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- THERE are hermit souls that live withdrawn
- In the place of their self-content;
- There are souls like stars, that dwell apart,
- In a fellowless firmament;
- There are pioneer souls that blaze the paths
- Where highways never ran-
- But let me live by the side of the road
- And be a friend to man.
- Let me live in a house by the side of the road
- Where the race of men go by-
- The men who are good and the men who are bad,
- As good and as bad as I.
- I would not sit in the scorner's seat
- Nor hurl the cynic's ban-
- Let me live in a house by the side of the road
- And be a friend to man.
- I see from my house by the side of the road
- By the side of the highway of life,
- The men who press with the ardor of hope,
- The men who are faint with the strife,
- But I turn not away from their smiles and tears,
- Both parts of an infinite plan-
- Let me live in a house by the side of the road
- And be a friend to man.
- I know there are brook-gladdened meadows ahead,
- And mountains of wearisome height;
- That the road passes on through the long afternoon
- And stretches away to the night.
- And still I rejoice when the travelers rejoice
- And weep with the strangers that moan,
- Nor live in my house by the side of the road
- Like a man who dwells alone.
- Let me live in my house by the side of the road,
- Where the race of men go by-
- They are good, they are bad, they are weak, they are strong,
- Wise, foolish - so am I.
- Then why should I sit in the scorner's seat,
- Or hurl the cynic's ban?
- Let me live in my house by the side of the road
- And be a friend to man.
- Sam Walter Foss

- THE Man of Questions paused and stood
- Before the Man of Toil,
- And asked, "Are you content, my man,
- To dig here in the soil?
- Do you not yearn for wealth and fame,
- And this wide world to see?"
- The Man of Toil still stirred the soil
- And answered, "No, sir-ee!"
- "Do you not yearn," the Questioner asked,
- "To pluck life's higher fruits?"
- "Oh, yes," said he, "I'd like, maybe,
- Another pair of boots."
- "And wouldn't you like a coat to match,
- And pantaloons and a hat;
- And wouldn't you like to dress as well
- As your neighbor Jacob Pratt?"
- "Why, I'd have duds as good as Jake,"
- The Man of Toil replied;
- "Why, I'd have clo'es as good as those
- 'Fore I'd be satisfied."
- "But if Jake ran for selectman
- And nothing could defeat him,
- How would it do, then, just for you
- To step right in and beat him?"
- "First-class idee," the Man of Toil
- Responded with delight;
- "I think I'd make mince-meat of Jake
- 'Fore we got through the fight."
- "And then you'd settle down content?"
- "Content? Of Course! I swan!
- A man's a hog who asks for more
- When he's a sillickman."
- "But, sir, our Congress is corrupt
- And needs a renovation;
- Wouldn't you consent in such event
- To take the nomination?"
- "Oh yes I'd take the job," said he.
- The Questioner arched his eyes,
- "Then don't you think the presidency
- Would be about your size?
- Now after Congress had been cleansed
- Beyond a shade of doubt
- I think you'd go--you would, I know--
- And clean the White House out."
- "I'd take the job and do it brown,"
- The Man of Toil replied;
- "But you hoe corn from morn till night
- And still are satisfied."
- "Me satisfied! I guess that you
- Don't know me," he began--
- "Oh, yes, I do, I well know you
- You are the Average Man."
- Sam Walter Foss

