Month: June 2023

  • Just a Line

    From The Detroit Times, June 10, 1915.

    The postman passes by, his steps tell plainly
        He hasn’t any mail to leave for me;
    Or should he stop, my eyes must still seek vainly
        The one handwriting I so long to see.
    Even a picture postal card were better
        Than leaving me without a single sign;
    Another day gone by, and still no letter,
        Dear daughter, can’t you drop me just a line?

    Why are you silent? I have often written
        When it was, strictly speaking, not my turn.
    Have you with pen paralysis been smitten,
        Or what new lesson would you have me learn?
    Am I impatient, in too great a hurry,
        You pressed with duties harder to decline?
    Oh, daughter, it would save a heap of worry
        If you would drop your father just a line.

    Perhaps there’s some mistake; a heedless sentence
        Penned without thinking may have caused you pain;
    Perhaps I rate too high my independence;
        Perhaps you think me frivolous and vain;
    Or my poor jests in earnest you were taking.
        Oh, could you read this secret heart of mine,
    You’d know, dear child, how near it is to breaking,
        And drop your lonely father just a line.

  • Si Woggles

    From the Evening Star, June 9, 1915. By Philander Johnson.

    Si Woggles was a grocer’s clerk,
    Who grew superior to his work.
    He got to thinking more and more
    That he knew how to run the store.
    He pointed out with feelings grim
    The profits that were due to him,
    And he attributed each loss
    To interference by the boss.
    It fairly made him weep to see
    How obstinate the boss could be.
    Si reasoned with him and he tried
    To check those efforts misapplied.
    That careless boss, he answered back
    And said that He would Run the Shack!
    The conscience of Si Woggles burned,
    His thoughts to desperation turned,
    Till finally his fretted mind
    Became so fierce that Si resigned!
    Sad was the day when Si no more
    Came ‘round to open up the store,
    And weigh the merchandise with care
    And gossip with a friendly air.

    And yet the people came to buy.
    Some few said, “What’s become of Si?”
    But somehow that old grocery store
    Keeps doing business as of yore.

  • Yes, It Surely Does

    From The Topeka State Journal, June 8, 1915. By Roy K. Moulton.

    Why did those old Egyptian kings
    Build pyramids and other things?
    Why did they proudly carve or paint
    An obelisk with figures quaint?
    Why did some Roman monarch raise
    A circus in those good old days?
    Or keep a poet under hire
    To sound a complimentary lyre?
    Why did old Caesar late at night
    Sit up describing every fight?
    Or Alexander make that bluff
    And say, “The world’s not big enough?”
    To us who view the modern game
    And see how wealth is wrung from fame,
    The answer need not cause surprise:
    It always pays to advertise.

  • Darby and Joan

    From The Detroit Times, June 7, 1915. By St. John Honeywood.

    When Darby saw the setting sun,
    He swung his scythe, and home he run,
    Sat down, drank off his quart, and said,
    “My work is done, I’ll go to bed.”
    “My work is done!” retorted Joan,
    “My work is done! your constant tone;
    But hapless woman ne’er can say,
    ‘My work is done,’ till judgment day.
    You men can sleep all night, but we
    Must toil.”—“Whose fault is that?” quoth he.
    “I know your meaning,” Joan replied,
    “But, Sir, my tongue shall not be tied;
    I will go on, and let you know
    What work poor women have to do:
    First, in the morning, though we feel
    As sick as drunkards when they reel—
    Yes, feel such pains in back and head
    As would confine you men to bed,
    We ply the brush, we wield the broom,
    We air the beds, and right the room;
    The cows must next be milked—and then
    We get the breakfast for the men.
    Ere this is done, with whimpering cries,
    And bristly hair, the children rise;
    These must be dressed, and dosed with rue,
    And fed—and all because of you.
    We next”—here Darby scratched his head,
    And stole off grumbling to his bed,
    And only said, as on she run,
    “Zounds! woman’s clack is never done.”

