Category: Evening Star

  • The Summer Prospectus

    From the Evening Star, July 3, 1914. By Philander Johnson.

    I read about the fishing and I read about the trees.
    I read about the scenery all guaranteed to please.
    I read about wild nature with its glories and its grace
    And packed my grip, determined that I’d go and see the place.

    The fish were tired of biting and the trees were not as grand
    As those that flourished in our parks and roadways near at hand.
    And nature in its wildness seems to love a lot of things
    That it provides with various sorts of stickers and of stings.

    And yet those printed pages seemed like poetry so fine
    And a handsome illustration went with every other line.
    No longer will I seek the rolling wave or leafy nook.
    I’ll pack my grip again and go back home and read the book.

  • Superior Wisdom

    From the Evening Star, July 1, 1914. By Philander Johnson.

    A collar built to suffocate;
    A hat that seems a leaden weight;
    A shirt and over that a coat
    To shed each cool wave set afloat;
    Suspenders which are far from light,
    Or else a belt pulled safe and tight—
    In these suffering man so neat
    Goes forth to battle with the heat.

    A filmy cloud of rustling lace,
    That floats along with clinging grace;
    A bit of color, which the breeze
    May toss about with buoyant ease—
    The man stands by and gasps for air
    And then exclaims while gazing there
    On comfortable loveliness,
    “How foolishly those women dress!”

  • An Impractical Idea

    From the Evening Star, June 25, 1914. By Philander Johnson.

    The Oriental dreams about a future blissful state—
    Nirvana, which will find him all oblivious to fate.
    Mohammed gave his followers a heaven of their own,
    Which those with our ideas are inclined to let alone.
    There is a heaven for each mortal striving here below;
    For some the pace is rapid and some want it rather slow.
    I fear my own ideal to a scanty height ascends—
    Just let me sit around addressing post cards to my friends.

    There’s a gentle satisfaction that is never known to fail
    In taking up your pen and sending scenery by mail;
    Or if a certain taste for art or humor you’d display,
    You can find a funny jingle or a picture bluntly gay.
    When weary of this mortal strife, oh, let me find a spot
    Where I can scratch a line about the climate, cool or hot,
    And somehow, o’er the distance which its strange enchantment lends,
    Devote myself to sending picture cards to all my friends!

  • Fourth of July

    From the Evening Star, June 23, 1914. By Philander Johnson.

    No dangers lurk in the display
        Of sizz-wheel or of rocket.
    So safe and sane we’ve made the day
        That no one dares to knock it.
    We’ll organize a picnic crowd.
        We’ll have a fine attendance
    And father will recite aloud
        About our Independence.

    Some pickles and some eggs we’ll take
        And pie—we’ll have to risk it.
    We’ll have ice cream, sardines and cake
        And special homemade biscuit.
    We are a bold and hardy race,
        But on the day in question
    The only perils we can face
        Are those of indigestion.

  • The Changing Picture

    From the Evening Star, June 21, 1914. By Philander Johnson.

    How softly fall the memory lights
        On pictures of the past
    As still and sultry grow the nights
        That shade the glare at last.
    When like a furnace breath so hot
        The breezes ebb and flow,
    You think about the cherished spot
        Where once you shoveled snow.

    The eager tingle of the blast
        No more seems harsh and rude.
    That sky with clouds all overcast
        Seems gentle and subdued.
    Oh, how we wailed the bitter lot
        That faced us months ago,
    And now how lovely seems the spot
        Where once we shoveled snow.

  • The Sea Sweepers

    From the Evening Star, June 4, 1914. By Philander Johnson.

    There was an old lady who swept back the sea
    And she was as busy as busy could be.
    We laughed to observe her industrious style,
    But she kept at her task with a song and a smile.
        “It’s better,” said she,
        “To work, you’ll agree,
        And it pleases my fancy to sweep back the sea.”

    A neighbor of hers gathered fabulous gain.
    He sought for repose, but the quest was in vain.
    He coveted fame with ambition sincere,
    But for every good word cam a critical sneer.
        “Dear Madam,” said he,
        In a manner quite free,
        “You are wasting your time as you sweep back the sea.”

    “Ho! Ho!” she made answer. “You toil year by year,
    ‘Mid the ebb and flow of despair and good cheer.
    Your task is like mine, only hardly so wise,
    Since I get fresh air and some fine exercise.”
        And he answered, “Ah, me!
        If you like, I will be
        Your partner and help you to sweep back the sea!”

