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Title: A Heap o' Livin'

Author: Edgar A. Guest

Release Date: April 29, 2008 [EBook #328]

Language: English

Character set encoding: ASCII

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HEAP O' LIVIN' ***














 A Heap o' Livin'


 by

 Edgar A. Guest




   To
   Marjorie and Buddy
   this little book of verse
   is affectionately
   dedicated
   by their Daddy




{11}

       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 disappear.
 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 understand
   his ways,
 Then his faults won't really matter, for you'll
   find a lot to praise.

{13}

       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.

{14}

          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.

{15}

          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 stoop 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.

{16}

             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 boyhood
     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,

{17}

   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.

{18}

   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.
 All this a baby costs, and yet
 His smile is worth it all, you bet."

{19}

           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.

{20}

            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
    comforts 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.

{21}

            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.

{22}

          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!"

{24}

     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 sorrowful
     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.

{26}

      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.

{28}

            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.

{30}

     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.

{32}

          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.

{33}

         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.

{34}

           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
    struggles 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.

{36}

            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.

{38}

      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 tumbling 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.

{39}

        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.

{40}

        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, whenever
    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.

{42}

           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.

{43}

           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.

{44}

         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.

{46}

          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.

{48}

        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.

{49}

     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.

{50}

          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.

{52}

             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_."

{54}

        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' preparin'
    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.

{56}

     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.

{57}

          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.

{58}

   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.

{59}

         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.

{60}

         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 children'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 darkness
    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 ripeness
    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.

{62}

     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.

{63}

         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.

{64}

         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.

{66}

        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 fragrant 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.

{67}

            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.

{68}

           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.

{70}

     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.

{71}

          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.

{72}

         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.

{73}

         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.

{74}

          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.

{75}

           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.

{76}

         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."

{77}

        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.

{78}

          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.

{80}

          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.

{81}

       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.


{82}

     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.

{83}

         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.

{84}

           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 appetite
 An' just fill a fellow's being with a thrill o'
    real delight;
 But for downright solid goodness that comes
    drippin' from the sky
 There is nothing quite the equal of a chunk o'
    raisin pie.

 I'm admittin' tastes are diff'runt, I'm not settin'
    up myself
 As the judge an' final critic of the good things
    on the shelf.
 I'm sort o' payin' tribute to a simple joy on
    earth,
 Sort o' feebly testifyin' to its lasting charm an'
    worth,
 An' I'll hold to this conclusion till it comes my
     time to die,
 That there's no dessert that's finer than a chunk
    o' raisin pie.

{85}

         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.

{86}

           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 beautiful
    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.

{88}

   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.

{90}

     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.

{91}

      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.

{92}

     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.

{93}

       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.

{94}

          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!  Wherever
     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
     completely 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.

{96}

       THE PRINCESS PAT'S

   _Written when the Canadian regiment
    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.

{97}

        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.

{98}

           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 sunlight
    in their eyes,
 And the joy of radiant mothers and their evening
    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
    perfume 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.

{100}

         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 summoned
   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!"

{102}

         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.

{103}

     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.

{104}

        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.

{106}

         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 trilling
   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.

{107}

    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.

{108}

         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."

{109}

            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.

{110}

     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.

{111}

         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.

{112}

           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.

{113}

         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.

{114}

     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 fighting
    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 children
    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 fighting
    for them all.

{116}

     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.

{117}

          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
     burdened 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.

{118}

    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.

{120}

         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.

{121}

       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.

{122}

   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.

{124}

     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.

{126}

      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."

{128}

    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.

{130}

    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.

{132}

       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.

{133}

           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!

{134}

         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.

{136}

     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'.

{138}

     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!"

{140}

         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?

{141}

        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.

{142}

           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.

{143}

            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.

{144}

           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."

{145}

        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.

{146}

     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.

{148}

         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 joyous
    faces there
 Keep me nightly guessing wildly:  "Is it something
    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
    laughter 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.

{150}

         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 disgrace;
 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."

{152}

    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.

{154}

 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.

{156}

       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.

{158}

         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.

{160}

         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.

{162}

     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.

{163}

       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.

{164}

     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.

{166}

          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.

{167}

      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 sacred 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.

{168}

         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 bequeathing;
 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.

{170}

          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.

{172}

   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?

{173}

           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.

{174}

        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.

{176}

         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.

{177}

        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?

{179}

         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
    fortunate 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.

{180}

         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.

{182}

            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 understood,
 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-fashioned 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.

{184}

           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."

{185}

       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.

{186}

            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.

{188}

      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











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