Over Here eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about Over Here.

Over Here eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about Over Here.

    I follow a famous father,
      And never a day goes by
    But I feel that he looks down to me
      To carry his standard high. 
    He stood to the sternest trials
      As only a brave man can;
    Though the way be long, I must never wrong
      The name of so good a man.

    I follow a famous father,
      Not known to the printed page,
    Nor written down in the world’s renown
      As a prince of his little age. 
    But never a stain attached to him
      And never he stooped to shame;
    He was bold and brave and to me he gave
      The pride of an honest name.

    I follow a famous father,
      And him I must keep in mind;
    Though his form is gone, I must carry on
      The name that he left behind. 
    It was mine on the day he gave it,
      It shone as a monarch’s crown,
    And as fair to see as it came to me
      It must be when I pass it down.

         The Important Thing

He was playing in the garden when we called him in for tea,
But he didn’t seem to hear us, so I went out there to see
What the little rogue was up to, and I stooped and asked him why,
When he heard his mother calling, he had made her no reply. 
“I am playing war,” he told me, “and I’m up against defeat,
And until I stop the Germans I can’t take the time to eat.”

“Isn’t supper so important that you’ll quit your round of play? 
Don’t you want to eat the shortcake mother made for you to-day?”
Then I asked him, but he answered as he shook his little head: 
“I don’t dare to stop for shortcake, if I do they’ll kill me dead! 
When I drive them from their trenches, then to supper I’ll come in,
But I mustn’t stop a minute, ’cause this war I’ve got to win.”

    I left him in his battle, left him there to end his play,
    For he’d taught to me a lesson that is needed much to-day;
    Not the lure of cake could turn him from the work he had to do;
    There was nothing so important as to see his struggle through. 
    And I wondered all that evening, as he slumbered in his bed
    If we’d risen to the meaning of the work that lies ahead?

Are we roused to the importance of the danger in our way? 
Are we thinking still of pleasures as we thought but yesterday? 
Are our comforts and our riches in our minds still uppermost? 
Must we wait, to see our danger, till the foe is on our coast? 
Oh, there’s nothing so important, nothing now that’s worth a pin
Save the war that we are fighting.  It’s a war we’ve got to win.

         Selfishness

Search history, my boy, and see
What petty selfishness has done. 
Find if you can one victory
That little minds have ever won. 
There is no record there to read
Of men who fought for self alone,
No instance of a single deed
splendor they may proudly own.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Over Here from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.