Cliffs of ScotlandSixteen Americans who died on the Tuscania are buried at the water's edge at the base of the rocky cliffs at a Scottish port.—(News Dispatch.)Cliffs of Scotland, guard them well,Shield them from the blizzard's rage;Let your granite towers tellThat those sleeping heroes fellIn the service of their age.Cliffs of Scotland, they were ours!Now forever they are thine!Guard them with your mighty powers!Barren are your rocks of flowers,But their splendor makes them fine.Cliffs of Scotland, at your baseFreedom's finest children lie;Keep them in your strong embrace!Tell the young of every raceSuch as they shall never die.Cliffs of Scotland, never moreMen shall think you stern and cold;Splendor now has found your shore;Unto you the ocean boreFreedom's precious sons to hold.
Sixteen Americans who died on the Tuscania are buried at the water's edge at the base of the rocky cliffs at a Scottish port.—(News Dispatch.)
Cliffs of Scotland, guard them well,Shield them from the blizzard's rage;Let your granite towers tellThat those sleeping heroes fellIn the service of their age.
Cliffs of Scotland, they were ours!Now forever they are thine!Guard them with your mighty powers!Barren are your rocks of flowers,But their splendor makes them fine.
Cliffs of Scotland, at your baseFreedom's finest children lie;Keep them in your strong embrace!Tell the young of every raceSuch as they shall never die.
Cliffs of Scotland, never moreMen shall think you stern and cold;Splendor now has found your shore;Unto you the ocean boreFreedom's precious sons to hold.
Mother's Party Dress"Some day," says Ma, "I'm goin' to getA party dress all trimmed with jet,An' hire a seamstress in, an' sheIs goin' to fit it right on me;An' then, when I'm invited outTo teas an' socials hereabout,I'll put it on an' look as fineAs all th' women friends of mine."An' Pa looked up: "I sold a cow,"Says he, "go down an' get it now."An' Ma replied: "I guess I'll wait,We've other needs that's just as great.The children need some clothes to wear,An' there are shoes we must repair;It ain't important now to getA dress fer me, at least not yet;I really can't afford it."Ma's talked about that dress fer years;How she'd have appliqued revers;The kind o' trimmin' she would pick;How 't would be made to fit her slick;The kind o' black silk she would choose,The pattern she would like to use.An' I can mind the time when PaGive twenty dollars right to Ma,An' said: "Now that's enough, I guess,Go buy yourself that party dress."An' Ma would take th' bills an' smile,An' say: "I guess I'll wait awhile;Aunt Kitty's poorly now with chills,She needs a doctor and some pills;I'll buy some things fer her, I guess;An' anyhow, about that dress,I really can't afford it."An' so it's been a-goin' on,Her dress fer other things has gone;Some one in need or some one sickHas always touched her to th' quick;Or else, about th' time 'at sheCould get th' dress, she'd always seeThe children needin' somethin' new;An' she would go an' get it, too.An' when we frowned at her, she'd smileAn' say: "The dress can wait awhile."Although her mind is set on laces,Her heart goes out to other places;An' somehow, too, her money goesIn ways that only mother knows.While there are things her children lackShe won't put money on her back;An' that is why she hasn't gotA party dress of silk, an' notBecause she can't afford it.
"Some day," says Ma, "I'm goin' to getA party dress all trimmed with jet,An' hire a seamstress in, an' sheIs goin' to fit it right on me;An' then, when I'm invited outTo teas an' socials hereabout,I'll put it on an' look as fineAs all th' women friends of mine."An' Pa looked up: "I sold a cow,"Says he, "go down an' get it now."An' Ma replied: "I guess I'll wait,We've other needs that's just as great.The children need some clothes to wear,An' there are shoes we must repair;It ain't important now to getA dress fer me, at least not yet;I really can't afford it."
Ma's talked about that dress fer years;How she'd have appliqued revers;The kind o' trimmin' she would pick;How 't would be made to fit her slick;The kind o' black silk she would choose,The pattern she would like to use.An' I can mind the time when PaGive twenty dollars right to Ma,An' said: "Now that's enough, I guess,Go buy yourself that party dress."An' Ma would take th' bills an' smile,An' say: "I guess I'll wait awhile;Aunt Kitty's poorly now with chills,She needs a doctor and some pills;I'll buy some things fer her, I guess;An' anyhow, about that dress,I really can't afford it."
An' so it's been a-goin' on,Her dress fer other things has gone;Some one in need or some one sickHas always touched her to th' quick;Or else, about th' time 'at sheCould get th' dress, she'd always seeThe children needin' somethin' new;An' she would go an' get it, too.An' when we frowned at her, she'd smileAn' say: "The dress can wait awhile."Although her mind is set on laces,Her heart goes out to other places;An' somehow, too, her money goesIn ways that only mother knows.While there are things her children lackShe won't put money on her back;An' that is why she hasn't gotA party dress of silk, an' notBecause she can't afford it.
Little FishermenA little ship goes out to seaAs soon as we have finished tea;Off yonder where the big moon glowsThis tiny little vessel goes,But never grown-up eyes have seenThe ports to which this ship has been;Upon the shore the old folks standTill morning brings it back to land.In search of smiles this little shipEach evening starts upon a trip;Just smiles enough to last the dayIs it allowed to bring away;So nightly to some golden shoreIt must set out alone for more,And sail the rippling sea for milesUntil the hold is full of smiles.By gentle hands the sails are spread;The stars are glistening overheadAnd in that hour when tiny shipsPrepare to make their evening tripsThe sea becomes a wondrous place,As beautiful as mother's face;And all the day's disturbing criesGive way to soothing lullabies.No clang of bell or warning shoutIs heard on shore when they put out;The little vessels slip awayAs silently as does the day.And all night long on sands of goldThey cast their nets, and fill the holdWith smiles and joys beyond compare,To cheer a world that's sad with care.
