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On a Morning in June – a Doctor Seuss-Free Graduation Poem The earth is all before me: with a heart Joyous, nor scar’d at its own liberty, I look about, and should the guide I chuse Be nothing better than a wandering cloud, I cannot miss my way. - Wordsworth, Prelude, I.15-19 Soon you’ll depart for your own pilgrimage, Seafaring through the life God has given you, To the golden Canterbury of your heart, Along the sunlit road you’ve chosen to walk, A pilgrimage, perhaps, to Orwell’s dusty room, Or deep into the mind of Thomas More Or far-off Saint James of the Field of Stars, Or sea-passages swift to Denmark’s shores, Or fields of sonnets singing in the dawn - All these you’ll find along your pilgrim road. Take then, your haversack, and neatly pack Your book, your song, your dream, a change of clothes (Your dreams are happier when you wear dry socks) A prayer that your parsoun will write for you A cup, a bowl, a pocketknife, a pen; And do take care to pack those useful words Learned, shaped, and sharpened, polished from your youth: The baby-sounds for supper, sandwich, cat, The childhood sounds for play and your best friend, Then words from Mom and words from books - and words from you. Words flown by you in dreams like sunlit sails Then shaped again in pencil or in ink And flung in hope upon a waiting leaf Words made by you for honest purposes And never employed in wicked deceit, For thieves might steal your book, your song, your hopes, And time decay your purposes and strength But your own words, oh, yes, your good, strong words, Like an old pair of boots will see you through To your heart’s desire at your journey’s end.
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Jun 1, 2018
Jun 1, 2018 at 12:21 PM UTC
A Doctor Seuss-Free Graduation Poem
On a Morning in June – a Doctor Seuss-Free Graduation Poem The earth is all before me: with a heart Joyous, nor scar’d at its own liberty, I look about, and should the guide I chuse Be nothing better than a wandering cloud, I cannot miss my way. - Wordsworth, Prelude, I.15-19 Soon you’ll depart for your own pilgrimage, Seafaring through the life God has given you, To the golden Canterbury of your heart, Along the sunlit road you’ve chosen to walk, A pilgrimage, perhaps, to Orwell’s dusty room, Or deep into the mind of Thomas More Or far-off Saint James of the Field of Stars, Or sea-passages swift to Denmark’s shores, Or fields of sonnets singing in the dawn - All these you’ll find along your pilgrim road. Take then, your haversack, and neatly pack Your book, your song, your dream, a change of clothes (Your dreams are happier when you wear dry socks) A prayer that your parsoun will write for you A cup, a bowl, a pocketknife, a pen; And do take care to pack those useful words Learned, shaped, and sharpened, polished from your youth: The baby-sounds for supper, sandwich, cat, The childhood sounds for play and your best friend, Then words from Mom and words from books - and words from you. Words flown by you in dreams like sunlit sails Then shaped again in pencil or in ink And flung in hope upon a waiting leaf Words made by you for honest purposes And never employed in wicked deceit, For thieves might steal your book, your song, your hopes, And time decay your purposes and strength But your own words, oh, yes, your good, strong words, Like an old pair of boots will see you through To your heart’s desire at your journey’s end.
Reactionarydrivel.blogspot.com – it’s not really reactionary, tho’ it might be drivel.
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Jun 1, 2018
Jun 1, 2018 at 12:21 PM UTC
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