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1849–1916

A WORN-OUT PENCIL.

James Whitcomb Riley

Welladay! Here I lay You at rest — all worn away, O my pencil, to the tip

Of our old companionship! Memory Sighs to see What you are, and used to be,

Looking backward to the time When you wrote your earliest rhyme!— When I sat Filing at

Your first point, and dreaming that Your initial song should be Worthy of posterity. With regret

I forget If the song be living yet, Yet remember, vaguely now, It was honest, anyhow.

You have brought Me a thought — Truer yet was never taught,— That the silent song is best,

And the unsung worthiest. So if I, When I die, May as uncomplainingly

Drop aside as now you do, Write of me, as I of you:— Here lies one Who begun

Life a-singing, heard of none; And he died, satisfied, With his dead songs by his side.

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A WORN-OUT PENCIL. · James Whitcomb Riley · Poetry Cove