A little ship goes out to seaAs soon as we have finished tea;Off yonder where the big moon glowsThis tiny little vessel goes,But never grown-up eyes have seenThe ports to which this ship has been;Upon the shore the old folks standTill morning brings it back to land.
In search of smiles this little shipEach evening starts upon a trip;Just smiles enough to last the dayIs it allowed to bring away;So nightly to some golden shoreIt must set out alone for more,And sail the rippling sea for milesUntil the hold is full of smiles.
By gentle hands the sails are spread;The stars are glistening overheadAnd in that hour when tiny shipsPrepare to make their evening tripsThe sea becomes a wondrous place,As beautiful as mother's face;And all the day's disturbing criesGive way to soothing lullabies.
No clang of bell or warning shoutIs heard on shore when they put out;The little vessels slip awayAs silently as does the day.And all night long on sands of goldThey cast their nets, and fill the holdWith smiles and joys beyond compare,To cheer a world that's sad with care.
The Cookie-LadyShe is gentle, kind and fair,And there's silver in her hair;She has known the touch of sorrow,But the smile of her is sweet;And sometimes it seems to meThat her mission is to beThe gracious cookie-ladyTo the youngsters of the street.All the children in the blockDaily stand beside the crock,Where she keeps the sugar cookiesThat the little folks enjoy;And no morning passes o'erThat a tapping at her doorDoesn't warn her of the visitOf a certain little boy.She has made him feel that heHas a natural right to beIn her kitchen when she's bakingPies and cakes and ginger bread;And each night to me he bringsAll the pretty, tender thingsAbout little by-gone childrenThat the cookie-lady said.Oh, dear cookie-lady sweet,May you beautify our streetWith your kind and gentle presenceMany more glad years, I pray;May the skies be bright above you,As you've taught our babes to love you;You will scar their hearts with sorrowIf you ever go away.Life is strange, and when I scan it,I believe God tries to plan it,So that where He sends his babiesIn that neighborhood to dwell,One of rare and gracious beautyShall abide, whose sweetest dutyIs to be the cookie-ladyThat the children love so well.
She is gentle, kind and fair,And there's silver in her hair;She has known the touch of sorrow,But the smile of her is sweet;And sometimes it seems to meThat her mission is to beThe gracious cookie-ladyTo the youngsters of the street.
All the children in the blockDaily stand beside the crock,Where she keeps the sugar cookiesThat the little folks enjoy;And no morning passes o'erThat a tapping at her doorDoesn't warn her of the visitOf a certain little boy.
She has made him feel that heHas a natural right to beIn her kitchen when she's bakingPies and cakes and ginger bread;And each night to me he bringsAll the pretty, tender thingsAbout little by-gone childrenThat the cookie-lady said.
Oh, dear cookie-lady sweet,May you beautify our streetWith your kind and gentle presenceMany more glad years, I pray;May the skies be bright above you,As you've taught our babes to love you;You will scar their hearts with sorrowIf you ever go away.
Life is strange, and when I scan it,I believe God tries to plan it,So that where He sends his babiesIn that neighborhood to dwell,One of rare and gracious beautyShall abide, whose sweetest dutyIs to be the cookie-ladyThat the children love so well.
Pleasure's SignsThere's a bump on his brow and a smear on his cheekThat is plainly the stain of his tears;At his neck there's a glorious sun-painted streak,The bronze of his happiest years.Oh, he's battered and bruised at the end of the day,But smiling before me he stands,And somehow I like to behold him that way.Yes, I like him with dirt on his hands.Last evening he painfully limped up to meHis tale of adventure to tell;He showed me a grime-covered cut on his knee,And told me the place where he fell.His clothing was stained to the color of clay,And he looked to be nobody's lad,But somehow I liked to behold him that way,For it spoke of the fun that he'd had.Let women-folk prate as they will of a boyWho is heedless of knickers and shirt;I hold that the badge of a young fellow's joyAre cheeks that are covered with dirt.So I look for him nightly to greet me that way,His joys and misfortunes to tell,For I know by the signs that he wears of his playThat the lad I'm so fond of is well.
There's a bump on his brow and a smear on his cheekThat is plainly the stain of his tears;At his neck there's a glorious sun-painted streak,The bronze of his happiest years.Oh, he's battered and bruised at the end of the day,But smiling before me he stands,And somehow I like to behold him that way.Yes, I like him with dirt on his hands.
Last evening he painfully limped up to meHis tale of adventure to tell;He showed me a grime-covered cut on his knee,And told me the place where he fell.His clothing was stained to the color of clay,And he looked to be nobody's lad,But somehow I liked to behold him that way,For it spoke of the fun that he'd had.
Let women-folk prate as they will of a boyWho is heedless of knickers and shirt;I hold that the badge of a young fellow's joyAre cheeks that are covered with dirt.So I look for him nightly to greet me that way,His joys and misfortunes to tell,For I know by the signs that he wears of his playThat the lad I'm so fond of is well.
