Thus broadly based, his spacious faith and love    Enfolded all below as all above--    Nay, ev'n if overmuch he loved mankind,    He gave his love's vast largess as designed.
       Therefore, in fondest, faithful service, he    Wrought ever bravely for humanity--    Stood, first of heroes for the Right allied--    Foes, even, grieving, when (for them) he died.
       This was the man we loved--are loving yet,    And still shall love while longing eyes are wet    With selfish tears that well were brushed away    Remembering his smile of yesterday.--
       For, even as we knew him, smiling still,    Somewhere beyond all earthly ache or ill,    He waits with the old welcome--just as when    We met him smiling, we shall meet again.
   NEW YEAR'S NURSERY JINGLE
       Of all the rhymes of all the climes      Of where and when and how,    We best and most can boost and boast      The Golden Age of NOW!
   TO THE MOTHER
       The mother-hands no further toil may know;      The mother-eyes smile not on you and me;    The mother-heart is stilled, alas!--But O      The mother-love abides eternally.
   TO MY SISTER
   A BELATED OFFERING FOR HER BIRTHDAY
       These books you find three weeks behind      Your honored anniversary    Make me, I fear, to here appear      Mayhap a trifle cursory.--    Yet while the Muse must thus refuse      The chords that fall caressfully,    She seems to stir the publisher      And dealer quite successfully.
       As to our _birthdays_--let 'em run      Until they whir and whiz!    Read Robert Louis Stevenson,      And hum these lines of his:--    "The eternal dawn, beyond a doubt,      Shall break on hill and plain    And put all stars and candles out      Ere we be young again."
   A MOTTO
       The _Brightest_ Star's the _modestest_,    And more'n likely writes    His motto like the lightnin'-bug's--    _Accordin' To His Lights_.
   TO A POET ON HIS MARRIAGE
   MADISON CAWEIN
       Ever and ever, on and on,    From winter dusk to April dawn,    This old enchanted world we range    From night to light--from change to change--    Or path of burs or lily-bells,    We walk a world of miracles.
       The morning evermore must be    A newer, purer mystery--    The dewy grasses, or the bloom    Of orchards, or the wood's perfume    Of wild sweet-williams, or the wet    Blent scent of loam and violet.
       How wondrous all the ways we fare--    What marvels wait us, unaware!...    But yesterday, with eyes ablur    And heart that held no hope of Her,    You paced the lone path, but the true    That led to where she waited you.
   ART AND POETRY
   TO HOMER C. DAVENPORT
       "Wess," he says, and sort o' grins,    "Art and Poetry is twins.    'F I could draw as you have drew,    Like to jes' swap pens with you."
   HER SMILE OF CHEER AND VOICE OF SONG
   ANNA HARRIS RANDALL
       Spring fails, in all its bravery of brilliant gold and green,--    The sun, the grass, the leafing tree, and all the dazzling scene          Of dewy morning--orchard blooms,          And woodland blossoms and perfumes            With bird-songs sown between.
       Yea, since _she_ smiles not any more, so every flowery thing    Fades, and the birds seem brooding o'er her silence as they sing--          Her smile of cheer and voice of song          Seemed so divinely to belong            To ever-joyous Spring!
       Nay, still she smiles.--Our eyes are blurred and see not through our        tears:    And still her rapturous voice is heard, though not of mortal ears:--          Now ever doth she smile and sing          Where Heaven's unending clime of Spring            Reclaims those gifts of hers.
