CHAPTER II.
POETS AND POETRY.
We here present a collection of verse written by Doniphan County writers, selected from the files of the county papers. Many of the writers here represented are natives of the county. Others have had their birth in the different states, and a few were born in foreign lands, but all have resided here, and the selections presented were inspired and written in Doniphan County.
SQUEAKS FROM THE SORGHUM WELL.
SOL. MILLER.
Tune-"Villikins and his Dinah."
As Martin was grinding some sorghum one day,
The commerce in sorghum's declining you know;
I detected your darkies remarking today
"A feather bed's good, if they had time to sleep;
"So Martin you'd better be changing your gait;
"The hypocrite business is pretty good pay;
"If men have besmeared you - embrace them and kiss;
"Take contracts to work for the great public cause;
"Be upright - whenever it brings you the pelf,
As Martin thus heard, did his wonder increase,
"Thence forward the grinding was dismally low;
Men ransacked the markets and thought it so queer
"Years came and years went, as the years always do,
I saw him once more after seasons had rolled,
"The last end of pea-time - the skin of the snail
"A tow-linen shirt that is minus a tail -
"And as he trudged onward thus did he complain:
MORAL.
"Whenever you see a great hog of a man, On the high prairie, October, 21, 1872. |
DID YOU EVER!
PAT. GRAY.
Did you ever take a ramble through the wood,
Did you ever to the orchard go to spark,
Did you ever keep your lady out too late,
Did her father ever catch her on your knee,
Did you ever fondly kiss her curley hair?
Did you ever find her in a little pout?
When your sweetheart had a package to be brought,
|
KANSAS.
CHARLES R. HEWINS
We're just as glad as we can be,
The boundless prairies, all our own,
It is the state for you and me,
We welcome all to this, our home - |
DEATH OF THE OLD YEAR.
MRS. EMILY STOCKING.
I walked in the moonlight's shimmering ray,
But the silence of night was scarcely broke.
Dost hear in the grove the wind's low sigh,
Tiny flowers that peeped out one by one,
The earth may be robed in her richest dress,
Dost see yon river? Ice-bound and still; |
THE GROUND HOG.
BY SOL. MILLER.
It's O, for the times of our fathers;
In his burrow in woodland hillside,
Then will we not learn from the ground hog |
M. E. CHURCH DEDICATION.
(Highland, Kansas.)
MARY DEANE.
Cradled, O, God within thy hand,
Upon thy loving heart, oh, trace
Bless those that bade these walls arise, |
THE OLD MAID.
EVARYAN.
She gave her life to love. She never knew
She never married. Suitors came and went:
Think you her life was wasted? Vale and hill
Her heart was full of sweetness till the end. |
TO THE RIVER.
ALMA KELLEY.
River, sad and dreary river,
Do you sing of sunny meadows ANSWER.
Once beside my laughing water
And my wavelets onward sweeping |
THE FOUNDING OF THE IOWA MISSION.
ANONYMOUS.
Hushed at last in balmy slumbers,
Where the pawpaw trees, still growing,
Mellow Autumn, sadly lingering,
Love and hate can thrill no longer,
Yonder, by the trees half hidden,
Pathways old, with faded grasses,
Tell us of one now reposing,
Feeble though, and frail in body,
Then there were no home scenes happy
In the distant forest jungle
Flowers of brilliant hue in Spring-time
All hail, wondrous transformation!
All hail glorious coronation,
Rescued from earth's midnight shadows; |
TO MY GREAT GRANDMOTHER.
(Aged Ninety-eight.)
NORMAN K. HICKMAN.
I count it a love and in honored tie,
Rosy and fair are the sunset hues;
The billows roll up from the years long fled,
'Tis the honest boast of a life well lived,
You say that your skies have a mournful cast,
The old sights sink in oblivion's sea;
Come there no sounds from balmier climes |
WHO IS TO BLAME?
MAUD ABBEY.
"Resistance to wrong is obedience to God."
"Am I my brother's keeper?" Still
Are to blame for childhood robbed
For manhood's treasure, sacred truth
Oh, may the nation's great heart go |
TELLING STORIES.
EVA RYAN.
My little one climbs on my knee to say,
Shall I tell the story of "Little Boy Blue"?
"O, somfin' pitty!" And I begin,
The story endsl there's a pause, and then
All at once the lids of my little one's eyes |
LULLABY.
LOLA KELLEY.
O, sleep, baby, sleep, for the twilight is dying,
The owl and the whippoorwill down by the river,
The fairy bell flowers o'er yonder are swinging
Now safe into dreamland go thou a drifting, |
MABEL.
THOMAS W. HEATLEY.
(To my little neighbor, Mabel Perry.)
Mobel - dainty little maiden -
Deep blue eyes that sparkle fair,
A voice both soft and musical,
A fairy form, a gentle step,
And though our dear no princess is,
And more than this - than outer charms - |
Transcribed from Gray's Doniphan County history: A record of the happenings of half a hundred years. By P. L. (Patrick Leopoldo) Gray. Bendena, Kan.: The Roycroft Press, 1905. 3p. l. [11]-84, 166, [2] p. front., plates, ports. 24 cm.