Snooping 'RoundLast night I caught him on his knees and looking underneath the bed,And oh, the guilty look he wore, and oh, the stammered words he said,When I, pretending to be cross, said: "Hey, young fellow, what's your game?"As if, back in the long ago, I hadn't also played the same;As if, upon my hands and knees, I hadn't many a time been foundWhen, thinking of the Christmas Day, I'd gone upstairs to snoop around.But there he stood and hung his head; the rascal knew it wasn't fair."I jes' was wonderin'," he said, "jes' what it was that's under there.It's somepin' all wrapped up an' I thought mebbe it might be a sled,Becoz I saw a piece of wood 'at's stickin' out all painted red.""If mother knew," I said to him, "you'd get a licking, I'll be bound,But just clear out of here at once, and don't you ever snoop around."And as he scampered down the stairs I stood and chuckled to myself,As I remembered how I'd oft explored the topmost closet shelf.It all came back again to me—with what a shrewd and cunning wayI, too, had often sought to solve the mysteries of Christmas Day.How many times my daddy, too, had come upstairs without a soundAnd caught me, just as I'd begun my clever scheme to snoop around.And oh, I envied him his plight; I envied him the joy he feelsWho knows that every drawer that's locked some treasure dear to him conceals;I envied him his Christmas fun and wished that it again were mineTo seek to solve the mysteries by paper wrapped and bound by twine.Some day he'll come to understand that all the time I stood and frowned,I saw a boy of years ago who also used to snoop around.
Last night I caught him on his knees and looking underneath the bed,And oh, the guilty look he wore, and oh, the stammered words he said,When I, pretending to be cross, said: "Hey, young fellow, what's your game?"As if, back in the long ago, I hadn't also played the same;As if, upon my hands and knees, I hadn't many a time been foundWhen, thinking of the Christmas Day, I'd gone upstairs to snoop around.
But there he stood and hung his head; the rascal knew it wasn't fair."I jes' was wonderin'," he said, "jes' what it was that's under there.It's somepin' all wrapped up an' I thought mebbe it might be a sled,Becoz I saw a piece of wood 'at's stickin' out all painted red.""If mother knew," I said to him, "you'd get a licking, I'll be bound,But just clear out of here at once, and don't you ever snoop around."
And as he scampered down the stairs I stood and chuckled to myself,As I remembered how I'd oft explored the topmost closet shelf.It all came back again to me—with what a shrewd and cunning wayI, too, had often sought to solve the mysteries of Christmas Day.How many times my daddy, too, had come upstairs without a soundAnd caught me, just as I'd begun my clever scheme to snoop around.
And oh, I envied him his plight; I envied him the joy he feelsWho knows that every drawer that's locked some treasure dear to him conceals;I envied him his Christmas fun and wished that it again were mineTo seek to solve the mysteries by paper wrapped and bound by twine.Some day he'll come to understand that all the time I stood and frowned,I saw a boy of years ago who also used to snoop around.
Bud Discusses CleanlinessFirst thing in the morning, last I hear at night,Get it when I come from school: "My, you look a sight!Go upstairs this minute, an' roll your sleeves up highAn' give your hands a scrubbing and wipe 'em till they're dry!Now don't stand there and argue, and never mind your tears!And this time please remember to wash your neck and ears."Can't see why ears grow on us, all crinkled like a shell,With lots of fancy carvings that make a feller yellEach time his Ma digs in them to get a speck of dirt,When plain ones would be easy to wash and wouldn't hurt.And I can't see the reason why every time Ma nears,She thinks she's got to send me to wash my neck and ears.I never wash to suit her; don't think I ever will.If I was white as sister, she'd call me dirty still.At night I get a scrubbing and go to bed, and thenThe first thing in the morning, she makes me wash again.That strikes me as ridiklus; I've thought of it a heap.A feller can't get dirty when he is fast asleep.When I grow up to be a man like Pa, and have a wifeAnd kids to boss around, you bet they'll have an easy life.We won't be at them all the time, the way they keep at me,And kick about a little dirt that no one else can see.And every night at supper time as soon as he appears,We will not chase our boy away to wash his neck and ears.
First thing in the morning, last I hear at night,Get it when I come from school: "My, you look a sight!Go upstairs this minute, an' roll your sleeves up highAn' give your hands a scrubbing and wipe 'em till they're dry!Now don't stand there and argue, and never mind your tears!And this time please remember to wash your neck and ears."
Can't see why ears grow on us, all crinkled like a shell,With lots of fancy carvings that make a feller yellEach time his Ma digs in them to get a speck of dirt,When plain ones would be easy to wash and wouldn't hurt.And I can't see the reason why every time Ma nears,She thinks she's got to send me to wash my neck and ears.
I never wash to suit her; don't think I ever will.If I was white as sister, she'd call me dirty still.At night I get a scrubbing and go to bed, and thenThe first thing in the morning, she makes me wash again.That strikes me as ridiklus; I've thought of it a heap.A feller can't get dirty when he is fast asleep.
When I grow up to be a man like Pa, and have a wifeAnd kids to boss around, you bet they'll have an easy life.We won't be at them all the time, the way they keep at me,And kick about a little dirt that no one else can see.And every night at supper time as soon as he appears,We will not chase our boy away to wash his neck and ears.
