Category: Rock Island Argus

  • The Silvery Lining

    From the Rock Island Argus, October 4, 1912.
    By Duncan M. Smith.
     
    
     There’s no use in moaning
     In weeping and groaning.
     The sun may be shining
     Ere yet it is noon.
     His warm rays may cheer you
     And hope nestle near you,
     So cease your repining
     And look for it soon.
     
     Make end to the sighing
     For swift years are flying
     And joy at your casement
     Is calling to you.
     Make haste, then, to meet it.
     Go smiling to greet it.
     Give care its effacement
     And hide it from view.
     
     Oh, turn your face sunward
     And listen for one word,
     A message of sweetness,
     Of love pure and true!
     Be happy, my dearie;
     Be smiling and cheery,
     And then with completeness
     Will joy come to you.
  • Song of the Road

    From the Rock Island Argus, October 1, 1912.
    By Duncan M. Smith.
     
    
     I love the open road that down
       The river winds away
     And reaches on from town to town
       Through fields with flowers gay,
     That offers here and there a nook
       Beneath a shady tree
     Where proper folk ne’er think to look
       Nor prying eye may see.
     
     I love the high and open sky;
       I love it when it’s gray.
     I love the swallows as they fly,
       The fishes when they play.
     I love the crashing thunderstorm
       When ‘neath a stack content,
     All snuggled up, serene and warm,
       I watch it till it’s spent.
     
     I love the wind that comes and goes
       With soft and slumb’rous sigh
     And flutters hollyhock and rose
       Whene’er it passes by.
     It kisses tramp and money king
       Alike in open day.
     The praises of the road I sing
       And tramp upon my way.
  • The Daily Grind

    From the Rock Island Argus, September 16, 1912.
    By Duncan M. Smith.
     
    
     Writing pieces for the paper,
     Mostly foolishness and vapor;
     Sometimes reason may slip in,
     Nor is that a deadly sin,
     But it is a sad mistake
     That a writer should not make,
     Lest the reader go to sleep
     Or declare it is too deep
     And the paper fling aside,
     Going forth to take a ride.
     
     Writing for the public print,
     Gossip, story, beauty hint—
     Anything to fill the space
     That a streak of blues will chase;
     Anything that’s light and not
     Clogged with too involved a plot;
     Anything that’s not designed
     To make labor for the mind
     Or to air high sounding views,
     Lest the reader take a snooze.
     
     Writing for the public mart,
     For the eye and for the heart,
     Something simple, straight and plain
     That will rest the reader’s brain
     And will put him in the mood
     For the predigested food
     That adorns the printed page
     In this restless, rushing age;
     That will feed him something light
     Ere he goes to sleep at night.
     
     For we do not read to learn—
     We have knowledge, yes, to burn—
     But we read to be amused
     And to hear our foes abused.
     There is work enough, indeed,
     Where we toil at breakneck speed.
     So when we sit down at night
     With a paper and a light
     Nothing we are after then
     That will make us work again.
  • The Great Event

    From the Rock Island Argus, September 14, 1912.
    By Duncan M. Smith.
     
    
     The county fair is now on tap
       And all the porkers proud
     Are showing off their very best
       Before the gaping crowd.
     The cattle in the narrow stalls,
       The horses on the track,
     Are showing, each and every one,
       How lofty they can stack.
     
     The barker at the circus tent
       Is tearing in the air
     Great jagged holes, that each and all
       May know that he is there.
     The peanut and the popcorn man
       Are chasing far and wide
     To see that every hungry child
       Is with lunch supplied.
     
     Up in the building on the hill,
       Where cabbage is displayed
     Beside the pumpkins and the corn
       And goose eggs, freshly laid,
     The folks who raised it stand around
       To hear its praises told,
     And each one swells and feels as gay
       As any two-year-old.
     
     The father and the mother come,
       And all the kids are there.
     The listen to the big brass band
       And at the players stare.
     They take in everything in sight
       That gives them thrills or mirth,
     And you can bet most anything
       They get their money’s worth.