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1866–1932

THE CHOICE.

Edmund Vance Cooke

The little it takes to make life bright, If we open our eyes to get it! And the trifle which makes it black as night, If we close our lids and let it!

Behold, as the world goes whirling by, It is gloomy, or glad, as it fits your eye. As it fits your eye, and I mean by that You find what you look for mostly;

You can feed your happiness full and fat, You can make your miseries ghostly, Or you can forget every joy you own By coveting something beyond your zone.

In the storms of life we can fret the eye Where the guttering mud is drifted, Or we can look to the world-wide sky Where the Artist's scenes are shifted.

Puddles are oceans in miniatures, Or merely puddles; the choice is yours. We can strip our niggardly souls so bare That we haggle a penny between us;

Or we can be rich in a common share Of the Pleiades and Venus. You can lift your soul to its outermost look, Or can keep it packed in a pocketbook.

We may follow a phantom the arid miles To a mountain of cankered treasure, Or we can find, in a baby's smiles, The pulse of a living pleasure.

We may drink of the sea until we burst, While the trickling spring would have quenched our thirst.

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THE CHOICE. · Edmund Vance Cooke · Poetry Cove