   OLD INDIANY
   FRAGMENT
   INTENDED FOR A DINNER OF THE INDIANA SOCIETY OF CHICAGO
       Old Indiany, 'course we know    Is first, and best, and _most_, also,    Of _all_ the States' whole forty-four:--    She's first in ever'thing, that's shore!--    And _best_ in ever'way as yet    Made known to man; and you kin bet    She's _most_, because she won't confess    She ever was, or will be, _less_!    And yet, fer all her proud array    Of sons, how many gits away!--    No doubt about her bein' _great_    But, fellers, she's a leaky State!    And them that boasts the most about    Her, them's the ones that's dribbled out.    Law! jes' to think of all you boys    'Way over here in Illinoise    A-celebratin', like ye air,    Old Indiany, 'way back there    In the dark ages, so to speak,    A-prayin' for ye once a week    And wonderin' what's a-keepin' you    From comin', like you ort to do.    You're all a-lookin' well, and like    You wasn't "sidin' up the pike,"    As the tramp-shoemaker said    When "he sacked the boss and shed    The blame town, to hunt fer one    Where they didn't work fer fun!"    Lookin' _extry_ well, I'd say,    Your old home so fur away.--    Maybe, though, like the old jour.,    Fun hain't all yer workin' fer.    So you've found a job that pays    Better than in them old days    You was on _The Weekly Press_,    Heppin' run things, more er less;    Er a-learnin' telegraph    Operatin', with a half    Notion of the tinner's trade,    Er the dusty man's that laid    Out designs on marble and    Hacked out little lambs by hand,    And chewed fine-cut as he wrought,    "Shapin' from his bitter thought"    Some squshed mutterings to say,--    "Yes, hard work, and porer pay!"    Er you'd kind o' thought the far-    Gazin' kuss that owned a car    And took pictures in it, had    Jes' the snap you wanted--bad!    And you even wondered why    He kep' foolin' with his sky-    Light the same on shiny days    As when rainin'. ('T leaked always.)    Wondered what strange things was hid    In there when he shet the door    And smelt like a burnt drug store    Next some orchard-trees, i swan!    With whole roasted apples on!    That's why Ade is, here of late,    Buyin' in the dear old State,--    So's to cut it up in plots    Of both town and country lots.
   ABE MARTIN
       Abe Martin!--dad-burn his old picture!    P'tends he's a Brown County fixture--    A kind of a comical mixture        Of hoss-sense and no sense at all!    His mouth, like his pipe, 's allus goin',    And his thoughts, like his whiskers, is flowin',    And what he don't know ain't wuth knowin'--        From Genesis clean to baseball!
       The artist, Kin Hubbard, 's so keerless    He draws Abe most eyeless and earless,    But he's never yet pictured him cheerless        Er with fun 'at he tries to conceal,--    Whuther onto the fence er clean over    A-rootin' up ragweed er clover,    Skeert stiff at some "Rambler" er "Rover"        Er newfangled automo_beel_!
       It's a purty steep climate old Brown's in;    And the rains there his ducks nearly drowns in    The old man hisse'f wades his rounds in        As ca'm and serene, mighty nigh    As the old handsaw-hawg, er the mottled    Milch cow, er the old rooster wattled    Like the mumps had him 'most so well throttled        That it was a pleasure to die.
       But best of 'em all's the fool-breaks 'at    Abe don't see at all, and yit makes 'at    Both me and you lays back and shakes at        His comic, miraculous cracks    Which makes him--clean back of the power    Of genius itse'f in its flower--    This Notable Man of the Hour,        Abe Martin, The Joker on Facts.
   O. HENRY
   WRITTEN IN THE CHARACTER OF "SHERRARD PLUMMER"
       O. Henry, Afrite-chef of all delight!--      Of all delectables conglomerate      That stay the starved brain and rejuvenate    The mental man. Th' esthetic appetite--    So long anhungered that its "in'ards" fight      And growl gutwise,--its pangs thou dost abate      And all so amiably alleviate,    Joy pats its belly as a hobo might    Who haply hath attained a cherry pie      With no burnt bottom in it, ner no seeds--        Nothin' but crispest crust, and thickness fit,    And squshin'-juicy, and jes' mighty nigh      Too dratted drippin'-sweet fer human needs,        But fer the sosh of milk that goes with it.
   "MONA MACHREE"
       "_Mona Machree, I'm the wanderin' cr'ature now,                  Over the sea;    Slave of no lass, but a lover of Nature now                  Careless and free._"                                        --T. A. Daly.
       Mona Machree! och, the sootheri 
					     					 			n' flow of it,                Soft as the sea,    Yet, in-under the mild, moves the wild undertow of it                Tuggin' at me,    Until both the head and the heart o' me's fightin'    For breath, nigh a death all so grandly invitin'    That--barrin' your own livin' yet--I'd delight in,      Drowned in the deeps of this billowy song to you    Sung by a lover your beauty has banned,    Not alone from your love but his dear native land,    Whilst the kiss of his lips, and touch of his hand,      And his song--all belong to you,                Mona Machree!