- "LET us paint a landscape in June," he cried;
- "A Landscape in high June."
- And the poster-painter swelled with pride
- And trilled a merry tune.
- And he painted five cows in Antwerp blue
- (For he was a poster-painter true),
- And the grass they browsed was a light écru
- And a dark maroon.
- And the foot of one cow was in the sky,
- And her horns were pink and green;
- Her amber tail it curled on high--
- A bright and beauteous scene.
- And a lavender river flowed at her feet
- With gamboge lilies fragrant and sweet,
- But some were the color of powdered peat,
- Some light marine.
- And another cow's tail was round the sun
- (Her horns hung limply down);
- And her tail was white as wool new-spun,
- And the sun was a neutral brown.
- In the drab background was a pale-blue lamb
- Who stood by the side of her turquoise dam,
- And the sky--a pink parallelogram--
- On the lamb closed down.
- And the rhomboid hills were of ochre hue
- With trees of lilac white,
- And rectilinear forests grew
- In a limpid cochineal light.
- An isosceles lake spread fair and pink,
- And, gathered about its damask brink,
- Triangular swans came down to drink
- With glad delight.
- Then a milkmaid came with cheeks of dun
- And a smile of dark maroon,
- One arm was on the setting sun,
- One on the rising moon.
- And she seemed to float from a Nile-green sky,
- With an ebony arm and an ivory eye,
- And her gown swelled from a point on high,
- Like a pink balloon.
- But all the things the painter drew
- 'Twere hard to tell--
- The cow, the sky, the swans of blue,
- Lamb, maid, he painted well.
- But which was the cow and which the maid,
- And which were the swans or the trees of shade,
- And which were the sky or the hills, I'm afraid,
- No soul could tell.
- Sam Walter Foss

- "HOW is business?" asks the young man of the Spirit of the Years;
- "Tell me of the modern output from the factories of fate,
- And what jobs are waiting for me, waiting for me and my peers.
- What's the outlook? What's the prospect? Are the wages small or great?"
- "Business growing, more men needed," says the Spirit of the Years,
- "Jobs are waiting for right workmen,--and I hope you are the men,--
- Grand hard work and ample wages, work piled up in great arrears--
- 'Don't see any job particular?' Listen, and I'll tell you then.
- "There are commonwealths to govern, there are senates to be swayed,
- There are new states still undreamed of to be founded,
- New empires in far oceans to be moulded--who's afraid?--
- And a couple polar oceans to be sounded.
- Come on, ye jolly empire-builders, here is work for you to do,
- And we don't propose to get along without it.
- Here's the little job of building this old planet over new,
- And it's time to do the business. Get about it.
- "Get to work, ye world-repairers. Steel the age and guide the years,
- Shame the antique men with bigness of your own;
- Grow ye larger men than Plutarch's and the old long-whiskered seers;
- Show the world a million kings without a throne.
- 'What's your business?' Empire-building, founding hierarchies for the soul,
- Principalities and powers for the mind,
- Bringing ever-narrowing chaos under cosmical control,
- Building highways through its marsh-lands for mankind.
- "Sow the lonely plains with cities; thread the flowerless land with streams;
- Go to thinking thoughts unthought-of, following where your genius leads,
- Seeing visions, hearing voices, following stars, and dreaming dreams,
- And then bid your dreams and visions bloom and flower into deeds.
- 'What's your business?' Shaping eras, making epochs, building States,
- Wakening slumbering rebellions in the soul,
- Leading men and founding systems, grappling with the elder fates
- Till the younger fates shall greaten and assume the old control.
- "'Business rushing?' Fairly lively. There's a world to clean and sweep,
- Cluttered up with wars and armies; 'tis your work to brush 'em out;
- Bid the fierce clinch-fisted nations clasp their hands across the deep;
- Wipe the tired world of armies; 'tis a fair day's work no doubt.
- 'Business rushing?' Something doing. You've a contract on your hands
- To wipe out the world's distinctions,--country, color, caste, and birth,--
- And to make one human family of a thousand alien lands,
- Nourishing a billion brothers with no foreigner on earth.
- "Have you learned yet," says the Zeitgeist, "the old secret of the soul?
- Make the sleepy sphinx give answer, for her riddle's long unguessed.
- Tell the riddle; clear the mystery; bid the midnight dark uproll;
- Let the thought with which the ages long have travailed be expressd.
- Go and find the Northwest Passage through the far seas of the mind,--
- There, where man and God are mingled in the darkness, go and learn.
- Sail forth on that bournless ocean, shrouded, chartless, undefined:
- Pluck its mystery from that darkness; pluck its mystery and return.
- "'What's your business?' Finding out things that no other man could find,--
- Things concealed by jealous Nature under locks, behind the bars;
- Building paved and guttered highways for the onward march of mind
- Through the spaces 'twixt the planets to the secrets of the stars.
- 'What's your business?' Think like Plato,--he did not exhaust all thought;
- Preach like Savonarola; rule like Alfred; do not shirk;
- Paint like Raphael and Titian; build like Angelo--why not?
- Sing like Shakespeare. 'How is business?' Rather lively. Get to work!"
- Sam Walter Foss