Tied Down"They tie you down," a woman said,Whose cheeks should have been flaming redWith shame to speak of children so."When babies come you cannot goIn search of pleasure with your friends,And all your happy wandering ends.The things you like you cannot do,For babies make a slave of you."I looked at her and said: "'Tis trueThat children make a slave of you,And tie you down with many a knot,But have you never thought to whatIt is of happiness and prideThat little babies have you tied?Do you not miss the greater joysThat come with little girls and boys?"They tie you down to laughter rare,To hours of smiles and hours of care,To nights of watching and to fears;Sometimes they tie you down to tearsAnd then repay you with a smile,And make your trouble all worth while.They tie you fast to chubby feet,And cheeks of pink and kisses sweet."They fasten you with cords of loveTo God divine, who reigns above.They tie you, whereso'er you roam,Unto the little place called home;And over sea or railroad trackThey tug at you to bring you back.The happiest people in the townAre those the babies have tied down."Oh, go your selfish way and free,But hampered I would rather be,Yes rather than a kingly crownI would be, what you term, tied down;Tied down to dancing eyes and charms,Held fast by chubby, dimpled arms,The fettered slave of girl and boy,And win from them earth's finest joy."
"They tie you down," a woman said,Whose cheeks should have been flaming redWith shame to speak of children so."When babies come you cannot goIn search of pleasure with your friends,And all your happy wandering ends.The things you like you cannot do,For babies make a slave of you."
I looked at her and said: "'Tis trueThat children make a slave of you,And tie you down with many a knot,But have you never thought to whatIt is of happiness and prideThat little babies have you tied?Do you not miss the greater joysThat come with little girls and boys?
"They tie you down to laughter rare,To hours of smiles and hours of care,To nights of watching and to fears;Sometimes they tie you down to tearsAnd then repay you with a smile,And make your trouble all worth while.They tie you fast to chubby feet,And cheeks of pink and kisses sweet.
"They fasten you with cords of loveTo God divine, who reigns above.They tie you, whereso'er you roam,Unto the little place called home;And over sea or railroad trackThey tug at you to bring you back.The happiest people in the townAre those the babies have tied down.
"Oh, go your selfish way and free,But hampered I would rather be,Yes rather than a kingly crownI would be, what you term, tied down;Tied down to dancing eyes and charms,Held fast by chubby, dimpled arms,The fettered slave of girl and boy,And win from them earth's finest joy."
Our CountryGod grant that we shall never seeOur country slave to lust and greed;God grant that here all men shall beUnited by a common creed.Here Freedom's Flag has held the skyUnstained, untarnished from its birth;Long may it wave to typifyThe happiest people on the earth.Beneath its folds have mothers smiledTo see their little ones at play;No tyrant hand, by shame defiled,To them has barred life's rosy way.No cruel wall of caste or classHas bid men pause or turn aside;Here looms no gate they may not pass—Here every door is opened wide.Here at the wells of Freedom allWho are athirst may drink their fill.Here fame and fortune wait to callThe toiler who has proved his skill.Here wisdom sheds afar its lightAs every morn the school bells ring,And little children read and writeAnd share the knowledge of a king.God grant that we shall never seeOur country slave to lust and greed;God grant that men shall always beUnited for our nation's need.Here selfishness has never reigned,Here freedom all who come may know;By tyranny our Flag's unstained!God grant that we may keep it so.
God grant that we shall never seeOur country slave to lust and greed;God grant that here all men shall beUnited by a common creed.Here Freedom's Flag has held the skyUnstained, untarnished from its birth;Long may it wave to typifyThe happiest people on the earth.
Beneath its folds have mothers smiledTo see their little ones at play;No tyrant hand, by shame defiled,To them has barred life's rosy way.No cruel wall of caste or classHas bid men pause or turn aside;Here looms no gate they may not pass—Here every door is opened wide.
Here at the wells of Freedom allWho are athirst may drink their fill.Here fame and fortune wait to callThe toiler who has proved his skill.Here wisdom sheds afar its lightAs every morn the school bells ring,And little children read and writeAnd share the knowledge of a king.
God grant that we shall never seeOur country slave to lust and greed;God grant that men shall always beUnited for our nation's need.Here selfishness has never reigned,Here freedom all who come may know;By tyranny our Flag's unstained!God grant that we may keep it so.
FatherhoodBefore you came, my little lad,I used to think that I was good;Some vicious habits, too, I had,But wouldn't change them if I could.I held my head up high and said:"I'm all that I have need to be,It matters not what path I tread—"But that was ere you came to me.I treated lightly sacred things,And went my way in search of fun;Upon myself I kept no strings,And gave no heed to folly done.I gave myself up to the fightFor worldly wealth and earthly fame,And sought advantage, wrong or right—But that was long before you came.But now you sit across from me,Your big brown eyes are opened wide,And every deed I do you see,And, O, I dare not step aside.I've shaken loose from habits bad,And what is wrong I've come to dread,Because I know, my little lad,That you will follow where I tread.I want those eyes to glow with pride;In me I want those eyes to see,The while we wander side by side,The sort of man I'd have you be.And so I'm striving to be goodWith all my might, that you may know,When this great world is understood,What pleasures are worth while below.I see life in a different lightFrom what I did before you came;Then anything that pleased seemed right—But you are here to bear my name,And you are looking up to meWith those big eyes from day to day,And I'm determined not to beThe means of leading you astray.
Before you came, my little lad,I used to think that I was good;Some vicious habits, too, I had,But wouldn't change them if I could.I held my head up high and said:"I'm all that I have need to be,It matters not what path I tread—"But that was ere you came to me.