   WILLIAM McKINLEY
   CANTON, OHIO, SEPTEMBER 30, 1907
       He said: "It is God's way:      His will, not ours be done."    And o'er our land a shadow lay      That darkened all the sun.    The voice of jubilee      That gladdened all the air,    Fell sudden to a quavering key      Of suppliance and prayer.
       He was our chief--our guide--      Sprung of our common Earth,    From youth's long struggle proved and tried      To manhood's highest worth:    Through toil, he knew all needs      Of all his toiling kind--    The favored striver who succeeds--      The one who falls behind.
       The boy's young faith he still      Retained through years mature--    The faith to labor, hand and will,      Nor doubt the harvest sure--    The harvest of man's love--      A nation's joy that swells    To heights of Song, or deeps whereof      But sacred silence tells.
       To him his Country seemed      Even as a Mother, where    He rested--slept; and once he dreamed--      As on her bosom there--    And thrilled to hear, within      That dream of her, the call    Of bugles and the clang and din      Of war.... And o'er it all
       His rapt eyes caught the bright      Old Banner, winging wild    And beck'ning him, as to the fight ...      When--even as a child--    He wakened--And the dream      Was real! And he leapt    As led the proud Flag through a gleam      Of tears the Mother wept.
       His was a tender hand--      Even as a woman's is--    And yet as fixed, in Right's command,      As this bronze hand of his:    This was the Soldier brave--      This was the Victor fair--    This is the Hero Heaven gave      To glory here--and There.
   BENJAMIN HARRISON
   ON THE UNVEILING OF HIS MONUMENT AT INDIANAPOLIS
   OCTOBER 27, 1908
       As tangible a form in History      The Spirit of this man stands forth as here      He towers in deathless sculpture, high and clear    Against the bright sky of his destiny.    Sprung of our oldest, noblest ancestry,      His pride of birth, as lofty as sincere,      Held kith and kin, as Country, ever dear--    Such was his sacred faith in you and me.    Thus, natively, from youth his work was one      Unselfish service in behalf of all--        Home, friends, and sharers of his toil and stress;    Ay, loving all men and despising none,      And swift to answer every righteous call,        His life was one long deed of worthiness.
       The voice of Duty's faintest whisper found      Him as alert as at her battle-cry--      When awful War's battalions thundered by,    High o'er the havoc still he heard the sound    Of mothers' prayers and pleadings all around;      And ever the despairing sob and sigh      Of stricken wives and orphan children's cry    Made all our Land thrice consecrated ground.    So rang his "Forward!" and so swept his sword--      On!--on!--till from the fire-and-cloud once more        Our proud Flag lifted in the glad sunlight    As though the very Ensign of the Lord      Unfurled in token that the strife was o'er,        And victory--as ever--with the right.
   LEE O. HARRIS
   CHRISTMAS DAY--1909
       O say not he is dead,      The friend we honored so;    Lift up a grateful voice instead      And say: He lives, we know--    We know it by the light      Of his enduring love    Of honor, valor, truth, and right,      And man, and God above.
       Remember how he drew      The child-heart to his own,    And taught the parable anew,      And reaped as he had sown;    Remember with what cheer      He filled the little lives,    And stayed the sob and dried the tear      With mirth that still survives.
       All duties to his kind      It was his joy to fill;    With nature gentle and refined,      Yet dauntless soul and will,    He met the trying need      Of every troublous call,    Yet high and clear and glad indeed      He sung above it all.
       Ay, listen! Still we hear      The patriot song, the lay    Of love, the woodland note so dear--      These will not die away.    Then say not he is dead,      The friend we honor so,    But lift a grateful voice instead      And say: He lives, we know.
   THE HIGHEST GOOD
   WRITTEN FOR A HIGH-SCHOOL ANNUAL
       To attain the highest good    Of true man and womanhood,    Simply do your honest best--    God with joy will do the rest.
   MY CONSCIENCE
       Sometimes my Conscience says, says he,    "Don't you know me?"    And I, says I, skeered through and through,    "Of course I do.    You air a nice chap ever' way,    I'm here to say!    You make me cry--you make me pray,    And all them good things thataway--    That is, at _night_. Where do you stay    Durin' the day?"
       And then my Conscience says, onc't more,    "You know me--shore?"    "Oh, yes," says I, a-trimblin' faint,    "You're jes' a saint!    Your ways is all so holy-right,    I love you better ever' night    You come around,--tel' plum daylight,    When you air out o' sight!"
