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1868–1950

Walter Simmons

Edgar Lee Masters

MY parents thought that I would be As great as Edison or greater: For as a boy I made balloons And wondrous kites and toys with clocks

And little engines with tracks to run on And telephones of cans and thread. I played the cornet and painted pictures, Modeled in clay and took the part

Of the villain in the “Octoroon.” But then at twenty — one I married And had to live, and so, to live I learned the trade of making watches

And kept the jewelry store on the square, Thinking, thinking, thinking, thinking,— Not of business, but of the engine I studied the calculus to build.

And all Spoon River watched and waited To see it work, but it never worked. And a few kind souls believed my genius Was somehow hampered by the store.

It was n't true. The truth was this: I did not have the brains.

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Walter Simmons · Edgar Lee Masters · Poetry Cove