The Waiter at the Camp

When it was time to say good-bye.

"What does his father think and say?"

The neighbors ask from day to day.

"Oh, he's a man," they answer then.

"And you know how it is with men.

But little do they ever say,

They do not feel the self-same way;

He seems indifferent and grim

And yet he's very proud of him."

Indifferent and grim! Oh, heart,

Be brave enough to play the part,

Let not the grief in you be shown,

Keep all your loneliness unknown,

To you the women folks must turn

For comfort when their sorrows burn.

You must not at this time reveal

The pain and anguish that you feel.

Oh, tongue, be silent through the years,

And eyes, keep back always the tears,

And let them never see or know

My hidden weight of grief and woe.

Though every golden dream I had

Was centered in my little lad,

Alone my sorrow I must bear.

They must not know how much I care.

Though women folks may talk and weep,

A man, unseen, his grief must keep,

And hide behind his smile and pride

The loneliness that dwells inside.

And so, from day to day, I go,

Playing the part of man, although

Beneath the rough outside and grim,

I think and dream and pray for him.

The officers' friend is the waiter at camp.

In the night air 'twas cold and was bitterly damp,

And they asked me to dine, which I readily did,

For at dining I've talents I never keep hid.

Then a bright-eyed young fellow came in with the meat,

And straightway the troop of us started to eat.

I silently noticed that young fellow wait

At each officer's side 'til he'd filled up his plate;

I was startled a bit at the very first look

By the size of the helping each officer took,

And I thought as I sat there among them that night

Of the army's effect on a man's appetite.

The waiter at last brought the platter to me

And modestly proper I started to be.

A small piece of meat then I gracefully took;

The young fellow stood there and gave me a look.

"Better get all you want," he remarked to me then,

"I pass this way once, but I don't come again."

I turned in amazement. He nodded his head

In a way that convinced me he meant what he said.

I knew from his manner and smile on his lip

That the rule in the army is "no second trip."

And I thought as he left me my food to attack,

Life gives us one chance, but it never comes back.

When he was just a lad in school,

He used to sit around and fool

And watch the clock and say:

"I can't see that I'll ever need

This stuff the teacher makes me read,

I'll work no more to-day.

And anyhow it's almost June

And school days will be over soon."

One time we played a baseball game,

And when a chance for stealing came,

On second base he stood,

And when we asked him why, he said:

"What was the use, they're far ahead,

One run would do no good.

The game is almost over now,

We couldn't win it anyhow."

The same old slacker still is he,

With men at war on land and sea,

And our lads plunging in it;

He spreads afar his old excuse.

"I'd like to help, but what's the use,

The Allied troops will win it.

There's nothing now to make us fret, there,

They'll have it won before we get there."

The worst of slackers is the man

Who will not help whene'er he can,

But plays the idle rover,

And tells to all beset with doubt

There's naught to be alarmed about,

The storm will soon be over.

Let no such dangerous person lead us,

To-day in France they sadly need us.

Here's to you, little mother,

With your boy so far away;

May the joy of service smother

All your grief this Christmas day;

May the magic of his splendor

Thrill your spirit through and through

And may all that's fine and tender

Make a smiling day for you.

May you never know the sadness

That from day to day you dread;

May you never find but gladness

In the Flag that's overhead;

May the good God watch above him

As he stands to duty stern,

And at last to all who love him

May he have a safe return.

Little mother, take the blessing

Of a grateful nation's heart;

May the news that is distressing

Never cause your tears to start;

May there be no fears to haunt you,

And no lonely hours and sad;

May your trials never daunt you,

But may every day be glad.

Little Mother, could I do it,

This my Christmas gift would be:

That he'd safely battle through it,

This to you I'd guarantee.

And I'd pledge to you this morning

Joys to banish all your cares,

Gifts of gold and silver scorning,

I would answer all your prayers.

Better than land or gold or trade

Are a high ideal and a purpose true;

Better than all of the wealth we've made

Is the work for others that now we do.

For Rome grew rich and she turned to song

And danced to music and drank her wine,

But she sapped the strength of her fibres strong

And a gilded shroud was her splendor fine.

The Rome of old with its wealth and wine

Was the handiwork of a sturdy race;

They builded well and they made it fine

And they dreamed of it as their children's place.

They thought the joys they had won to give,

And which seemed so certain and fixed and sure,

To the end of time in the world would live

And the Rome they'd fashioned would long endure.

They passed to their children the hoarded gold,

Their marble halls and their fertile fields!

But not the spirit of Rome of old,

Nor the Roman courage that never yields.

They left them the wealth that their hands had won,

But they failed to leave them a purpose true.

They left them thinking life's work all done,

And Rome went down and was lost to view.

We must guard ourselves lest we follow Rome.

We must leave our children the finer things.

We must teach them love of the spot called home

And the lasting joy that a purpose brings.

For vain are our Flag and our battles won,

And vain are our lands and our stores of gold,

If our children feel that life's work is done.

We must give them a high ideal to hold.

"My Crown Prince was fine and fair," a sorrowful

father said,

"But he marched away with his regiment and

they tell me that he's dead!

'We all must go,' he whispered low, 'We must

fight for the Fatherland.'

Now the heart of me's torn with the grief I

know, and I cannot understand,

For none of the Kaiser's princes lie out there

where my soldier sleeps;

Here's a land where grief is the common lot, but

never the Kaiser weeps.

"My Crown Prince was a kindly prince, and his

eyes were gentle, too,

And glad were the days of his youth to me when

his wonderful smile I knew.

Then the Kaiser flattered and spoke him well,

and he sent him out to die,

But his Crown Prince hasn't felt one hurt and

the heart of me questions why?

He talks of war in his regal way and he boasts

of his strength to strike,

But his boys all live and he doesn't know what

the sting of a bullet's like.

"Rebellion gnaws at the soul of me as I think

of his Crown Prince gay,

And my Prince cold in the arms of death, and

harsh are the things I say.

I join with the grief-torn muttering men who

challenge the Kaiser's right

To build his joys on the graves of ours. We

shall rise in our wrath to smite!

And this is the thing we shall ask of him: to

give us the reason why

Our boys must fall on his battlefields, but never

his boys must die?"

The biggest moment in our lives was that when first he cried,

From that day unto this, for him, we've struggled side by side.

We can recount his daily deeds, and backwards we can look,

And proudly live again the time when first a step he took.

I see him trudging off to school, his mother at his side,

And when she left him there alone she hurried home and cried.

And then the sturdy chap of eight that was, I proudly see,

Who packed a little grip and took a fishing trip with me.

Among the lists of boys to go his name has now appeared;

To us has come the sacrifice that mothers all have feared;

And though we dread the parting hour when he shall march away,

We love him and the Flag too much to ask of him to stay.

His baby ways shall march with him, and every joy we've had,

Somewhere in France some day shall be a little brown-eyed lad;

A toddler and a child at school, the chum that once I knew

Shall wear our country's uniform, for they've been drafted, too.

You have given me riches and ease,

You have given me joys through the years,

I have sat in the shade of your trees,

With the song of your birds in my ears.


Back to IndexNext