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Poems

Chapter 28: A BIT O’ CHEER
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About This Book

The collection gathers short lyrical poems that celebrate nature, seasonal scenes, and everyday rural moments while often turning to love, faith, and consolation. Many pieces take the form of songs, odes, and brief vignettes, with musical cadences and occasional noted settings for voice and piano. Imagery centers on brooks, birds, winter sleighing, gardens, and domestic animal life, moving between joyful revelry, devotional reflection, and wistful meditation on loss and longing. The language favors simple, melodic diction and steady rhyme, producing an accessible, sentimental atmosphere across varied brief poems.

The gusts of wind that frisk about,
With the winter sprites at play,
And pile them high like football fiends,
In a most fantastic way,
Are stragglers from the woodland dell,
Just assuming to be fay.
The birds cheer with chirps, squirrels with chats,
A clouded lining of sun-beam slats,
Curtains Sol of cunning eye;
Crows “Caw! caw!” as tho at play,
A golden bomb bursts the glow’ring sky,
And frightens the elfins away.

A BIT O’ CHEER

Such scurrying of blow and bluster out,
Instilled a longing just to look about
For one stray emblem of returning spring,
Some form of life aquiver on the wing.
A massive mound of snow towered mountain high.
The nude trees, all ashiver stood opprest;
One brave bough saluted the whistling wind,
That had cruelly bared her aching breast.
The tiny twigs twisted and twined for warmth,
Still striving in vain for reviving breath,
While the icy palm with a ruthless calm,
Soon smote many a sickly one with death.
Ah, me! Is that a vision which I see!
Are those real, rosy apples on that tree?
Or is it God’s own gleaming sun streams thru—
A crimson hue, on them for me and you?
Or must I deem it destiny of war—
Bloody war, never known on earth before
Stains them gore; or reflected words of cheer
From afar, to home friends who writhe in fear.
’Tis Nature’s pretty prank our hearts have blest,
Yet simple truth should always be confest;
The flaunting fruit which flings high in that tree,
Are merry, dancing, dangling apples three.

THOT