FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   >>  
e victory shall not come to me, Perhaps I shall not reach the goal I seek, It may be at the last I shall be weak And falter as the promised land I see; Yet I must try for it and strive to be All that a conqueror is. On to the peak, Must be my call--this way lies victory! Boy, take my hand and hear me when I speak. There is the goal. In honor make the fight. I may not reach it but, my boy, you can. Cling to your faith and work with all your might, Some day the world shall hail you as a man. And when at last shall come your happy day, Enough for me that I have shown the way. WINDING THE CLOCK When I was but a little lad, my old Grandfather said That none should wind the clock but he, and so, at time for bed, He'd fumble for the curious key kept high upon the shelf And set aside that little task entirely for himself. In time Grandfather passed away, and so that duty fell Unto my Father, who performed the weekly custom well; He held that clocks were not to be by careless persons wound, And he alone should turn the key or move the hands around. I envied him that little task, and wished that I might be The one to be entrusted with the turning of the key; But year by year the clock was his exclusive bit of care Until the day the angels came and smoothed his silver hair. To-day the task is mine to do, like those who've gone before I am a jealous guardian of that round and glassy door, And 'til at my chamber door God's messenger shall knock To me alone shall be reserved the right to wind the clock. THE NEED We were settin' there an' smokin' of our pipes, discussin' things, Like licker, votes for wimmin, an' the totterin' thrones o' kings, When he ups an' strokes his whiskers with his hand an' says t' me: "Changin' laws an' legislatures ain't, as fur as I can see, Goin' to make this world much better, unless somehow we can Find a way to make a better an' a finer sort o' man. "The trouble ain't with statutes or with systems--not at all; It's with humans jus' like we air an' their petty ways an' small. We could stop our writin' law-books an' our regulatin' rules If a better sort of manhood was the product of our schools. For the things that we air needin' isn't writin' from a pen Or bigger guns to shoot with, but a bigger type of men. [Illustration: _"The Need"_ _From a painting by_ PRUETT CARTER.] "I reckon all these problems air jest ornery like the weeds. They grow in
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   >>  



Top keywords:

things

 

writin

 
Grandfather
 

bigger

 

victory

 

totterin

 

problems

 

licker

 

wimmin

 

thrones


whiskers
 
guardian
 
strokes
 

reckon

 

ornery

 

settin

 
reserved
 

chamber

 

glassy

 

messenger


smokin
 

CARTER

 

discussin

 

legislatures

 

jealous

 

schools

 

product

 

regulatin

 

needin

 

painting


manhood
 

PRUETT

 

statutes

 

systems

 

humans

 

trouble

 

Illustration

 

Changin

 

Enough

 

WINDING


fumble
 

curious

 

promised

 

falter

 

Perhaps

 
strive
 

conqueror

 

exclusive

 

turning

 

entrusted