Giant Hours with Poet Preachers by William LeRoy Stidger
page 10 of 119 (08%)
page 10 of 119 (08%)
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to bring to you Markham's "The Shoes of Happiness," which seems to me
the strongest book he has written, not forgetting, either, "The Hoe" book, as he himself calls it. If you have the privilege of personal friendship with this "Father Poet," he will write for you somewhere, some time, some place, these four favorite lines, with a twinkle in his eyes that is half boy and half sage, but all love, which quatrain he calls "Outwitted": "He drew a circle that shut me out-- Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout. But Love and I had the wit to win: We drew a circle that took him in!" The Shoes of Happiness. And with these four lines he introduces the new book of poems, "The Shoes of Happiness." THE HAPPINESS OF POVERTY One wonders where "The Shoes of Happiness" may be found, and the answer is forthcoming in the first of "Six Stories," when he finds that the Sultan Mahmoud is near unto death, and that there is just one thing that will make him well, and that is that he may wear the shoes of a perfectly happy man: "For only by this can you break the ban: You must wear the shoes of a happy man." The Shoes of Happiness. |
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