The Poetry Corner

To Clara Morris.

By Edwin C. Ranck

In days gone by, the poets wrote Sweet verses to the ladies fair; Described the nightingale's clear note, Or penned an Ode to Daphne's hair. To dare all for a woman's smile Or breathe one's heart out in a rose-- Such trifles now are out of style, The scented manuscript must close. Yet Villon wrote his roundelays, And that sweet singer Horace; But I will sing of other days In praise of Clara Morris. Youth is but the joy of life, Not the eternal moping; We get no happiness from strife Nor yet by blindly groping. All the world's a stage you know The men and women actors; A little joy, a little woe-- These are but human factors. The mellow days still come and go, The earth is full of beauty; If we would only think it so, Life is not all a duty. And you are young in heart not years, Is this not true because You mingle happiness with tears And do not look for flaws? Your silver hair is but the snow That drifts above the roses, And though the years may come and go They can but scatter posies.