I treated lightly sacred things,And went my way in search of fun;Upon myself I kept no strings,And gave no heed to folly done.I gave myself up to the fightFor worldly wealth and earthly fame,And sought advantage, wrong or right—But that was long before you came.
But now you sit across from me,Your big brown eyes are opened wide,And every deed I do you see,And, O, I dare not step aside.I've shaken loose from habits bad,And what is wrong I've come to dread,Because I know, my little lad,That you will follow where I tread.
I want those eyes to glow with pride;In me I want those eyes to see,The while we wander side by side,The sort of man I'd have you be.And so I'm striving to be goodWith all my might, that you may know,When this great world is understood,What pleasures are worth while below.
I see life in a different lightFrom what I did before you came;Then anything that pleased seemed right—But you are here to bear my name,And you are looking up to meWith those big eyes from day to day,And I'm determined not to beThe means of leading you astray.
A ChoiceSure, they get stubborn at times; they worry and fret us a lot,But I'd rather be crossed by a glad little boy and frequently worried than not.There are hours when they get on my nerves and set my poor brain all awhirl,But I'd rather be troubled that way than to be the man who has no little girl.There are times they're a nuisance, that's true, with all of their racket and noise,But I'd rather my personal pleasures be lost than to give up my girls and my boys.Not always they're perfectly good; there are times when they're wilfully bad,But I'd rather be worried by youngsters of mine than lonely and childless and sad.So I try to be patient and calm whenever they're having their fling;For the sum of their laughter and love is more than the worry they bring.And each night when sweet peace settles down and I see them asleep in their cot,I chuckle and say: "They upset me to-day, but I'd rather be that way than not."
Sure, they get stubborn at times; they worry and fret us a lot,But I'd rather be crossed by a glad little boy and frequently worried than not.There are hours when they get on my nerves and set my poor brain all awhirl,But I'd rather be troubled that way than to be the man who has no little girl.
There are times they're a nuisance, that's true, with all of their racket and noise,But I'd rather my personal pleasures be lost than to give up my girls and my boys.Not always they're perfectly good; there are times when they're wilfully bad,But I'd rather be worried by youngsters of mine than lonely and childless and sad.
So I try to be patient and calm whenever they're having their fling;For the sum of their laughter and love is more than the worry they bring.And each night when sweet peace settles down and I see them asleep in their cot,I chuckle and say: "They upset me to-day, but I'd rather be that way than not."
What Father KnowsMy father knows the proper wayThe nation should be run;He tells us children every dayJust what should now be done.He knows the way to fix the trusts,He has a simple plan;But if the furnace needs repairsWe have to hire a man.My father, in a day or two,Could land big thieves in jail;There's nothing that he cannot do,He knows no word like "fail.""Our confidence" he would restore,Of that there is no doubt;But if there is a chair to mendWe have to send it out.All public questions that ariseHe settles on the spot;He waits not till the tumult dies,But grabs it while it's hot.In matters of finance he canTell Congress what to do;But, O, he finds it hard to meetHis bills as they fall due.It almost makes him sick to readThe things law-makers say;Why, father's just the man they need;He never goes astray.All wars he'd very quickly end,As fast as I can write it;But when a neighbor starts a fuss'Tis mother has to fight it.In conversation father canDo many wondrous things;He's built upon a wiser planThan presidents or kings.He knows the ins and outs of eachAnd every deep transaction;We look to him for theories,But look to ma for action.
My father knows the proper wayThe nation should be run;He tells us children every dayJust what should now be done.He knows the way to fix the trusts,He has a simple plan;But if the furnace needs repairsWe have to hire a man.
My father, in a day or two,Could land big thieves in jail;There's nothing that he cannot do,He knows no word like "fail.""Our confidence" he would restore,Of that there is no doubt;But if there is a chair to mendWe have to send it out.
All public questions that ariseHe settles on the spot;He waits not till the tumult dies,But grabs it while it's hot.In matters of finance he canTell Congress what to do;But, O, he finds it hard to meetHis bills as they fall due.
It almost makes him sick to readThe things law-makers say;Why, father's just the man they need;He never goes astray.All wars he'd very quickly end,As fast as I can write it;But when a neighbor starts a fuss'Tis mother has to fight it.
In conversation father canDo many wondrous things;He's built upon a wiser planThan presidents or kings.He knows the ins and outs of eachAnd every deep transaction;We look to him for theories,But look to ma for action.
Back HomeGlad to get back home again,Where abide the friendly men;Glad to see the same old scenesAnd the little house that meansAll the joys the soul has treasured—Glad to be where smiles aren't measured,Where I've blended with the gladnessAll the heart has known of sadness,Where some long-familiar steepleMarks my town of friendly people.Though it's fun to go a-strayingWhere the bands are nightly playingAnd the throngs of men and womenDrain the cup of pleasure brimmin',I am glad when it is overThat I've ceased to play the Rover.And when once the train starts chuggingTowards the children I'd be hugging,All my thoughts and dreams are set there;Fast enough I cannot get there.Guess I wasn't meant for bright lights,For the blaze of red and white lights,For the throngs that seems to smotherIn their selfishness, each other;For whenever I've been down there,Tramped the noisy, blatant town there,Always in a week I've startedYearning, hungering, heavy-hearted,For the home town and its spacesLit by fine and friendly faces.Like to be where men about meDo not look on me to doubt me;Where I know the men and women,Know why tears some eyes are dimmin',Know the good folks an' the bad folksAn' the glad folks an' the sad folks;Where we live with one another,Meanin' something to each other.An' I'm glad to see the steeple,Where the crowds aren't merely people.
