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James Whitcomb Riley - ScrapsJames Whitcomb Riley - Scraps
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There`s a habit I have nurtured,     From the sentimental time When my life was like a story,     And my heart a happy rhyme,-- Of clipping from the paper,     Or magazine, perhaps, The idle songs of dreamers,     Which I treasure as my scraps. They hide among my letters,     And they find a cozy nest In the bosom of my wrapper,     And the pockets of my vest; They clamber in my fingers     Till my dreams of wealth relapse In fairer dreams than Fortune`s     Though I find them only scraps. Sometimes I find, in tatters     Like a beggar, form as fair As ever gave to Heaven     The treasure of a prayer; And words all dim and faded,     And obliterate in part, Grow into fadeless meanings     That are printed on the heart. Sometimes a childish jingle     Flings an echo, sweet and clear, And thrills me as I listen     To the laughs I used to hear; And I catch the gleam of faces,     And the glimmer of glad eyes That peep at me expectant     O`er the walls of Paradise. O syllables of measure!     Though you wheel yourselves in line, And await the further order     Of this eager voice of mine; You are powerless to follow     O`er the field my fancy maps, So I lead you back to silence     Feeling you are only scraps.
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