    At early dawn, ere Phoebus rose,
    Old Joan resumed her tale of woes;
    When Darby thus—“I’ll end the strife,
    Be you the man and I the wife;
    Take you the scythe and mow, while I
    Will all your boasted cares supply.”
    “Content,” quoth Joan, “give me my stint.”
    This Darby did, and out she went.
    Old Darby rose and seized the broom
    And whirled the dirt about the room,
    Which having done, he scarce knew how,
    He hied to milk the brindled cow.
    The brindled cow whisked round her tail
    In Darby’s eyes, and kicked the pail.
    The clown, perplexed with grief and pain,
    Swore he’d ne’er try to milk again:
    When turning round, in sad amaze,
    He saw his cottage in a blaze:
    For as he chanced to brush the room,
    In careless haste, he fired the broom.
    The fire at last subdued, he swore
    The broom and he would meet no more.
    Pressed by misfortune, and perplexed,
    Darby prepared for breakfast next;
    But what to get he scarcely knew—
    The bread was spent, the butter too.
    His hands bedaubed with paste and flour,
    Old Darby labored full an hour.
    But, luckless wight! thou couldst not make
    The bread take form of loaf or cake.
    As every door wide open stood,
    In pushed the sow in quest of food;
    And, stumbling onward, with her snout
    O’erset the churn—the cream ran out.
    As Darby turned, the sow to beat,
    The slippery cream betrayed his feet;
    He caught the bread trough in his fall,
    And down came Darby, trough, and all.
    The children, wakened by the clatter,
    Start up, and cry, “Oh! what’s the matter?”
    Old Jowler barked, and Tabby mewed,
    And hapless Darby bawled aloud,
    “Return, my Joan, as heretofore,
    I’ll play the housewife’s part no more;
    Since now, by sad experience taught,
    Compared to thine my work is naught;
    Henceforth, as business calls, I’ll take
    Content, the plough, the scythe, the rake,
    And never more transgress the line
    Our fates have marked, while thou art mine.
    Then, Joan, return, as heretofore,
    I’ll vex thy honest soul no more;
    Let’s each our proper task attend—
    Forgive the past, and strive to mend.”

  • What Pa Doesn’t Know

    From the Omaha Daily Bee, June 6, 1915. By Edgar A. Guest.

    Sometimes when folks come in to call on Ma an’ Pa’s away,
    An’ I’m supposed to be where I can’t hear a word they say,
    Ma starts to tell ‘em all about Pa’s fine an’ splendid ways,
    An’ just how good an’ kind he is, an’ all the jokes he plays;
    An’ how he never gives her any reason for complaint,
    Until she has the women folks believin’ Pa’s a saint.

    Pa’s just an ordinary man—he tells us so himself.
    He has to work all day to get his little bit of pelf.
    He isn’t one that’s known to fame, he can’t do clever things,
    He isn’t one that makes a speech, or out in public sings.
    But Ma just makes him out to be a man the world would cheer
    If it could know the worth of him—when he’s not there to hear.

    When Pa’s away Ma tells her friends how much of him she thinks,
    An’ just how good it is to have a man that never drinks.
    She dwells upon his thoughtful ways, his patience an’ his worth,
    An’ boasts that she is married to the finest man on earth.
    But if Pa isn’t home on time, an’ supper has to wait,
    She gives it to him, good an’ strong, for gettin’ in so late.

    Sometimes when Ma is scolding Pa, an’ he don’t say a word,
    I feel like tellin’ him the things that Ma don’t know I’ve heard.
    I feel like crawlin’ in his lap, an’ whisperin’, “Never mind,
    Deep in her heart Ma really thinks you’re all that’s good an’ kind.
    She thinks that you’re the finest man there is on earth, I know
    Because most every afternoon she tells the neighbors so.”

  • Hope On

    From The Detroit Times, June 5, 1915. By M. L. Cooley.

    When all good gifts were gathered
        And molded into man,
    No other gift was needed
        To complete God’s perfect plan.

    But through his own volition
        Man fell and trouble came;
    Hope sprang into his nature,
        A never-dying flame.

    And down through countless ages,
        Beyond our human scope,
    To each has come the blessing
        Of an unending hope.

    While still the nations battle
        And men do strive and slay,
    And the world seems an arena
        With war the awful play,

    Hope rises still triumphant,
        Hope sends one brightening ray,
    Though dark enough the future,
        Hope still lights up the way.

  • The Soldier’s Easter Song

    From The Topeka State Journal, June 4, 1915. By Minna Irving.