Glad to get back home again,Where abide the friendly men;Glad to see the same old scenesAnd the little house that meansAll the joys the soul has treasured—Glad to be where smiles aren't measured,Where I've blended with the gladnessAll the heart has known of sadness,Where some long-familiar steepleMarks my town of friendly people.
Though it's fun to go a-strayingWhere the bands are nightly playingAnd the throngs of men and womenDrain the cup of pleasure brimmin',I am glad when it is overThat I've ceased to play the Rover.And when once the train starts chuggingTowards the children I'd be hugging,All my thoughts and dreams are set there;Fast enough I cannot get there.
Guess I wasn't meant for bright lights,For the blaze of red and white lights,For the throngs that seems to smotherIn their selfishness, each other;For whenever I've been down there,Tramped the noisy, blatant town there,Always in a week I've startedYearning, hungering, heavy-hearted,For the home town and its spacesLit by fine and friendly faces.
Like to be where men about meDo not look on me to doubt me;Where I know the men and women,Know why tears some eyes are dimmin',Know the good folks an' the bad folksAn' the glad folks an' the sad folks;Where we live with one another,Meanin' something to each other.An' I'm glad to see the steeple,Where the crowds aren't merely people.
The Dead ReturnThe dead return. I know they do;The glad smile may have passed from view,The ringing voice that cheered us soIn that remembered long agoBe stilled, and yet in sweeter waysIt speaks to us throughout our days.The kindly father comes againTo guide us through the haunts of men,And always near, their sons to greetAre lingering the mothers sweet.About us wheresoe'er we treadHover the spirits of our dead;We cannot see them as we couldIn bygone days, when near they stoodAnd shared the joys and griefs that came,But they are with us just the same.They see us as we plod along,And proudly smile when we are strong,And sigh and grieve the self-same wayWhen thoughtlessly we go astray.I sometimes think it hurts the deadWhen into sin and shame we're led,And that they feel a thrill divineWhen we've accomplished something fine.And sometimes thoughts that come at nightSeem more like messages that mightHave whispered been by one we love,Whose spirit has been called above.So wise the counsel, it must beThat all we are the dead can see.The dead return. They come to shareOur laughter and our bit of care;They glory, as they used to do,When we are splendid men and true,In all the joy that we have won,And they are proud of what we've done.They suffer when we suffer woe;All things about us here they know.And though we never see them hereTheir spirits hover very near.
The dead return. I know they do;The glad smile may have passed from view,The ringing voice that cheered us soIn that remembered long agoBe stilled, and yet in sweeter waysIt speaks to us throughout our days.The kindly father comes againTo guide us through the haunts of men,And always near, their sons to greetAre lingering the mothers sweet.
About us wheresoe'er we treadHover the spirits of our dead;We cannot see them as we couldIn bygone days, when near they stoodAnd shared the joys and griefs that came,But they are with us just the same.They see us as we plod along,And proudly smile when we are strong,And sigh and grieve the self-same wayWhen thoughtlessly we go astray.
I sometimes think it hurts the deadWhen into sin and shame we're led,And that they feel a thrill divineWhen we've accomplished something fine.And sometimes thoughts that come at nightSeem more like messages that mightHave whispered been by one we love,Whose spirit has been called above.So wise the counsel, it must beThat all we are the dead can see.
The dead return. They come to shareOur laughter and our bit of care;They glory, as they used to do,When we are splendid men and true,In all the joy that we have won,And they are proud of what we've done.They suffer when we suffer woe;All things about us here they know.And though we never see them hereTheir spirits hover very near.
My Soul and IWhen winter shuts a fellow in and turns the lock upon his door,There's nothing else for him to do but sit and dream his bygones o'er.And then before an open fire he smokes his pipe, while in the blazeHe seems to see a picture show of all his happy yesterdays.No ordinary film is that which memory throws upon the screen,But one in which his hidden soul comes out and can be plainly seen.Now, I've been dreaming by the grate. I've seen myself the way I am,Stripped bare of affectation's garb and wisdom's pose and folly's sham.I've seen my soul and talked with it, and learned some things I never knew.I walk about the world as one, but I express the wish of two.I've come to see the soul of me is wiser than my selfish mind,For it has safely led me through the tangled paths I've left behind.I should have sold myself for gold when I was young long years ago,But for my soul which whispered then: "You love your home and garden so,You never could be quite content in palace walls. Once rise to fameAnd you will lose the gentler joys which now so eagerly you claim.I want to walk these lanes with you and keep the comradeship of trees,Let you and I be happy here, nor seek life's gaudy luxuries."Mine is a curious soul, I guess; it seemed so, smiling in my dreams;It keeps me close to little folks and birds and flowers and running streams,To Mother and her friends and mine; and though no fortune we possess,The years that we have lived and loved have all been rich with happiness.I'm glad the snowdrifts shut me in, for I have had a chance to seeHow fortunate I've been to have that sort of soul to counsel me.
When winter shuts a fellow in and turns the lock upon his door,There's nothing else for him to do but sit and dream his bygones o'er.And then before an open fire he smokes his pipe, while in the blazeHe seems to see a picture show of all his happy yesterdays.No ordinary film is that which memory throws upon the screen,But one in which his hidden soul comes out and can be plainly seen.
