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The following sections, if they exist, are offprint from Beacham's Guide to Literature for Young Adults: "About the Author", "Overview", "Setting", "Literary Qualities", "Social Sensitivity", "Topics for Discussion", "Ideas for Reports and Papers". (c)1994-2005, by Walton Beacham.
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Table of Contents | |
Section | Page |
Start of eBook | 1 |
A SPRAY OF KENTUCKY PINE | 1 |
The Prelude | 1 |
The Interlude | 2 |
I. | 2 |
II. | 2 |
III. | 2 |
The Poem | 3 |
The Spray of Kentucky Pine | 4 |
Postlude | 8 |
—Placed At The Feet Of The
Dead Poet—
—James Whitcomb Riley—
By The Hand
Of the Man From
Down On The Farm—
—George
Douglass Sherley
—On The Banks
Of Wolf Run—
—1916—
Second Edition
From Ye Olden Printe Shope—
—James M. Byrnes,
Esquire—
On Ye Long Highway
Called
Shorte in Ye Goodly
Towne
Of Lexington Kentucky
The Inscription Two-fold
To The Dead:
Reverently Inscribed
—To the Indiana-Born
World-Wide Poet—
—James Whitcomb Riley—
—This Spray Of Kentucky Pine—
To The Living:
Also Lovingly Inscribed
By The Man From Down
On The Farm To The
Dear Lady Here On The
Banks Of Wolf Run
—His Mother—
On Grateful Commemoration
Of Her Eighty-Fifth Birthday
August 20, 1916
—A Note Explanatory—
With James Whitcomb Riley, some years ago. This Man From Down On The Farm, made a Reading Tour, of—in Population—more than one-half of this Imperial Republic, including the Cream of the Canadian Provinces. Of that Tour, at some other time, in some more leisurely hour, he desires, if able, to make a full and faithful Record. This, is but a humble Spray of Kentucky Pine, placed at the feet of the Dead Poet!
According to a long established Custom,
the Man, in some way, in private
print—
—for the Relative, for the
Friend, for the Stranger too—
quietly Celebrates the various Red-Letter
Days, of the
Dear Lady Here, On the Banks of Wolf Run—his
Mother!
Her full Restoration, to her usual Good
Health,
is a Source of much Joy, and the cause
of much Gratitude.
The many Prayers made for her Recovery
must have been of
much avail before the Great White Throne,
of Infinite Mercy!
He is also deeply grateful, that the nearness
of her
Eighty-Fifth Birthday, makes it possible
for him,
to make an Inscription Two-fold, for the
Dead,
for the Living—for the Dear
Poet, for the Beloved Mother!
The linking of their names together, under
this Spray of
Kentucky Pine—culled by a hand
most loving—is like
unto finding the other half of a broken
Chord, in some
Prelude Elusive: for James Whitcomb
Riley, deeply
endeared himself, to the Dear Lady Here,
while he and
her son were a long while away, on their
Reading Tour.
Out of sheer Kindliness, out of Goodness
of Heart, he often
wrote to her, delightful Letters of Good
Cheer, filled with
a charming detail, with more than a trifle
of over-Praise;
all of which, is most acceptable, to the
heart of a too fond mother.
Recently, from his Winter Home in the
South-land, he sent to
her, in response to one of these Farm
Bubbles, a little
Bit of unpublished Verse, written before
his hand had
failed him, reproduced for her—and
others—in fac-simile.
Pray deem it not, all too presumptuous,
this humble
Spray of Kentucky Pine!
It serves as a Reverent Tribute to the
One!
As a Loving Commemoration to the Other!
—Holding Two Telegrams And A Plea—
When the word came that James Whitcomb Riley was Dead this Telegram was sent to a near Relative an astute Man of Affairs who with the Head of a Great Publishing House—a Prime Favorite from his early Boyhood of the Poet—held his well-placed Confidence in all matters concerning the necessary material Things of Life.
The mightiest Monarch of the Indiana Forest
lies prone upon his Native
Soil!
This Man From Down On The Farm,
Reverently, sends this humble Spray of
Kentucky Pine,
as a Symbol, ever-green, of his Lasting
Love, for the Dead Poet:
as a Symbol, made manifest, of his deep
Sympathy,
for You, for Yours.
This Message was wired to a most Gentle Lady who had meant so much in so many ways to James Whitcomb Riley appealing as she did to the Best to the Highest in his Nature and who was indeed a “Ministering Angel” when “Pain and Anguish” wrung his brow, racked his frail body where lingered its Tenant his Immortal Soul!
