Tag: S. E. Kiser

  • Just to Be a Boy Again

    From the Rock Island Argus, June 2, 1913.
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     “Just to be a child again,” sighed the millionaire,
     “Knowing not what woe exists, free from every care;
     Just to be a child again, filled with boyish glee,
     Free from all the ills I bear and from sorrows free.”
     
     ‘Round the corner lay a boy, fretting in his bed.
     “Gee, I wisht I was a man,” dismally he said.
     “Every season seems to bring some disease, somehow.
     Had the scarlet fever last - got the measles now.
     
     “Yes, I’ve had the chicken-pox and the jaundice, too;
     ‘Spose I’ll have the mumps the next - always something new;
     When you’re sick there ain’t no fun, ‘cause you feel so bad;
     When you’re well you go to school - gee, but life is sad!”
     
     “Just to be a boy,” the man murmured with a sigh,
     “Free to frolic as I pleased, all things yet to try;
     Ah, how small men’s triumphs are, what a price we pay
     For the little that we get as we scheme away.”
  • Poor Young Man

    From the Rock Island Argus, May 30, 1913.
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     Ah, poor young man! He has no chance to show his worth;
     No undiscovered continents are left on earth;
     Columbus, had it been his fate to live today
     Might serve beneath some section boss for little pay.
     
     Oh, poor young man! He cannot use his gifts, alack!
     No Austerlitz remains to lose, no Rome to sack.
     The past has both Thermopylae and Waterloo—
     What is there that the poor young man may hope to do?
     
     Newton, Galileo, Morse, have lived and wrought;
     Homer, Shakespeare, Milton, Pope, and Burns and Scott!
     Ah, if they had not written all there was to write
     He might take up his pen and give the world delight.
     
     Raphael, Titian, Rembrandt—how with paint and brush
     May be expected to be supreme? Huge vessels rush
     From hemisphere to hemisphere, the winds defying
     Because a Fulton had a plan he thought worth trying.
     
     Oh, poor young man! He sits downcast, no chance remains
     For him to nobly free a race from galling chains.
     The great things have been done, alas! By craft or stealth
     The magnates have become possessed of all the wealth.
     
     The world has ceased to need men who were born to lead;
     He may not join the splendid few. ’Tis sad indeed!
     He came too late to win renown or claim applause;
     He has no chance to be supreme in any cause.
     
     Ah, poor young man! How sad his fate, how drear his lot.
     To have no hope of being great!—And yet, why not?
     At Homer many, many a man stuck out his tongue
     And told him that the greatest songs had all been sung.
  • Happy Days for Pa

    From the Rock Island Argus, May 28, 1913.
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     Pa is feeling rather chipper; every day he wears a smile
     Though he has no public office and keeps working all the while;
     They have not increased his wages, and they never will, I guess,
     But his look is always cheerful and he’s full of hopefulness.
     
     His overcoat is seedy and his pants bag at the knees;
     We are not among the people who can travel overseas;
     The price of living’s higher than it ought to be, ’tis true,
     But pa’s clinging to his courage and he takes a hopeful view.
     
     The folks next door have lately had to cut expenses down;
     It seems they’ve been unlucky—it’s the talk all over town;
     They have sold their new electric—ma pretends it was too bad—
     So it seems pa needn’t buy one, and it makes him mighty glad.
  • San Francisco

    From The Birmingham Age-Herald, May 18, 1913.
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     A pall hung over the broad blue bay;
     In smoking ruins the city lay—
     The splendid city so bravely planned—
     And Horror hastened from land to land
     And Sorrow’s sign was on every door
     For the far-famed city that was no more.
     
     And tearful men to their brethren said:
     “Its glory is gone and its greatness dead;
     Its marble halls and its stately homes
     Its towering walls and its lofty domes
     Its well-won pride and its careless glee
     Forever and ever have ceased to be!”
     
     But another city has risen there;
     They have made it great, they have made it fair;
     Its wharves have called to the wide world’s fleets
     And traffic roars through its crowded streets;
     Still glorified by the old romance
     It grieves no more o’er its sad mischance.
     
     They have left no trace on the flame-swept hills
     Of the twisted beams and the blackened sills,
     And over the haunts where vice was bred
     The glittering roofs of trade are spread;
     With matchless courage and splendid zeal
     They have made a marvel of stone and steel.
     
     They have planned with hope, they have wrought with pride
     And the spirit lives that men thought had died
     And they who were stricken so sorely dwell
     In a fairer city than that which fell
     And all that was lost in that day of despair
     They have bravely reclaimed and glorified there.
     
     The high hills gleam that were desolate
     And riches stream through the Golden Gate;
     A splendid city superbly planned
     Sends forth her greeting to every land,
     And fleets are sailing from every shore
     To the far-famed city that grieves no more.
  • My Pa

    From the Rock Island Argus, May 17, 1913.
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     My pa is not a millionaire,
         He’s never been elected yet
     To any office anywhere,
         There’s lots of things that we can’t get;
     Ma often wishes we could buy
         The costly things the neighbors do;
     The price of livin’ is so high
         We have to skimp and worry through.
     
     I guess my pa was never meant
         To be a leader in the strife;
     Ma says he’ll not be president
         Nor get ahead much in this life.
     But he can make a whistle, though
         Just from a piece of willow tree;
     I wish that you could see the bow
         And arrow that he fixed for me.
     
