Wednesday, 3 January 2018

Home and the Office



Home is the place where the laughter should ring,
 And man should be found at his best.
Let the cares of the day be as great as they may,
 The night has been fashioned for rest.
So leave at the door when the toiling is o'er
 All the burdens of worktime behind,
And just be a dad to your girl or your lad—
 A dad of the rollicking kind.

The office is made for the tasks you must face;
 It is built for the work you must do;
You may sit there and sigh as your cares pile up high,
 And no one may criticize you;
You may worry and fret as you think of your debt,
 You may grumble when plans go astray,
But when it comes night, and you shut your desk tight,
 Don't carry the burdens away.

Keep daytime for toil and the nighttime for play,
 Work as hard as you choose in the town,
But when the day ends, and the darkness descends,
 Just forget that you're wearing a frown—
Go home with a smile! Oh, you'll find it worth while;
 Go home light of heart and of mind;
Go home and be glad that you're loved as a dad,
 A dad of the fun-loving kind.

                                                                                  (Author unknown)

Tuesday, 2 January 2018

The Finest Fellowship


There may be finer pleasures than just tramping with your boy,
And better ways to spend a day; there may be sweeter joy;
There may be richer fellowship than that of son and dad,
But if there is, I know it not; it's one I've never had.

Oh, some may choose to walk with kings and men of pomp and pride,
But as for me, I choose to have my youngster at my side.
And some may like the rosy ways of grown-up pleasures glad,
But I would go a-wandering with just a little lad.

Yes, I would seek the woods with him and talk to him of trees,
And learn to know the birds a-wing and hear their melodies;
And I would drop all worldly care and be a boy awhile;
Then hand-in-hand come home at dusk to see the mother smile.

Grown men are wearisome at times, and selfish pleasures jar,
But sons and dads throughout the world the truest comrades are.
So when I want a perfect day with every joy that's fine,
I spend it in the open with that little lad o' mine. 


By Edgar Albert Guest

Saturday, 16 December 2017

Don't Take Your Troubles To Bed.


    You may labor your fill, friend of mine, if you will;
      You may worry a bit, if you must;
    You may treat your affairs as a series of cares,
      You may live on a scrap and a crust;
    But when the day's done, put it out of your head;
    Don't take your troubles to bed.

    You may batter your way through the thick of the fray,
      You may sweat, you may swear, you may grunt;
    You may be a jack-fool if you must, but this rule
      Should ever be kept at the front:--
    Don't fight with your pillow, but lay down your head
    And kick every worriment out of the bed.

    That friend or that foe (which he is, I don't know),
      Whose name we have spoken as Death,
    Hovers close to your side, while you run or you ride,
      And he envies the warmth of your breath;
    But he turns him away, with a shake of his head,
    When he finds that you don't take your troubles to bed.

Author Unknown

Thursday, 30 November 2017

The Path to Home


The Path to Home

THERE'S the mother at the doorway, and the children at the gate,
And the little parlor windows with the curtains white and straight.
There are shaggy asters blooming in the bed that lines the fence,
And the simplest of the blossoms seems of mighty consequence.
Oh, there isn't any mansion underneath God's starry dome
That can rest a weary pilgrim like the little place called home.

Men have sought for gold and silver; men have dreamed at night of fame;
In the heat of youth they've struggled for achievement's honored name;
But the selfish crowns are tinsel, and their shining jewels paste,
And the wine of pomp and glory soon grows bitter to the taste.
For there's never any laughter howsoever far you roam,
Like the laughter of the loved ones in the happiness of home.

-        
                                                                                                                                                                   Edgar Albert Guest

Sunday, 18 June 2017

Success



           I hold no dream of fortune vast,
            Nor seek undying fame.
          I do not ask when life is past
            That many know my name.

          I may not own the skill to rise
            To glory's topmost height,
          Nor win a place among the wise,
            But I can keep the right.

          And I can live my life on earth
            Contented to the end,
          If but a few shall know my worth
            And proudly call me friend.

                                                                                                    
                                                                                        By Edgar A. Guest

Thursday, 15 October 2015

You May Count That Day


A class of little settlement girls besought Mrs. George Herbert Palmer, one insufferable summer morning, to tell them how to be happy. "I'll give you three rules," she said, "and you must keep them every day for a week. First, commit something good to memory each day. Three or four words will do, just a pretty bit of poem, or a Bible verse. Do you understand?" A girl jumped up. "I know; you want us to learn something we'd be glad to remember if we went blind." Mrs. Palmer was relieved; these children understood. She gave the three rules--memorize something good each day, see something beautiful each day, do something helpful each day. When the children reported at the end of the week, not a single day had any of them lost. But hard put to it to obey her? Indeed they had been. One girl, kept for twenty-four hours within squalid home-walls by a rain, had nevertheless seen two beautiful things—a sparrow taking a bath in the gutter, and a gleam of sunlight on a baby's hair.


  If you sit down at set of sun
     And count the acts that you have done,
     And, counting, find
  One self-denying deed, one word
  That eased the heart of him who heard-
     One glance most kind,
  That fell like sunshine where it went-
  Then you may count that day well spent.

  But if, through all the livelong day,
  You've cheered no heart, by yea or nay-
     If, through it all
  You've nothing done that you can trace
  That brought the sunshine to one face-
     No act most small
  That helped some soul and nothing cost-
  Then count that day as worse than lost.
  

By George Eliot

Tuesday, 13 October 2015

Meetin' Trouble


Some students of biology planned a trick on their professor. They took the head of one beetle, the body of another of a totally different species, the wings of a third, the legs of a fourth. These members they carefully pasted together. Then they asked the professor what kind of bug the creature was. He answered promptly, "A humbug." Just such a monstrosity is trouble--especially future trouble. Some things about it are real, but the whole combined menace is only an illusion, not a thing which actually exists at all. Face the trouble itself; give no heed to that idea of it which invests it with a hundred dire calamities.

  Trouble in the distance seems all-fired big--
    Sorter makes you shiver when you look at it a-comin';
  Makes you wanter edge aside, er hide, er take a swig
    Of somethin' that is sure to set your worried head a-hummin'.
  Trouble in the distance is a mighty skeery feller--
  But wait until it reaches you afore you start to beller!

  Trouble standin' in th' road and frownin' at you, black,
    Makes you feel like takin' to the weeds along the way;
  Wish to goodness you could turn and hump yerself straight back;
    Know 'twill be awful when he gets you close at bay!
  Trouble standin' in the road is bound to make you shy--
  But wait until it reaches you afore you start to cry!

  Trouble face to face with you ain't pleasant, but you'll find
    That it ain't one-ha'f as big as fust it seemed to be;
  Stand up straight and bluff it out! Say, "I gotter a mind
    To shake my fist and skeer you off--you don't belong ter me!"
  Trouble face to face with you? Though you mayn't feel gay,
  Laugh at it as if you wuz--and it'll sneak away!

 by Everard Jack Appleton 
  From "The Quiet Courage."