Now, I've been dreaming by the grate. I've seen myself the way I am,Stripped bare of affectation's garb and wisdom's pose and folly's sham.I've seen my soul and talked with it, and learned some things I never knew.I walk about the world as one, but I express the wish of two.I've come to see the soul of me is wiser than my selfish mind,For it has safely led me through the tangled paths I've left behind.
I should have sold myself for gold when I was young long years ago,But for my soul which whispered then: "You love your home and garden so,You never could be quite content in palace walls. Once rise to fameAnd you will lose the gentler joys which now so eagerly you claim.I want to walk these lanes with you and keep the comradeship of trees,Let you and I be happy here, nor seek life's gaudy luxuries."
Mine is a curious soul, I guess; it seemed so, smiling in my dreams;It keeps me close to little folks and birds and flowers and running streams,To Mother and her friends and mine; and though no fortune we possess,The years that we have lived and loved have all been rich with happiness.I'm glad the snowdrifts shut me in, for I have had a chance to seeHow fortunate I've been to have that sort of soul to counsel me.
AuntyI'm sorry for a feller if he hasn't any aunt,To let him eat and do the things his mother says he can't.An aunt to come a visitin' or one to go and seeIs just about the finest kind of lady there could be.Of course she's not your mother, an' she hasn't got her ways,But a part that's most important in a feller's life she plays.She is kind an' she is gentle, an' sometimes she's full of fun,An' she's very sympathetic when some dreadful thing you've done.An' she likes to buy you candy, an' she's always gettin' toysThat you wish your Pa would get you, for she hasn't any boys.But sometimes she's over-loving, an' your cheeks turn red with shameWhen she smothers you with kisses, but you like her just the same.One time my father took me to my aunty's, an' he said:"You will stay here till I get you, an' be sure you go to bedWhen your aunty says it's time to, an' be good an' mind her, too,An' when you come home we'll try to have a big surprise for you."I did as I was told to, an' when Pa came back for meHe said there was a baby at the house for me to see.I've been visitin' at aunty's for a week or two, an' PaHas written that he's comin' soon to take me home to Ma.He says they're gettin' lonely, an' I'm kind o' lonely, too,Coz an aunt is not exactly what your mother is to you.I am hungry now to see her, but I'm wondering to-dayIf Pa's bought another baby in the time I've been away.
I'm sorry for a feller if he hasn't any aunt,To let him eat and do the things his mother says he can't.An aunt to come a visitin' or one to go and seeIs just about the finest kind of lady there could be.Of course she's not your mother, an' she hasn't got her ways,But a part that's most important in a feller's life she plays.
She is kind an' she is gentle, an' sometimes she's full of fun,An' she's very sympathetic when some dreadful thing you've done.An' she likes to buy you candy, an' she's always gettin' toysThat you wish your Pa would get you, for she hasn't any boys.But sometimes she's over-loving, an' your cheeks turn red with shameWhen she smothers you with kisses, but you like her just the same.
One time my father took me to my aunty's, an' he said:"You will stay here till I get you, an' be sure you go to bedWhen your aunty says it's time to, an' be good an' mind her, too,An' when you come home we'll try to have a big surprise for you."I did as I was told to, an' when Pa came back for meHe said there was a baby at the house for me to see.
I've been visitin' at aunty's for a week or two, an' PaHas written that he's comin' soon to take me home to Ma.He says they're gettin' lonely, an' I'm kind o' lonely, too,Coz an aunt is not exactly what your mother is to you.I am hungry now to see her, but I'm wondering to-dayIf Pa's bought another baby in the time I've been away.
Bread and JamI wish I was a poet like the men that write in booksThe poems that we have to learn on valleys, hills an' brooks;I'd write of things that children like an' know an' understand,An' when the kids recited them the folks would call them grand.If I'd been born a Whittier, instead of what I am,I'd write a poem now about a piece of bread an' jam.I'd tell how hungry children get all afternoon in school,An' sittin' at attention just because it is the rule,An' lookin' every now an' then up to the clock to seeIf that big hand an' little hand would ever get to three.I'd tell how children hurry home an' give the door a slamAn' ask their mothers can they have a piece of bread an' jam.Some poets write of things to eat an' sing of dinners fine,An' praise the dishes they enjoy, an' some folks sing of wine,But they've forgotten, I suppose, the days when they were smallAn' hurried home from school to get the finest food of all;They don't remember any more how good it was to cramInside their hungry little selves a piece of bread an' jam.I wish I was a Whittier, a Stevenson or Burns,I wouldn't write of hills an' brooks, or mossy banks or ferns,I wouldn't write of rolling seas or mountains towering high,But I would sing of chocolate cake an' good old apple pie,An' best of all the food there is, beyond the slightest doubt,Is bread an' jam we always get as soon as school is out.
I wish I was a poet like the men that write in booksThe poems that we have to learn on valleys, hills an' brooks;I'd write of things that children like an' know an' understand,An' when the kids recited them the folks would call them grand.If I'd been born a Whittier, instead of what I am,I'd write a poem now about a piece of bread an' jam.
I'd tell how hungry children get all afternoon in school,An' sittin' at attention just because it is the rule,An' lookin' every now an' then up to the clock to seeIf that big hand an' little hand would ever get to three.I'd tell how children hurry home an' give the door a slamAn' ask their mothers can they have a piece of bread an' jam.
Some poets write of things to eat an' sing of dinners fine,An' praise the dishes they enjoy, an' some folks sing of wine,But they've forgotten, I suppose, the days when they were smallAn' hurried home from school to get the finest food of all;They don't remember any more how good it was to cramInside their hungry little selves a piece of bread an' jam.