Tenderly, Lovingly, let the Fair Elaine
cherish
the Shield Invincible of her
Sir Launcelot!
Some Day—Some Glad Day—she
too, will go upward
with the Flood, in the Dark Barge, decked
with Flowers:
clasping in her Beautiful Hand of Gentle
Service,
the Lily of Fidelity: floating with
the Mystic
Tide, to meet again—at Towered
Camelot—
—her Gallant, her Waiting Knight!
For Love shares with the Soul its Precious
Immortality!
The Plea
—To The Relatives To The Intimate Friends of James Whitcomb Riley—
Let Lockerbie Street, in its Lovely Brevity,
be held—if you
will—as a Perpetual Reservation
for the Children of your Great, your Growing
City,
holding the House, which for many years
was the
Happy Home of the Poet, as a Sacred Shrine.
Let your fine Civic Building, now rising
in its
Majesty—like the Towers of
Illion—made possible
by his Generous Gift of the Site, made
Glorious
by the touch of his hand, on its Great
Cornerstone:
let it—if you will—proudly
bear his Name.
Let either one, or both, of these Noble
Things
be done, for the sake of his memory.
Let this, that, or any other form of a
Memorial wait upon
the wisdom of your Choice: but no
matter what is done;
how much is done; or how it is done; there
is one Thing
which ought not to be left undone.
Every tender, slender needle, rising out
of its
Globular Greenness, in this humble Spray
of Kentucky Pine,
harbors this One Thought, this Single
Plea!
This is the Plea:
Let James Whitcomb Riley, skillfully cast in Bronze, simply clad in the plain blue garb of a Union Soldier Lad a Private— let him stand fur all Time, in your Circle, in the Centre, in the Heart of your City, the beloved City of his adoption. Let him stand there, under the shadow of that Mighty Shaft, the Tribute of your Grand Commonwealth, to her Valiant Sons—the Soldier, the Sailor. Let him stand there, on a one-piece Pedestal of Indiana Stone; Simple, Massive. Thereon carve his Name, the date of his Birth; the date of his Death; and these Immortal words:
“Well, Goodby, Jim:
Take Keer of Yourse’f!”
Read, re-read, and read again, the Poem. That Poem is an American Classic! It is the Epitome of Self-Sacrifice for the Sake of a Vital Cause! It is the one Idyl of the Middle-West! It is thoroughly America! It is intensely Indiana! Pardon the Plea! But Prepare the Way! Turn the Page—read the Poem!
Old man never had much to say—
‘Ceptin’ to Jim.—
And Jim was the wildest boy he had—
And the old man jes’
wrapped up in him!
Never heerd him speak but once
Er twice in my life,—and first
time was
When the army broke out, and Jim he went,
The old man backin’ him, fer three
months;
And all ’at I heerd the old man
say
Was jes’ as we turned to start away,—
“Well, good-by, Jim:
Take keer of yourse’f!”
’Peared-like, he was more satisfied
Jes’ lookin’
at Jim
And likin’ him all to hisse’f-like,
see?
‘Cause he was jes’
wrapped up in him!
And over and over I mind the day
The old man come and stood round in the
way
While we was drillin’, a-watchin’
Jim—
And down at the deepot a-heerin’
him say,
“Well, good-by, Jim:
Take keer of yourse’f!”
Never was nothin’ about the farm
Disting’ished Jim;
Neighbors all ust to wonder why
The old man ’peered
wrapped up in him;
But when Cap. Biggler he writ back
’At Jim was the bravest boy we had
In the whole dern rigiment, white er black.
And his fighten’ good as his farmin’
bad—
’At he had led, with a bullet clean
Bored through his thigh, and carried the
flag
Through the bloodiest battle you ever
seen,
The old man wound up a letter to him
’At Cap. read to us, ’at said:
“Tell Jim
Good-by,
And take keer
of hisse’f!”
Jim come home jes’ long enough
To take the whim
’At he’d like to go back in
the calvery—
And the old man jes’
wrapped up in him!
Jim ’lowed ’at he’d
had sich luck afore,
Guessed he’d tackle her three years
more.
And the old man give him a colt he’d
raised,
And follered him over to Camp Ben Wade,
And laid around fer a week er so,
Watchin’ Jim on dress-parade—
Tel finally he rid away,
And last he heerd was the old man say,
“Well, good-by, Jim:
Take keer of yourse’f!”
