What I Call Living

Photo by Lenka Fortelna

The miser thinks he’s living when he’s hoarding up his gold;
The soldier calls it living when he’s doing something bold;
The sailor thinks it living to be tossed upon the sea,
And upon this vital subject no two of us agree.
But I hold the opinion, as I walk my way along,
That living’s made of laughter and good-fellowship and song.

I wouldn’t call it living always to be seeking gold,
To bank all the present gladness for the days when I’ll be old.
I wouldn’t call it living to spend all my strength for fame,
And forego the many pleasures which today are mine to claim.
I wouldn’t for the splendor of the world set out to roam,
And forsake my laughing children and the peace I know at home.

Oh, the thing that I call living isn’t gold or fame at all!
It’s good fellowship and sunshine, and it’s roses by the wall;
It’s evenings glad with music and a hearth fire that’s ablaze,
And the joys which come to mortals in a thousand different ways.
It is laughter and contentment and the struggle for a goal;
It is everything that’s needful in the shaping of a soul.

This poem is in the public domain.

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About Edgar Guest

Edgar Guest (1881-1959) was born in Birmingham, England, but moved with his family to Detroit, Michigan when he was ten years old. At age fourteen he started working as a copy boy at the Detroit Free Press, where his first poem was published at age seventeen, and where he continued to work for more than sixty years. He went on to become a reporter and columnist, whose poetry and columns were featured in hundreds of newspapers around the country. He married Nellie Crossman in 1906 and the couple had three children. Edgar is said to have written some 11,000 poems during his lifetime, most of them topical, upbeat verse. Critics sometimes derided his work, but America adored him. He was known as the "People's Poet," served as Michigan's poet laureate, hosted a long-running radio show and TV show, and published more than twenty books of poetry.
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