By
Frank J. Medina
THE SMITH-BROOKS PRESS, DENVER
Copyright 1919
by
Frank J. Medina
Denver, Colo.
PAGE | |
ALONE | 12 |
It’s queer how seasons affect us sometimes, | |
BOARDER’S SOLILOQUY | 14 |
To board or not to board? That is the question, | |
ECHOES FROM THE SEA | 7 |
Drifting along in my gallant craft, | |
ESCAPED FROM THE LAW | 30 |
They started out all bright and gay, | |
GOING, GOING, GONE | 17 |
Where are you going, my dear young man? | |
HER GENTLEMAN FRIEND | 33 |
He’s tall, handsome; eyes of blue; | |
I’S OO BOY | 34 |
I hug him closely to my breast, | |
“IT’S ALL BEEN DONE BEFORE” | 13 |
There are many things in this world | |
LAWYER TAFFY AND DR. PILL | 22 |
There are two distinguished gentlemen, | |
LIFE’S REALITY | 6 |
Gather ’round me closely and a story I’ll relate | |
LITTLE LIFE | 24 |
Little infants, | |
LONELINESS | 16 |
Loneliness is not a pain, | |
LOVE AT DAWN | 10 |
The fields are full of flowers, | |
LOVE WILL FIND THE WAY | 9 |
Though oceans divide, apart they roam, | |
MY JINGLES | 5 |
These jingles, I present to thee, | |
MY LADY FAIR | 20 |
My lady loves the poems that are old; | |
MY WIFE | 25 |
What? You ask me if I’m happy | |
OUR LAST GOODNIGHT | 32 |
“Goodnight! goodnight!” Our last “goodnight!” | |
OLD AND NEW | 23 |
The old oaken bucket, | |
PARTING | 36 |
Tonight we part forever, though it fills my heart with pain; | |
PLEADING SUITOR | 12 |
Give me the love, the love I crave | |
ROCKY MOUNTAINS | 8 |
I love to climb these hills unique, | |
SMALL TOWN HOTEL | 18 |
A bed, a washstand, a lamp and a chair, | |
SONGS OF LONG AGO | 20 |
Deep in my heart I cherish memories of the past, | |
THAT’S MY BEAU | 21 |
A great big fellow, | |
THAT’S MY PA | 29 |
Always stern, | |
THAT’S MY WIFE | 28 |
Rich brown hair, | |
THE ACTOR’S FAREWELL | 27 |
The actor stood with his only love, | |
THE SCHOOL HOUSE ON THE PLAIN | 26 |
’Tis not far from the foothills, | |
THE SEA OF LIFE | 19 |
Smoothly we sail o’er life’s mighty sea, | |
THE TICKING OF THE CLOCK | 15 |
Far from friends and comrades, | |
THE WILD AND WOOLLY WEST | 31 |
You call us wild—just tell me why; | |
’TWAS NOT TO BE | 35 |
I’ve been thinking of the many things | |
TRUTH | 36 |
If in life you would succeed, | |
WHO? | 17 |
Who lights the stars that twinkle at night? | |
WHO WAS THE FOOL? | 11 |
A fool there was, so the story goes, |
(A Parody)
(In Three Acts)
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.