- "THERE will be a war in Europe,
- Thrones will be rent and overturned,"
- ("Go and fetch a pail of water," said his wife).
- "Nations shall go down in slaughter,
- Ancient capitals be burned,"
- ("Hurry up and split the kindlings," said his wife).
- "Cities wrapped in conflagration!
- Nation decimating nation!
- Chaos crashing through creation!"
- ("Go along and feed the chickens," said his wife).
- "And the war shall reach to Asia,
- And the Orient be rent,"
- ("When you going to pay the grocer?" says his wife).
- "And the myrmidons of thunder
- Shake the trembling continent,"
- ("Hurry up and beat them carpets," said his wife).
- "Million myriads invading,
- Rapine, rioting, and raiding,
- Conquest, carnage, cannonading!"
- ("Wish you'd come and stir this puddin'," said his wife).
- "Oh, it breaks my heart, this onflict
- Of the Sclav and Celt and Dane,"
- ("Bob has stubbed his rubber boots on," said his wife).
- "Oh, the draggled Russian banners!
- Oh, the chivalry of Spain!"
- ("We have got no more molasses," said his wife).
- "See the marshalled millions led on
- With no bloodless sod to tread on,
- Gog and Magog! Armageddon!"
- ("Hurry up and get a yeast cake," said his wife).
- "Oh, the grapple of the nations,
- It is coming, woe is me!"
- ("Did you know we're out of flour?" said his wife).
- "Oh, the many-centuried empires
- Overwhelmed in slaughter's sea!"
- ("Wish you'd go and put the cat out," said his wife).
- "Death and dreadful dissolution
- Wreak their awful execution,
- Carnage, anarchy, confusion!"
- ("Let me have two cents for needles," said his wife.
- "All my love goes out to Europe,
- And my heart is torn and sad,"
- ("How can I keep house on nothing?" said his wife).
- "O, the carnival of carnage,
- O, the battle, malestrom mad!"
- ("Wish you'd battle for a living," said his wife).
- "Down in smoke and blood and thunder,
- While the stars look on in wonder,
- Must these empires all go under?"
- ("Where're we going to get our dinner?" said his wife).
- Sam Walter Foss

- WE'VE lived for forty years, dear wife,
- And walked together side by side,
- And you to-day are just as dear
- As when you were my bride.
- I've tried to make life glad for you,
- One long, sweet honeymoon of joy,
- A dream of marital content,
- Without the least alloy.
- I've smoothed all boulders from our path,
- That we in peace might toil along,
- By always hastening to admit
- That I was right and you were wrong.
- No mad diversity of creed
- Has ever sundered me from thee;
- For I permit you evermore
- To borrow your ideas of me.
- And thus it is, through weal or woe,
- Our love forevermore endures;
- For I permit that you should take
- My views and creeds, and make them yours.
- And thus I let you have my way,
- And thus in peace we toil along,
- For I am willing to admit
- That I am right and you are wrong.
- And when our matrimonial skiff
- Strikes snags in love's meandering stream,
- I lift our shallop from the rocks,
- And float as in a placid dream.
- And well I know our marriage bliss
- While life shall last will never cease;
- For I shall always let thee do,
- In generous love, just what I please.
- Peace comes, and discord flies away,
- Love's bright day follows hatred's night;
- For I am ready to admit
- That you are wrong and I am right.
- Sam Walter Foss

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