Share:
  Guess poet | Poets | Poets timeline | Isles | Contacts

Ella Wheeler Wilcox - What I Have Seen #3Ella Wheeler Wilcox - What I Have Seen #3
Work rating: Low


I saw two youths: both were fair in the face, They had set out foot to foot in life`s race; But one said to the other, "I say now, my brother, You are going a little too slow; The world will look on, and say, `See Josy John,` We must put on more style, now, you know." So he tipped a plug hat on one side of his pate, And strutted along with a Jockey Club gait; And he carried a cane, and said, "It is plain, I am too fine a fellow to toil. I can gamble and bet, and a good living get; But my hands are too pretty to soil. "My friend in the rear, you are slow, I am fast; I am up with the times—I am first, you are last. So I guess I will leave you—aw, if it won`t grieve you; I`ll wait for you when I get through; Or, when up on the hill, I`ll remem-bah you still, And—aw, mayhap I`ll come and help you." I saw him pass on with a strut through the street; Saw him stopped by a score of "good boys" for a treat. While the calm "Josy John" went quietly on, And kept his lips free from the bowl; Worked at whatever came, turned from sin and from shame, And wrote "Purity," "Truth," in his soul. I saw two men: one was fair to behold; The other, a drunken sot, bloated and bold. One stood on the mountain and drank of God`s fountain, The other drank beer in the street. Yet both started alike; but one made a "strike," Which ended, you see, in defeat.
Source

The script ran 0.001 seconds.