue and the sun is out......... 78
- The sumac's flaming scarlet................... 136
- The things that haven't been done before...... 172
- The things that make a soldier great.......... 114
- The world's too busy now to pause............. 92
- 'Tis better to have tried in vain............. 83
- To do your little bit of toil................. 133
- To gentle ways I am inclined.................. 90
- To happiness I raise my glass................. 146
- To live as gently as I can.................... 15
- Time was when spring returned we went......... 156
- 'Twas not so many years ago................... 154
-
- Used to wonder just why father................ 46
-
- We can be great by helping one another........ 73
- We was speakin' of folks, jes' common folks... 36
- When an apple tree is ready for the world..... 68
- When God first viewed the rose He'd made...... 184
- When he was only nine months old.............. 76
- When I was young and frivolous................ 150
- When Pa comes home, I'm at the door........... 138
- "When shall I be a man?" he said.............. 126
- When the hair about the temples starts to
- show the signs of gray...................... 186
- When you get to know a fellow................. 11
- Who does his task from day to day............. 91
- Who has a troop of romping youth.............. 21
- Who once has had a friend has found........... 167
-
- You cannot gather every rose.................. 141
- You can talk about your music................. 106
- You do not know it, little man................ 88
- You don't begrudge the labor.................. 113
- You ought to be fine for the sake of the folks 162
-
-
-
-
- End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of A Heap O' Livin' by Edgar A. Guest
-
-
-
-