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Farm Legends

Chapter 26: THE GOOD OF THE FUTURE.
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About This Book

A collection of poems and short verse sketches portraying rural life and its communities, alternating wry humor with sincere pathos as it records schoolroom scenes, farm characters, local rituals, college memories, and civic commemorations. Several pieces confront sudden disasters and personal bereavement while others offer hopeful reflection and moral admonition; occasional stanzas address public figures and scientific achievement. The work emphasizes dignity in humble lives and the small ironies of human nature, arranging its material into narrative ballads, elegies, commemorative poems, and lighter stray stanzas.

Why is the mire in the trodden street,
And the dark stream by the sewer borne,
Spurned from even under our feet,
Grudged by us e'en the look of scorn?
There is fresh grass in its gloom—
There are sweetness and bloom;
There is pulse for men to eat—
There are golden acres of wheat.
But so it is, and hath ever been:
The good of the future is e'er unseen.
Why is the mud of humanity spurned
E'en from the tread of the passer-by?
Why is the look of pity turned
From the bare feet and the downcast eye?
There is virtue yet to spring
From this poor trodden thing;
There are germs of godlike power
In the trials of this hour;
But so it is, and hath ever been:
The man of the future is e'er unseen.