A Heap O' Livin - novelonlinefull.com
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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 pa.s.s 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 pa.s.sing day That must depart along the way?