       And then my Conscience sort o' grits    His teeth, and spits    On his two hands and grabs, of course,    Some old remorse,    And beats me with the big butt-end    O' _that_ thing--tel my clostest friend    'Ud hardly know me. "Now," says he,    "Be keerful as you'd orto be    And _allus_ think o' me!"
   MY BOY
       You smile and you smoke your cigar, my boy;      You walk with a languid swing;    You tinkle and tune your guitar, my boy,      And you lift up your voice and sing;    The midnight moon is a friend of yours,      And a serenade your joy--    And it's only an age like mine that cures      A trouble like yours, my boy!
   THE OBJECT LESSON
   Barely a year ago I attended the Friday afternoon exercises of acountry school. My mission there, as I remember, was to refresh mymind with such material as might be gathered, for a "valedictory,"which, I regret to say, was to be handed down to posterity underanother signature than my own.
   There was present, among a host of visitors, a pale young man ofperhaps thirty years, with a tall head and bulging brow and a highlyintellectual pair of eyes and spectacles. He wore his hair withoutroach or "part" and the smile he beamed about him was "a joy forever."He was an educator--from the East, I think I heard it rumoured--anywayhe was introduced to the school at last, and he bowed, and smiled, andbeamed upon us all, and entertained us after the most delightfullyedifying manner imaginable. And although I may fail to reproduce theexact substance of his remarks upon that highly important occasion, Ithink I can at least present his theme in all its coherency of detail.Addressing more particularly the primary department of the school, hesaid:--
   "As the little exercise I am about to introduce is of recent origin,and the bright, intelligent faces of the pupils before me seem rifewith eager and expectant interest, it will be well for me, perhaps, tooffer by way of preparatory preface, a few terse words of explanation.
   "The Object Lesson is designed to fill a long-felt want, and isdestined, as I think, to revolutionize, in a great degree, theeducational systems of our land.--In my belief, the Object Lesson willsupply a want which I may safely say has heretofore left the mostegregious and palpable traces of mental confusion and intellectualinadequacies stamped, as it were, upon the gleaming reasons of themost learned--the highest cultured, and the most eminently gifted andpromising of our professors and scientists both at home and abroad.
   "Now this deficiency--if it may be so termed--plainly has a beginning;and probing deeply with the bright, clean scalpel of experience wediscover that--'As the twig is bent the tree's inclined.' To remedy,then, a deeply seated error which for so long has rankled at the veryroot of educational progress throughout the land, many plausible, andwe must admit, many helpful theories have been introdu 
					     					 			ced to allay thepainful errors resulting from the discrepancy of which we speak: butuntil now, nothing that seemed wholly to eradicate the defect has beendiscovered, and that, too, strange as it may seem, is, at last,emanating, like the mighty river, from the simplest source, butbroadening and gathering in force and power as it flows along, until,at last, its grand and mighty current sweeps on in majesty to the vastillimitable ocean of--of--of--Success! Ahem!
   "And, now, little boys and girls, that we have had by implication, aclear and comprehensive explanation of the Object Lesson and itsmission, I trust you will give me your undivided attention while Iendeavor--in my humble way--to direct your newly acquired knowledgethrough the proper channel. For instance:--
   "This little object I hold in my hand--who will designate it by itsproper name? Come, now, let us see who will be the first to answer. 'Apeanut,' says the little boy here at my right. Very good--very good! Ihold, then, in my hand, a peanut. And now who will tell me, what isthe peanut? A very simple question--who will answer? 'Something goodto eat,' says the little girl. Yes, 'something good to eat,' but wouldit not be better to say simply that the peanut is an edible? I thinkso, yes. The peanut, then, is--an edible--now, all together, anedible!
   "To what kingdom does the peanut belong? The animal, vegetable, ormineral kingdom? A very easy question. Come, let us have promptanswers. 'The animal kingdom,' does the little boy say? Oh, no! Thepeanut does not belong to the animal kingdom! Surely the little boymust be thinking of a larger object than the peanut--the elephant,perhaps. To what kingdom, then, does the peanut belong? Thev-v-veg--'The vegetable kingdom,' says the bright-faced little girl onthe back seat. Ah! that is better. We find then that the peanutbelongs to the--what kingdom? The 'vegetable kingdom.' Very good, verygood!