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'Pen” — 60th Birthday

FROM youth to age, in calm and storm, in fine and cloudy weather,
My harmless little pen and I have safely jogged together.
When first I grasped his tiny staff, one Christmas long ago,
He lisped: “Come let us make a rhyme about the frost and snow.”
“Ah, foolish babes!” the nurse cried out, and snatched his tiny wing;
“The world is full of sweeter songs than you can write or sing.”

At school he was a sturdy wight, although I held him badly,
And many a page of classic prose we canter'd over gladly;
In leisure hours, on sunny days, he whisper'd in my ear;
“O, let us sing of all that's bright and beautiful and dear.”
“Write not, sing not, misguided pen,” the teacher wise exclaimed,
“Or write me but the names of those whose poetry is famed.”

Then, for a time, he frisk'd about, in incoherent fashion,
Longing to tell a tragic tale of hopeless love and passion;
“Wait yet,” I cried, “till time shall show if love be sweet or bitter.”
Poor Pen (he lost his feathers then) gave but a mournful twitter.
Love, when he came, was sweet and shy, and would not be portray'd;
He brought his own low melodies, and sang them in the shade.

Then Pen began a diary of household joy and sorrow,
And, steel-clad, plodded on his way for many a busy morrow.
From lists and bills he sometimes turned, at evening, with regret,
To say: “The poetry of life is hanging round me yet.”
“Put down that pen,” the babes cried out; “O, mother, do not write,
But sing us just one little song before we say ‘Goodnight.”’

The babes grew up, and faithful Pen, their copies duly set,
And we, for daughters' eyes retraced the lines where first we met;
Ere the first brood had taken wing, another race began,
And Pen and I forgot the verse while teaching boys to “scan.”
So let it be, we acquiesced. “More useful we have been
Than had our verses lived and died in ‘Fraser's Magazine.”’

And yet not so; we linger still; the gentle hand of age
Has swept across the blotted book, and turned another page;
A blessed blank for Pen, who still delights in rhyme and jingle;
No worldly cares need now intrude, no household duties mingle;
The eye is dim, the ear is dull, the limbs on sofa prone,
But Conscience whispers, with a smile, “Our time is now our own.”

The mental stream thro' flow'ry meads delights no more to flow,
But, filter'd through the ash of life, its drops are clear and slow;
Baptised in these to higher aims, and willing to the end,
Pen yet may take a prize or two to help a needy friend.
For nights of rest and peaceful days a weak thanksgiving raise,
And may his latest struggle be an humble song of praise.

In a published book

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Comments

  • adios muchachos
    March 22, 2009
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    Ms Emily

    Beautiful!


  • I-Like-Rhymes Moderators member
    March 20, 2009
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    This is an epic of the life of a woman from childhood, through parenting to old age and her constant companion the pen. I enjoyed the way the pen developed in the same way as she did through the quill pen of early childhood, into the slender pen with metal nib dipping into the inkwell of a scholar and on to the early steel fountain pens of her more mature years.
    Throughout the poem the lives of pen and poet are linked and the effect is to produce an entrancing tale.


  • Von Powell Moderators member
    March 20, 2009
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    Tribute to a Pen! A beautifully rhymed life story of a well used and well loved pen, oh if only it could speak!
    Easy to see where Banjo obtained his poetic genes. Von