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Poem by Edgar Albert Guest


Reward


Don't want medals on my breast,
Don't want all the glory,
I'm not worrying greatly lest
The world won't hear my story.
A chance to dream beside a stream
Where fish are biting free;
A day or two, 'neath skies of blue,
Is joy enough for me.

I do not ask a hoard of gold,
Nor treasures rich and rare;
I don't want all the joys to hold;
I only want a share.
Just now and then, away from men
And all their haunts of pride,
If I can steal, with rod and reel,
I will be satisfied.

I'll gladly work my way through life;
I would not always play;
I only ask to quit the strife
For an occasional day.
If I can sneak from toil a week
To chum with stream and tree,
I'll fish away and smiling say
That life's been good to me.



Edgar Albert Guest


Edgar Albert Guest's other poems:
  1. Laughter
  2. The Home Builders
  3. Home (It takes a heap o’ livin’ in a house t’ make it home)
  4. About Boys
  5. The Handy Man


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