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Classic poem

Ike Walton's Prayer

by James Whitcomb Riley

I crave, dear Lord,

No boundless hoard

Of gold and gear,

Nor jewels fine,

Nor lands, nor kine,

Nor treasure-heaps of anything.-

Let but a little hut be mine

Where at the hearthstore I may hear

The cricket sing,

And have the shine

Of one glad woman's eyes to make,

For my poor sake,

Our simple home a place divine;-

Just the wee cot-the cricket's chirr-

Love, and the smiling face of her.

I pray not for

Great riches, nor

For vast estates, and castle-halls,-

Give me to hear the bare footfalls

Of children o’er

An oaken floor,

New-risen with sunshine, or bespread

With but the tiny coverlet

And pillow for the baby’s head;

And pray Thou, may

The door stand open and the day

Send ever in a gentle breeze,

With fragrance from the locust-trees,

And drowsy moan of doves, and blur

Of robin-chirps, and drove of bees,

With afterhushes of the stir

Of intermingling sounds, and then

The good-wife and the smile of her

Filling the silences again-

The cricket’s call,

And the wee cot,

Dear Lord of all,

Deny me not!

I pray not that

Men tremble at

My power of place

And lordly sway, -

I only pray for simple grace

To look my neighbor in the face

Full honestly from day to day-

Yield me this horny palm to hold,

And I’ll not pray

For gold;-

The tanned face, garlanded with mirth,

It hath the kingliest smile on earth-

The swart brow, diamonded with sweat,

Hath never need of coronet.

And so I reach,

Dear Lord, to Thee,

And do beseech

Thou givest me

The wee cot, and the cricket’s chirr,

Love, and the glad sweet face of her.

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Public domain/Source

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