The Shoemaker

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Thou Poet, who, like any lark,
  Dost whet thy beak and trill
  From misty morn till murky dark,
  Nor ever pipe thy fill:
  Hast thou not, in thy cheery note,
  One poor chirp to confer--
  One verseful twitter to devote
  Unto the Shoe-ma-ker?

  At early dawn he doth peg in
  His noble work and brave;
  And eke from cark and wordly sin
  He seeketh soles to save;
  And all day long, with quip and song,
  Thus stitcheth he the way
  Our feet may know the right from wrong,
  Nor ever go a stray.

  Soak kip in mind the Shoe-ma-ker,
  Nor slight his lasting fame:
  Alway he waxeth tenderer
  In warmth of our acclaim;--
  Aye, more than any artisan
  We glory in his art
  Who ne'er, to help the under man,
  Neglects the upper part.

  But toe the mark for him, and heel
  Respond to thee in kine--
  Or kid--or calf, shouldst thou reveal
  A taste so superfine:
  Thus let him jest--join in his laugh--
  Draw on his stock, and be
  A shoer'd there's no rival half
  Sole liberal as he.

  Then, Poet, hail the Shoe-ma-ker
  For all his goodly deeds,--
  Yea, bless him free for booting thee--
  The first of all thy needs!
  And when at last his eyes grow dim,
  And nerveless drops his clamp,
  In golden shoon pray think of him
  Upon his latest tramp.

© James Whitcomb Riley