A Commonplace Song

written by


« Reload image

Ebbs and flows the restless river
 In the city street
Where the great nerve centres quiver,
 Where the pulses beat.
Where the human waves are driving
 Drifts a woman’s face,
White and worn by ceaseless striving
 With the commonplace.
Want has written strange inscriptions
 On the brow and cheek;
Pain could weave some weird descriptions
 If the lips would speak;
Toil has touched the lines of beauty
 And, the curves of grace.
Comeliness is good, but duty
 Rules the commonplace.

Thick-soled shoes and shabby bonnet,
 Dingy cotton gloves,
Old turned dress with darns upon it
 (Not what woman loves),
Gaunt umbrella, green with weather—
 One must self efface
To keep home and bairns together
 In the commonplace.

Late and early, never shirking
 Tub and scrub and broom,
Late at night with needle working
 In the dwelling-room;
Yet when week’s receipts are thinner
 Grocers’ bills to face—
Tenpence means three children’s dinner
 In the commonplace!

Poets sing their wild Iambics—
 Love and War and Gods—
Let us sing of humble women
 Fighting fearful odds,
Not where steel and bullets rattle
 And the squadrons race,
But the grim unending battle
 With the commonplace.

Now they shriek the creeds are dying!
 Faith is of the air!
Wailfully their lyres are sighing
 Sonnets of despair!
All the scheme of things evolving
 Somehow out of Space!
Darken then, instead of solving,
 This grim commonplace!

Rogues may win success and glory,
 Beauty pride of fame,
Statesmen make a nation’s story,
 Poets deathless name.
But the patient woman Toiler
 What is hers to win?
On the one hand—Want, the Spoiler,
 On the other—Sin!

Ye who swear and strut and bluster,
 So-called manly pride,
When you answer at the muster
 On the other side,
Will the courage you have vaunted
 Stand you in such grace
As weak hands that fought undaunted
 With the commonplace?

Noblest worth works ever humbly,
 Oftest is unseen,
Half the world is toiling dumbly
 In the gray routine.
Sing, O Poet of the Morrow!
 Cheer the weary face
Where brave women moil and sorrow
 In the commonplace!

© George Essex Evans