     My pa gets paid so much a week
         Because he doesn’t own a store;
     Ma says if he was not so meek
         And mild he might be drawin’ more.
     We have no car nor runabout
         And nearly always have to save;
     Ma’s heart is often full of doubt,
         But pa keeps hopin’ and is brave.
     
     Sometimes I help him in the yard
         When he comes home on Saturdays;
     I’m sorry he must work so hard
         And wish that he could get a raise;
     Most all the time ma needs a lot
         Of things we can’t afford, and which
     The neighbors nearly all have got
         Because they managed to get rich.
     
     My pa sometimes takes me away
         Out in the country for fresh air;
     We build dams in the streams and play
         That both of us are boys, out there;
     Ma says that pa, long, long ago
         Just got to be a mere machine;
     I wouldn’t want to trade him, though
         For any pa I’ve ever seen.
  • Would It Not Be Well?

    From the Rock Island Argus, May 16, 1913.
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     We speak in accents kind and fair
         Concerning those who have departed;
     We praise the ones who travel where
         The shoreless seas are all uncharted.
     Oh, it is well that we should raise
         Our voices in a grand, sweet chorus
     And passing o’er their foibles, praise
         The worth of them that go before us.
     
     But would it not be better still
         If men might sometimes gladly hear us
     Give forth expressions of goodwill
         And kindness while they lingered near us?
     ’Tis well to praise the dead, to be
         Respectful to them and forgiving;
     But would it not be good if we
         More often spoke well of the living?
  • The Lonely Little Boy

    From the Rock Island Argus, May 12, 1913.
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     The little boy whom you forget
         To play with when the days are fair
     The child whose hopes are sinless yet
         Who kneels to lisp his evening prayer
     Will soon leave off his childish ways
         And learn the things that men must learn;
     Why do you waste the precious days
         That never, never can return?
     
     You never lead him by the hand
         Nor make his little joys your own
     Ambition sends you her command
         And he is left to play alone;
     He never climbs upon your knee
         Delighted at the long day’s end
     To find that you have time to be
         His fond and sympathetic friend.
     
     You never can afford to waste
         A precious hour arousing him
     The prizes after which you haste
         Are always far away and dim;
     You must be ever pressing on
         Forgetting, while you strive and plan
     How soon his childhood will be gone
         How quickly he will be a man.
     
     You never pause with him to hear
         The breeze that sings among the reeds
     You have no time to give the dear
         Sweet sympathy for which he pleads;
     You never rush with him in wild
         Pursuit of fairies through the glen
     Yourself again a careless child
         Freed from the cares that worry men.
     
     Have you no treasured memories
         Of one who gladly played with you
     Before you had been robbed of ease
         And when your cares were small and few?
     Ah, will you rob him of the joy
         Of looking back along the years
     When he has ceased to be a boy
         And Duty’s call rings in his ears?
     
     The little boy whom you forget
         To play with when the days are fair
     The child whose thoughts are sinless yet
         Who kneels to lisp his evening prayer
     Will soon leave off his childish ways
         And you will sit somewhere alone
     Regretting precious wasted days
         And joys that might have been your own.
  • Real Trouble

    From the Rock Island Argus, May 1, 1913
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     He sighed because it was his fate
         To earn the blessings he received;
     Because he was compelled to wait
         For opportunities he grieved.
     
     He mourned because he could not claim
         A certain lady for his own;
     He sadly sighed because his name
         In many quarters was unknown.
     
     He thought his fate was hard to bear
         Because he seldom got a rest;
     When he began to lose his hair
         A bitter sadness filled his breast.
     
     But when he lost his appetite
         And when good health was his no more
     He sadly wondered day and night
         Why he had ever grieved before.
  • Ownership

    From the Rock Island Argus, April 28, 1913.
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     This glad world was not made for me,
         The brook would sing upon its way,
     The fragrant blossoms grace the tree,
         The squirrels in the branches play,
     If I should sink to nothingness,
         And never know again or care;
     But being here, I may possess
         All that is good and sweet and fair.
     
     I may be gladdened by the song
         With which the lark begins the day;
     To me the woodland joys belong,
         The blossoms that bestrew my way;
     The beauty of the towering cliff
         I may behold with ecstasy;
     I see and hear—what matter if
         This fair world was not made for me?
  • It Pays to Talk

    From the Rock Island Argus, April 24, 1913.
     By S. E. Kiser.
     
    
     Sim Watson’s stock of wit was small,
     But he let on he knew it all;
         He held his head up mighty high;
         The word he spoke the most was “I;”
     He had a large amount of gall,
         And never let a chance go by
     Whenever he was in a crowd
     To make his conversation loud.
     
     You’d hear his voice above the rest
     He’d strut and he’d stick out his chest
         He never “guessed,” he always KNEW;
         Or, leastwise, he pretended to;
     He always seemed to worry lest
         He might be hidden from the view;
     When taller men than Sim were there
     You’d see him standin’ on a chair.
     
     We all knew his talk was guff,
     That he was puttin’ up a bluff,
         And yet, somehow, we kind of got
         To thinkin’ that he knew a lot;
     The jokes he told were old and tough—
         Most of them tales that we’d forgot—
     But still we’d laugh at what he said,
     And so his reputation spread.
     
     Well, as I see the case today,
     Sim taught a lesson, anyway;
         Your stock of knowledge may be small,
         But don’t stand back against the wall
     And listen to what others say.
         Speak up and claim to know it all;
     Most people will believe you do—
     The wiser ones are mighty few.