I wish I was a Whittier, a Stevenson or Burns,I wouldn't write of hills an' brooks, or mossy banks or ferns,I wouldn't write of rolling seas or mountains towering high,But I would sing of chocolate cake an' good old apple pie,An' best of all the food there is, beyond the slightest doubt,Is bread an' jam we always get as soon as school is out.
The Little WomanThe little woman, to her I bowAnd doff my hat as I pass her by;I reverence the furrows that mark her brow,And the sparkling love light in her eye.The little woman who stays at home,And makes no bid for the world's applause;Who never sighs for a chance to roam,But toils all day in a grander cause.The little woman, who seems so weak,Yet bears her burdens day by day;And no one has ever heard her speakIn a bitter or loud complaining way.She sings a snatch of a merry song,As she toils in her home from morn to night.Her work is hard and the hours are longBut the little woman's heart is light.A slave to love is that woman small,And yearly her burdens heavier grow,But somehow she seems to bear them all,As the deep'ning lines in her white cheeks show.Her children all have a mother's care,Her home the touch of a good wife knows;No burden's too heavy for her to bear,But, patiently doing her best, she goes.The little woman, may God be kindTo her wherever she dwells to-day;The little woman who seems to findHer joy in toiling along life's way.May God bring peace to her work-worn breastAnd joy to her mother-heart at last;May love be hers when it's time to rest,And the roughest part of the road is passed.The little woman—how oft it seemsGod chooses her for the mother's part;And many a grown-up sits and dreamsTo-day of her with an aching heart.For he knows well how she toiled for himAnd he sees it now that it is too late;And often his eyes with tears grow dimFor the little woman whose strength was great.
The little woman, to her I bowAnd doff my hat as I pass her by;I reverence the furrows that mark her brow,And the sparkling love light in her eye.The little woman who stays at home,And makes no bid for the world's applause;Who never sighs for a chance to roam,But toils all day in a grander cause.
The little woman, who seems so weak,Yet bears her burdens day by day;And no one has ever heard her speakIn a bitter or loud complaining way.She sings a snatch of a merry song,As she toils in her home from morn to night.Her work is hard and the hours are longBut the little woman's heart is light.
A slave to love is that woman small,And yearly her burdens heavier grow,But somehow she seems to bear them all,As the deep'ning lines in her white cheeks show.Her children all have a mother's care,Her home the touch of a good wife knows;No burden's too heavy for her to bear,But, patiently doing her best, she goes.
The little woman, may God be kindTo her wherever she dwells to-day;The little woman who seems to findHer joy in toiling along life's way.May God bring peace to her work-worn breastAnd joy to her mother-heart at last;May love be hers when it's time to rest,And the roughest part of the road is passed.
The little woman—how oft it seemsGod chooses her for the mother's part;And many a grown-up sits and dreamsTo-day of her with an aching heart.For he knows well how she toiled for himAnd he sees it now that it is too late;And often his eyes with tears grow dimFor the little woman whose strength was great.
The Father of the ManI can't help thinkin' o' the lad!Here's summer bringin' trees to fruit,An' every bush with roses clad,An' nature in her finest suit,An' all things as they used to beIn days before the war came on.Yet time has changed both him an' me,An' I am here, but he is gone.The orchard's as it was back thenWhen he was just a little tyke;The lake's as calm an' fair as whenWe used to go to fish for pike.There's nothing different I can seeThat God has made about the place,Except the change in him an' me,An' that is difficult to trace.I only know one day he cameAn' found me in the barn alone.To some he might have looked the same,But he was not the lad I'd known.His soul, it seemed, had heard the callAs plainly as a mortal can.Before he spoke to me at all,I saw my boy become a man.I can't explain just what occurred;I sat an' talked about it there;The dinner-bell I never heard,Or if I did, I didn't care.But suddenly it seemed to meOut of the dark there came a light,An' in a new way I could seeThat I was wrong an' he was right.I can't help thinkin' o' the lad!He's fightin' hate an' greed an' lust,An' here am I, his doting dad,Believin' in a purpose just.Time was I talked the joy o' play,But now life's goal is all I see;The petty thoughts I've put away—My boy has made a man o' me.
I can't help thinkin' o' the lad!Here's summer bringin' trees to fruit,An' every bush with roses clad,An' nature in her finest suit,An' all things as they used to beIn days before the war came on.Yet time has changed both him an' me,An' I am here, but he is gone.
The orchard's as it was back thenWhen he was just a little tyke;The lake's as calm an' fair as whenWe used to go to fish for pike.There's nothing different I can seeThat God has made about the place,Except the change in him an' me,An' that is difficult to trace.
I only know one day he cameAn' found me in the barn alone.To some he might have looked the same,But he was not the lad I'd known.His soul, it seemed, had heard the callAs plainly as a mortal can.Before he spoke to me at all,I saw my boy become a man.
I can't explain just what occurred;I sat an' talked about it there;The dinner-bell I never heard,Or if I did, I didn't care.But suddenly it seemed to meOut of the dark there came a light,An' in a new way I could seeThat I was wrong an' he was right.
I can't help thinkin' o' the lad!He's fightin' hate an' greed an' lust,An' here am I, his doting dad,Believin' in a purpose just.Time was I talked the joy o' play,But now life's goal is all I see;The petty thoughts I've put away—My boy has made a man o' me.