Tuk the papers, the old man did,
A-watchin’ fer Jim—
Fully believin’ he’d make
his mark
Some way—jes’
wrapped up in him!—
And many a time the word ’u’d
come
’At stirred him up like the tap
of a drum—
At Petersburg, fer instunce, where
Jim rid right into their cannons there,
And tuk ’em, and p’inted
’em t’other way,
And socked it home to the boys in gray,
As they scooted fer timber, and on and
on—
Jim a lieutenant and one arm gone,
And the old man’s words in his mind
all day,—
“Well, good-by, Jim:
Take keer of yourse’f!”
Think of a private now, perhaps,
We’ll say like Jim,
’At’s clumb clean up to the
shoulder-straps
And the old man jes’
wrapped up in him!
Think of him—with the war plum,
through.
And the glorious old Red-White-and-Blue
A-laughin’ the news down over Jim,
And the old man bendin’ over him—
The surgeon turin’ away with tears
’At hadn’t leaked for years
and years,
As the hand of the dyin’ boy clung
to
His father’s, the old voice in his
ears,—
“Well, good-by, Jim:
Take keer of yourse’f!”
[Illustration]
O! James Whitcomb Riley! This Man From Down On The Farm—one-while your constant Companion, in work most Congenial, all-while your Faithful Friend—rejoices. and is exceeding Glad, That All Is Well With You! For no one knew, better than you, the Wisdom, the Beauty, of Death! No one the more fully realized the Folly, the Futility, of human Grief! You firmly believed, that he, who follows The Christ; that he, who, in all Humility, bears the Cross; that he, who, in all Gratitude, wears upon his unworthy brow, the imprint of the Kiss Divine!—the Kiss of Forgiveness Complete—you firmly believed, that he ought to be brave enough, strong enough, to meet the Call, whensoever, wheresoever, it may chance to come. You firmly believed that the Call always comes at the Right Moment: that Incompletion Here, finds its Completement There: that every human Life holds—like the Palace of Aladdin—its unfinished Window: that the finite mind, hampered by its mortality, is a clog to any Completion, to any Earthly Perfection. Therefore, feeling, believing, as you did Here, now knowing, as you must know There, this Man rejoices, and is exceeding Glad, That All Is Well With You!
O! James Whitcomb Riley Your Nature-on the surface—was Simple, Honest, Open, Direct. It was all of that but—it was More! It was deeper than Tears! It was wider than Laughter! It was more profound, more subtle, than either your spoken Word. or, your written, your printed Thought. You were infinitely better than the Very Best that you ever did! High Praise, but True! Your nature was strangely Complex:
There was the Man!
There was the
Poet!
There
was the Mystic!
The Man could be known—and was—of all men. The Poet could be read—as he was—and he understood. He could Sing—as he did—Songs which caught the Hearts of the People—from the Cradle to the Grave! The Mystic!
O! James Whitcomb Riley! That Mystic Element in your Nature! It was held under a Strong Curb: It was constantly held in Check: But it was never Overcome! It was a Mood—not a Madness. It seldom made an Outward Sign. Then, it was brief, spasmodic, eratic. It was known to but few, even of those who came with you, in constant contact. To this Man, that Mystic Element in your Nature, made a most wonderful Appeal, deep, strong. To him, it was the real James Whitcomb Riley! You were a Mystic, but never a Reformer. You cheerfully rendered unto Ceasar all things that were his just due. You had no desire to overturn Natural Law, Human Regulation. You accepted, without question, the Established Order of Things. But so strong was this touch of the Mystic that, it you had desired, you could have, quickly, thickly, populated some far off Smiling Isle, of the Fair Summer Seas, with a Band of Cultured Men, of Cultured Women, ready, eager, to follow you—that Mystic You! into the Creation of a New Cult, of a New Religion! In your Poems there is but a trickle of the Mystic —a flash a dash—as the falling of a Star! That Edgar Allen Poe Episode, is the Answer. You were unduly humiliated by that Incident— —and it was but as Nothing But your Super-Sensitiveness, made you Suffer!
O! James Whitcomb Riley! Death, hath yet other Compensations! It has placed you Beyond the Cloy of Fulsome Praise: Beyond the Sting of Cruel Blame: the One, may not help You the Other, cannot hurt You!
