From The Birmingham Age-Herald, March 11, 1913. By John Greenleaf Whittier. Still sits the schoolhouse by the road, A ragged beggar sunning; Around it still the sumachs grow, And blackberry vines are running. Within, the master’s desk is seen, Deep scarred by raps official; The warping floor, the battered seats, The jack knife’s carved initial. The charcoal frescoes on the wall; Its door’s worn sill, betraying The feet that, creeping slow to school Went storming out to playing. Long years ago a winter sun Shone over it at setting; Lit up its western window panes, And low eaves icy fretting. It touched the tangled golden curls, And brown eyes full of grieving, Of one who still her steps delayed When all the school was leaving. For near her stood the little boy Her childish favor singled; His cap pulled low upon a face Where pride and shame were mingled. Pushing with restless feet the snow To right and left, he lingered— As restlessly her tiny hands The blue checked apron fingered. He saw her lift her eyes; he felt The soft hand’s light caressing, And heard the tremble of her voice, As if a fault confessing. “I’m sorry that I spelt the word; I hate to go above you, Because,”—the brown eyes lower fell— “Because, you see, I love you!” Still memory to gray haired man That sweet child face is showing, Dear girl! The grasses on her grave Have forty years been growing! He lives to learn in life’s hard school How few who pass above him Lament their triumph and his loss, Like her—because they love him.
Month: March 2021
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In School Days
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The Good Fellow
From the Evening Star, March 10, 1913. By Walt Mason. You’re welcome at the booze bazaar while you have got a roll; they’ll say you are a shining star, a genial, princely soul. The low-browed gent who sells the suds will call you “Cap” or “Judge,” while you have bullion in your duds to buy his baneful budge. And all the mirthful hangers-on will cheer your wit and sense, while merrily the demijohn goes round at your expense. They’ll greet with wide ecstatic grin the stalest of your jokes, while you have cash to buy the gin or fix the crowd with smokes. But when your little roll is lost, and you all busted are, there falls a chill antarctic frost about the shining bar. And when you fix your thirsty gaze upon the bottled shelf, the gent who smirked in other days, growls fiercely, “Chase yourself!” The loafers eye you with disdain, who once said you were It, and grumble that you cause them pain, when you’d display your wit. The days when you showed up so strong no one can now recall; and if you hang around too long they’ll push you through the wall. Good fellows go the same old gait, the gay, high-rolling chumps; and they will meet the same old fate, and bump the same old bumps.
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Spirit of Resignation
From the Evening Star, March 9, 1913. “I did my best,” said Uncle Jim,. “No one can say I shirk. I started in with earnest vim To get a chance to work. I didn’t sit in calm content Nor indolent disgrace. I wrote straight to the President And asked him for a place. “The sun is shining on the stream That sings its song so light; And underneath the waves that gleam Are fish who yearn to bite. In spite of disappointment sad I do not sigh or sob. To tell the truth, I’m rather glad I didn’t get a job.”
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A Philosopher
From The Birmingham Age-Herald, March 8, 1913. There lived a happy man one time Who ne’er was known to sigh; He simply spat tobacco juice And watched the world go by. In winter time he sought a stove, In summer by a stream He stretched himself in careless ease, Well pleased to rest and dream. The busy turmoil of this life Did not appeal to him; He had no brilliant plans mapped out For keeping “in the swim.” The song of birds was sweet to hear, He loved the skies of blue And when the sun beamed on the earth It warmed him through and through. “A worthless chap,” some people said, Who did not understand, Merely because he scorned to work With head or foot or hand. But life was passing sweet to him, And though without a cent, He often laughed at millionaires Who knew far less content.
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Oft in the Stilly Night
From The Topeka State Journal, March 7, 1913. By Roy K. Moulton. Oft in the stilly night, Ere slumber’s chains have bound me Just when I’ve neatly tucked The flannel blanket ‘round me, There comes the alarming thought, With possibilities dire; I know that I have forgot To fix that blamed furnace fire. I scramble out in the cold With every nerve fibre quaking; My nasal appendage is blue; My elbows and knees are shaking. I stumble o’er rugs and chairs And make a terrible noise By falling downstairs head first— I’ve tripped on a pile of toys. I strike a tin railroad train, And slide o’er the hard oak floor On elbows and shoulder blades; My head bangs against a door. When I reach the basement depths, I’m sick and I’m sore and lame, I open the furnace mouth And seek for the tongue of flame. I find that the fire’s all right; That it’s just as it ought to be To last through the entire night And that’s where the joke’s on me. I remember when it’s too late, As I rub each lame bruised spot, I’d fixed the blame thing all right— I’d fixed it and then forgot.