  • The New Pitcher’s Prayer

    From the Evening Star, May 31, 1914.

    Out on the grass-green diamond
        Thousands and thousands can see
    One, the man who is pitching—
        That little image is me.
    Clad in the garb of a player,
        Built for a pitcher am I,
    Whirling the ball with a motion
        Studied and graceful and high.

    You think you’re the judges before whom
        Pitchers are tried and approved;
    That you are the court and your verdict
        Tells whether I’m kept or removed.
    You do not know, but I’ll tell you,
        I haven’t a chance save as one
    Standing with mask and protector
        Determines my fate, lost or won.

    He can decide and determine,
        His calling of strike or of ball,
    Whether I’m good or a “dead one”—
        You do not matter at all.
    He can call corners or close ones,
        He can determine my fate;
    Make me or mar me at pleasure,
        Label me “star” or a “skate.”

    Umpire, I pray you, kind master,
        Look now with favor on me;
    Give me an inch now of margin,
        Waving your right arm up free.
    Fate’s staring there on the benches;
        The manager’s thinking today
    Will settle my doom or my fortune,
        So, umpire, be good to me, pray!

  • Tables Turned

    From the Evening Star, May 7, 1914. By Philander Johnson.

    I watched the gently flowing stream
        Where silver ripples stray.
    Beneath the water’s flash and gleam
        I knew the fish would play.
    I thought of many a prize to make
        A rare and tempting dish.
    I sat and dreamed, though half awake,
        That I was stringin’ fish.

    I looked and saw the finny tribe
        Down in the water clear.
    Swift circles they would there describe
        And to my hook draw near.
    I made full many a fervent wish,
        They romped in graceful glee.
    I dreamed that I was stringin’ fish.
        The fish were stringin’ me.

  • The Old Fan

    From the Evening Star, April 26, 1914.

    He comes every day to see them play
        Where the noisy bleachers shout.
    From the first of May in the thick of the fray
        You find him day in and out.

    He once had wealth and he once had health,
        But they both went long ago;
    He’s lost his wealth and comes in stealth
        To the game he used to know.

    He works in the fall just enough to call
        Together a hundred or two,
    That shall average all the days of ball
        And take him the summer through.

    He never is seen in the winter keen
        From the day of final fly
    ’Til spring is queen and the diamond’s green
        And the crack of the bat is nigh.

    Then a little more pale and a little more frail
        He creeps out to the ground,
    And leans o’er the rail when the flies they sail
        And studies the bushmen found.

    By the first of May, at least so they say,
        He begins to get his voice,
    And talk of the play in a running way
        And cackle about his choice.

    His mind disturbed, he never is heard
        Until that first of May
    To utter a word, then his heart is stirred
        And he shrieks at every play.

    So every spring we are wondering,
        ’Til we see him creeping out,
    If death’s dark wing has been hovering
        And fanned his life spark out.

    He’s shriveling thin, the spirit within
        Is all that keeps him about;
    When the home nine wins his cheek bones’ skin
        Shows a hectic flush without.

    And I often think that a breath will wink
        That frail life spirit out
    And break the link at death’s near brink
        If the home team’s put to rout.

    So here’s to the Fan, to the also ran,
        May he live on the bleachers here,
    And stretch life’s span and cheat death’s ban
        For still another year!

  • Annual Ordeal

    From the Evening Star, April 17, 1914. By Philander Johnson.

    When sunshine gets the better of the days so chill and raw,
    Dear father gets a hammer and a chisel and a saw.
    He says in thoughtful tones that match his stern superior frown,
    “A lot o’ things about this shack are getting all run down.
    The bells and lights need fixing and the doors are out of plumb.
    There’s not a lock or hinge that doesn’t call for oiling some!”
    It’s then we see a very anxious look on mother’s face,
    As she remarks, “He’s starting in to fool around the place.”

    There are grease spots on the carpet; there are scratches on the door.
    There are holes and splintered sections in the polished hardwood floor.
    If you pause to press a button it will shock you without fail.
    The plaster drops in bunches where he tried to drive a nail.
    But no one dares to criticize the work that he has done;
    So long as father pays the bills, he ought to have his fun.
    But there’s a sense of nervousness that nothing can efface
    When spring arrives and father starts to fool around the place.