O! James Whitcomb Riley! Once, when under the Spell of a Mystic Mood, you sought—as you had often sought before—that Wise Wizard of White River. He met you, when you came into that Peaceful Indiana Valley—where dwells this Wizard—by the Flowing Fountain of those Healing Waters. He knew your need; he spoke no unnecessary word; he quickly set his place in order, and was ready to go with you—anywhere. There had been, on your arrival, a clamor to have you Read that afternoon—but the Wizard quietly slipped you away. Out into the Open you drove, in an old Barouche, behind a Pair of Good Horses. It was a long Drive; it was a beautiful Drive. It was driven in Silence. After several hours—the spell was still upon you—a sharp turn brought you to the Banks of White River; and there—under a Clump of the Sycamore, of the Willow, in a deep, Shady Pool, an Eddy, undisturbed by the current of the broad, shallow Stream—a Batch of Boys, swimming, chattering, diving. “Stop” you said to the driver; “Come here” you called to the Lads. They came trooping, dripping, out of the Pool. A change came over you; flinging off your coat, your hat, you arose to your feet.Page 6
There they stood before you, naked, unabashed, curious. A complacent smile, flickered across the bearded face of the Wise Wizard. He must have known! He must have timed your arrival at that particular spot, at that particular moment. But even the Wizard could not have known what was to follow. Without a word of explanation, you gave them, that crowd of naked Boys—gave it, as you had never given it before, doubtless, as you never gave it again—your
“Old Swimmin’ Hole”
Oh! the old swimmin’ hole! whare
the crick so still and deep
Looked like a baby-river that was laying
half asleep,
And the gurgle of the worter round the
drift jest below
Sounded like the laugh of something we
onc’t ust to know
Before we could remember anything but
the eyes
Of the angels lookin’ out as we
left Paradise;
But the merry days of youth is beyond
our controle,
And its hard to part ferever with the
old swimmin’-hole.
Oh! the old swimmin’-hole!
In the happy days of yore,
When I ust to lean above it on the old
sickamore.
Oh! it showed me a face in its warm sunny
tide
That gazed back at me so gay and glorified,
It made me love myself, as I leaped to
caress
My shadder smilin’ up at me with
sich tenderness.
But them days is past and gone, and old
Time’s tuck his toll
From the old man come back to the old
swimmin’-hole.
Oh! the old swimmin’-hole!
In the long, lazy days
When the humdrum of school made so many
run-a-ways.
How plesant was the jurney down the old
dusty lane,
Whare the tracks of our bare feet was
all printed so plane
You could tell by the dent of the heel
and the sole
They was lot o’ fun on hands at
the old swimmin’-hole.
But the lost joys is past! Let your
tears in sorrow roll
Like the rain that ust to dapple up the
old swimmin’-hole.
Thare the bullrushes growed, and the cattails
so tall,
And the sunshine and shadder fell over
it all;
And it mottled the worter with amber and
gold
Tel the glad lilies rocked in the ripples
that rolled;
And the snake-feeder’s four gauzy
wings fluttered by
Like the ghost of a daisy dropped out
of the sky,
Or a wownded apple-blossom in the breeze’s
controle
As it cut acrost some orchurd to’rds
the old swimmin’-hole.
Oh! the old swimmin’-hole!
When I last saw the place,
The scenes was all changed, like the change
in my face;
The bridge of the railroad now crosses
the spot
Whare the old divin’-log lays sunk
and fergot.
And I stray down the banks whare the trees
ust to be—
But never again will theyr shade shelter
me!
And I wish in my sorrow I could strip
to the soul.
And dive off in my grave like the old
swimmin’-hole.
Their little jaws dropped!
Their little eyes distended!
Their little ears
stood erect!
They fairly bristled with an intense attention. You said the last word, of the last line. Then—absolute, unbroken—Silence! Finally—but without another word—you reached down, patted the youngest one on his wet curly Locks. The Wizard whispered to the driver “Go.” As the team, in a brisk trot, started away. you, still standing, coatless, hatless, waved your hand—in that quick little jerky fashion peculiar to you—to those little naked Urchins. With a mighty Shout, they ran back to the Pool, and gave a rapid-firing Exhibition of the Single Dive; the Double Dive; and one—a dare-devil—the Triple Dive! What a Memory, what a Priceless Memory, you must have given those Boys of Martinsville, that Ideal Summer Afternoon, in the Long While Ago! Martinsville! To you of Blessed Memory! For the sake of an early, enduring, Friendship, did you not encrust one Jap Miller of Martinsville with no mean verse? And did it not run something like this?
Jap Miller down at Martinsville’s
the blamedest feller yit!
When he starts in a-talkin’
other folks is apt to quit!—
‘Pears like that mouth o’
his’n wuzn’t made fer nothin’ else
But jes’ to argify ’em down
and gether in their pelts:
He’ll talk you down on tariff; er
he’ll talk you down on tax.
And prove the pore man pays ’em
all and them’s about the fac’s!
Religen, law, er politics, prize-fightin’,
er base-ball
Jes’ tetch Jap up a little and he’ll
post you ’bout ’em all.