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Many Books
From the Perth Amboy Evening News, March 6, 1913. By Walt Mason. They turn out books a-plenty, they print ‘em by the mile, and one, perhaps in twenty is worth a reader’s while. So many books are dizzy, so many books are flat; so many keep you busy a-guessing where you’re at; so many books are sporty, so many books are vile, and one, perhaps in forty, is worth a reader’s while. Translations from the Germans, translations from the Swedes, and masquerading sermons the weary victim reads; translations from the Spanish, translations from the Finns, translations from the Danish, and other bookish sins; and native authors nifty print volumes by the pile, and one perhaps, in fifty, is worth a reader’s while. We’ve books by four time winners who would expound the truth, and books concerning sinners pursued by wondrous sleuth; and we have problem novels and books about the slum, where, down in filthy hovels fierce people live on rum; and we have volumes weighty, and some that make us smile, and one, perhaps in eighty, is worth a reader’s while. We’ve books about the toiler, and books about the dude, and books about the spoiler, and books that shock the prude; and we have books that worry about our modern ways, and other books that hurry us back to ancient days, to lady on her pillion, to knight who scraps in style; and one in fifty million is worth a reader’s while.
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A Simple Prescription
From the Rock Island Argus, March 5, 1913. By S. E. Kiser. The doctor gazed a while at me and gravely shook his head; “You must not work so hard,” said he, “eat only whole wheat bread; Avoid all starchy things and try to take your beefsteak rare; Avoid the deadly stuff they fry, keep in the open air, And cheer up. Clear your frowns away, put all your cares aside: Play golf or tennis every day, or get a horse to ride. “You might take three months off and go to Europe or Japan, Or take a trip to Mexico; you need a change, old man. You have a haggard, weary look, your system’s all run down; Go out and loll beside some brook a thousand miles from town. Take my advice and rest a while, become a man of ease. Quit working and learn how to smile. Three dollars, if you please.” He could not know how glad I was to get his dear advice, Nor that I could not go because I chanced to lack the price; He knew not that if for a space I traveled unconcerned They would inform me that my place was filled, when I returned. By toiling hard and steadily I clung to my position And kept those who were dear to me in fairly good condition.
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The Old Game
From The Seattle Star, March 4, 1913. By Berton Braley. Oh, yes, I had quit it “forever,” The scissors and paste and all that, The haste and the frantic endeavor, The typewriter’s merry rat-tat; I tired of the holler for “copy,” I longed for a life that was tame, And my friends called me shabby and sloppy, So I dropped from the Newspaper Game. But something kept whispering, “Billy, You’re out of your element here. This sinecure’s meant for some Willie Who don’t know a scoop from a beer. This joint is too tied by decorum, This routine is always the same; Your clothes don’t wear out where you wore ‘em When playing the Newspaper Game.” Whenever the newsboys would holler, Whenever the extras came out, I tugged at my unsweated collar And my heart-strings were tugged by a doubt, Till at last—well, I doubted no longer, I passed up my cinch, and I came To the call that I knew was the stronger, And I plunged in the Newspaper Game. The typewriters rattled to greet me, The smell of sour paste-pots was sweet, I found the old “mill” there to meet me, I dropped in my battered old seat. The news room was dingy and smoky, But a shiver of joy shook my frame, For I’d quit the “good job” that was pokey, And was back at the Newspaper Game. Below were the linotypes clicking, And the smell of hot lead came to me; The sport man was nervously flicking The ash from his “cigarootee.” My typewriter acted unruly, My fingers felt clumsy and lame, But I knew I was back again, truly, To the joy of the Newspaper Game. You can swear you will leave it behind you. You can flee to wherever you will, But the newspaper fever will find you, The newspaper fervor will thrill. It makes—or more likely, it breaks you, You die—and leave scarcely a name; But not until death overtakes you Are you free of the Newspaper Game.
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What’s the Use?
From The Topeka State Journal, March 3, 1913. By Roy K. Moulton. I thought that I might buy a car and zip around the countryside. I went to see an agent and he took me for a nice long ride. Somehow the news got noised around and fifteen agents called me And took me out in brand new cars, their points of excellence to see. This thing went all year around, and really, folks, it was immense; I toured all over half the state without a nickel of expense. Why should I own a touring car? I am not missing any fun; I can go riding all the time with agents who would sell me one.
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A Possibility
From the Evening Star, March 2, 1913. By Berton Braley. When tariff makers of renown Shall cut each unjust duty down; When landlords ask but little rent; When banks and trusts shall be content With modest profits now and then On trade they do with common men; When railroads cease to charge a rate Almost the value of the freight; When coal men, lumbermen and such Shall cease to waste and spoil so much; When middlemen shall be no more; And he who runs the retail store Shall find a profitable way To scale the prices we must pay; When, in each legislative hall, Our “statesmen” serve us, one and all, Instead of working for the folk Who hold the land beneath their yoke; When you and I, with thrifty care, Shall stop the leakage here and there, Desist from thoughtlessness and haste Which mean extravagance and waste; When all these goodly things are so, The cost of living may get low— But, I dunno!