    Back from gory battle came a soldier Easter Day,
    The streets were full of people in their Easter garments gay;
    Silver bells were ringing in the steeples overhead,
    The soldier he was wounded, and this is what he said:
    “It’s a long way to glory, it’s a long way to go
    From the dim and quiet churches where the Easter lilies blow.
    Good-by to home and comfort, farewell to sweethearts dear,
    It’s a long, long way to glory, and my heart’s right here.”

    When the soldier joined the colors he was full of thoughts of Fame,
    But he found among the trenches that they never spoke her name.
    Coming home upon a furlough with his right arm in a sling,
    He was strong for peace eternal when the chimes began to ring:
    “It’s a long way to glory, it’s a long way to go,
    The route is marked in crimson with the blood of friend and foe.
    There’s a girl I want to marry, we have waited ‘most a year,
    It’s a long, long way to glory when my heart is here.

    “I would rather have a cottage, and a garden and a cow,
    Than a V. C. on my bosom, and a laurel on my brow.
    War has led me through his shambles till my soul is worn to rags;
    Give us peace the wide world over, fold away the battle-flags;
    It’s a long way to glory, it’s a long way to go,
    It’s a long way to glory and the hardest road I know.
    From the snowy Easter lilies may the dove of peace appear,
    It’s a long, long way to glory, for my heart’s right here.”

  • Once Again

    From The Topeka State Journal, June 3, 1915. By Roy K. Moulton.

    Quite soon the world must hesitate
    And listen to the graduate
        And soak in good advice
    That’s given by the wise young men
    And women o’er and o’er again
        Without the slightest price.

    They’ve got a lot of it to give.
    They’ll tell the whole world how to live
        And how to win the strife.
    They’ll tell the old folk as of yore,
    In fancy and high-sounding lore
        How to succeed in life.

    It’s safe to say they will solve all
    Of Wilson’s problems, great and small,
        And questions of the day.
    The world, of course, will be polite
    And listen on commencement night
        And then go on its way.

  • The Good Old Rebel

    From the Richmond Times Dispatch, June 2, 1915. By Innes Randolph.

    [The following verses, which were set to music, and formed one of the favorite songs of the generation now nearly gone, were written almost immediately after the close of the Civil War, when the South was in the throes of reconstruction, and when an oath of allegiance and consequent pardon were prerequisite to the rights of citizenship.]

    Oh, I’m a good old Rebel,
        Now that’s just what I am;
    For this “fair Land of Freedom”
        I don’t care a dam.
    I’m glad I fit against it—
        I only wish we’d won,
    And I don’t want no pardon
        For anything I’ve done.

    I hates the Constitution,
        This great Republic, too;
    I hates the Freedmen’s Buro,
        In uniforms of blue.
    I hates the nasty eagle,
        With all his brag and fuss;
    The lyin’ thievin’ Yankees,
        I hates ‘em wuss and wuss.

    I hates the Yankee Nation
        And everything they do;
    I hates the Declaration
        Of Independence, too.
    I hates the glorious Union,
        ’Tis dripping with our blood;
    I hates the striped banner—
        I fit it all I could.

    I followed old Mars’ Robert
        For four year, near about,
    Got wounded in three places,
        And starved at Pint Lookout.
    I cotched the roomatism
        A-campin’ in the snow,
    But I killed a chance of Yankees—
        I’d like to kill some mo’.

    Three hundred thousand Yankees
        Is stiff in Southern dust;
    We got three hundred thousand
        Before they conquered us.
    They died of Southern fever
        And Southern steel and shot;
    I wish it was three millions
        Instead of what we got.

    I can’t take up my musket
        And fight ‘em now no more,
    But I ain’t agoin’ to love ‘em,
        Now that is sartin sure.
    And I don’t want no pardon
        For what I was and am;
    I won’t be reconstructed
        And I don’t care a dam.

  • Yanktum Doodlebug

    From The Fool-Killer, June 1, 1915. By John McDonough.

    Yankee Doodle prayed for peace
        Upon one Sunday morning;
    Then sold some shot and shells to kill
        Young men and babies borning.

    So it is with Yankee Doo—
        Yankee Doodle Dandy—
    War is hell, but then, oh well!
        Blood money comes in handy.