The Little Home Paper
CHARLES HANSON TOWNE
IN The American Magazine
Permission to reproduce in this book
The little home paper comes to me,
As badly printed as it can be;
It's ungrammatical, cheap, absurd--
Yet, how I love each intimate word!
For here am I in the teeming town,
Where the sad, mad people rush up and down,
And it's good to get back to the old lost place,
And gossip and smile for a little space.
The weather is hot; the corn crop's good;
They've had a picnic in Sheldon's Wood.
And Aunt Maria was sick last week
Ike Morrison's got a swollen cheek,
And the Squire was hurt in a runaway--
More shocked than bruised, I'm glad they say.
Bert Wills--I used to play with him--
Is working a farm with his Uncle Jim.
The Red Cross ladies gave a tea,
And raised quite a bit. Old Sol MacPhee
Has sold his house on Lincoln Road--
He couldn't carry so big a load.
The methodist minister's had a call
From a wealthy parish near St. Paul.
And old Herb Sweet is married at last--
He was forty-two. How the years rush past!
But here's an item that makes me see
What a puzzling riddle life can be.
"Ed Stokes", it reads, "was killed in France
When the Allies made their last advance."
Ed Stokes! That boy with the laughing eyes
As blue as the early--summer skies!
He wouldn't have killed a fly--and yet,
Without a murmur, without a regret,
He left the peace of our little place,
And went away with a light in his face;
For out in the world was a job to do,
And he wouldn't come home until it was through!
Four thousand mires from our tiny town
And its hardware store, this boy went down.
Such a quiet lad, such a simple chap--
But he's put East Dunkirk on the map!