The Poetry Corner

This Side An' That.

By George MacDonald

The rich man sat in his father's seat-- Purple an' linen, an' a'thing fine! The puir man lay at his yett i' the street-- Sairs an' tatters, an' weary pine! To the rich man's table ilk dainty comes, Mony a morsel gaed frae't, or fell; The puir man fain wud hae dined on the crumbs, But whether he got them I canna tell. Servants prood, saft-fittit, an' stoot, Stan by the rich man's curtained doors; Maisterless dogs 'at rin aboot Cam to the puir man an' lickit his sores. The rich man deeit, an' they buried him gran', In linen fine his body they wrap; But the angels tuik up the beggar man, An' layit him doun in Abraham's lap. The guid upo' this side, the ill upo' that-- Sic was the rich man's waesome fa'! But his brithers they eat, an' they drink, an' they chat, An' carena a strae for their Father's ha'! The trowth's the trowth, think what ye will; An' some they kenna what they wad be at; But the beggar man thoucht he did no that ill, Wi' the dogs o' this side, the angels o' that!