* * * * *
W’y, that-air blame Jap Miller,
with his keen sircastic fun,
Has got more friends than ary candidate
’at ever run!
Don’t matter what his views
is, when he states the same to you,
They allus coincide with your’n,
the same as two and two:
You can’t take issue with
him—er, at least, they haint no sense
In startin’ in to down him, so you
better not commence.—
The best way’s jes’ to listen,
like your humble servant does.
And jes’ concede Jap Miller is the
best man ever wuz!
On the drive back to the little Station, you were the Man, the Poet, but not the Mystic! You delighted the Wizard with your genial flow of Verse, of Story. When the watchful Wizard, smuggled you aboard your train—with privacy unbroken you, like King Saul, returned to your People, refreshed in body, restored in mind; for had not the Wizard done for you, as David did for Saul, for had not he brought Peace to your no longer Troubled Soul? Did he not say to you, in parting, “All Is Well With You?”
O! James Whitcomb Riley! It is late in the Afternoon, of a Perfect Summer Day. This Man From Down On The Farm, is standing on the Banks Of Wolf Run. He is thinking of You! Joyfully, not Regretfully! A Pastoral Scene stretches before him— a Scene of much Beauty! The Cattle stand, not “knee-deep in June” but well into the pure rippling WatersPage 8
of an August Wolf Run, under the dense shade overhead, where arching branches inter-lock, casting a net-work of shifting Shadows on the bosom of the Peaceful Waters, which seem to murmer, as they flow, your Name—Joyfully, not Mournfully!
James Whitcomb Riley!
James Whitcomb Riley!
James Whitcomb Riley!
Smiling, undulating, across the Creek, a Blue Grass Meadow gently rolls away, toward the White, the Winding Pike: Each blade of Blue Grass—Joyfully, not Tearfully—seems to whisper your Name:
James Whitcomb Riley!
James Whitcomb Riley!
James Whitcomb Riley!
But Hark! The belated Song of
a Mocking Bird—
its Vesper Song—to its enraptured Mate!
This, the Glad Song:
To You James Whitcomb Riley! The World was full of Roses! Every Rose held hidden, within its Tremulous Heart, a Slender Crystal Chalice of Perfumed Dew, which, overflowing, spilled its Prodigal Sweetness, onto the Earth, into the Air,
For You James Whitcomb Riley!
—For You, and for All Humanity!
And this, the Joyful Refrain:
—Joy, without Regret!
Joy, without Mourning!
Joy,
without Tears!—
—A Refrain which readily, willingly,
finds Grateful Echo in the Heart of
This Man From Down On The Farm!
O! James Whitcomb Riley!
All Is Well With You!
All Is Well With You!
O! James Whitcomb Riley!
All Is Well With You!
O! James Whitcomb Riley!
[Illustration]
—Which ought to have been The Prelude to this Spray of Kentucky Pine. Because it was written, published, a little more than a year before the Death of the Poet. Therefore, it was a Tribute to him, Living!
A Promethean Poet was there. He had touched the Heavenly flame; he had lasted the Waters of Inspiration: he had drained the Crystal Cup of Fancy, finding therein neither Lees nor Dregs, which bite the tongue, stifle the song, of lesser Men; he had reverently kissed the coy hand of Fame, when she had crowned his Worthy Brow, with her Wreath Immortal! His Poems, homely, simple, sweet—springing from the lap of Nature—had spread, like wild-fire of the Forest, into the Four Quarters of the Globe. He came from the Land, across the River, where, in these latter days, the People quit the planting of the Potato, to pen a Poem: pause in the cultivation of the Corn, to compose a Novel. Some of it is good, very good; Some of it is bad, very bad: but all of it produces a princely Revenue far in excess of any return from either the Potato or the Corn. Long before the avalanche-like advent of this State- wide Literary Madness, the Star of this Poet had risen— risen before, and still shines beyond, and above them all. The hand which wrote “Goodbye, Jim”—not classical in either GreekPage 9
or Roman sense, yet a great American Classic—with its pungent odor of Blue Jeans, with its clean, sweet, clear-cut, fine smell, of its native soil— that hand may never again hold the Pen; the man himself, may crumble—God forbid!—back into the Dust— that “Little Dust of Harm”—out of which he came; but his Poems will not, cannot die. When those other Writers will have been forgotten; when even the gifted Maker of “Ben Hur” will be, but as an empty name; even then, this Poet, and his Poems, will cleave to the Mind, cling to the Heart, of countless Generations, not yet born!
[Illustration]
Whatever Is—Is Best