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Just Folks
Who Is Your Boss?
Edgar A.Guest
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       "I work for someone else," he said;
       "I have no chance to get ahead.
       At night I leave the job behind;
       At morn I face the same old grind.
       And everything I do by day
       Just brings to me the same old pay.
       While I am here I cannot see
       The semblance of a chance for me."
       I asked another how he viewed
       The occupation he pursued.
       "It's dull and dreary toil," said he,
       "And brings but small reward to me.
       My boss gets all the profits fine
       That I believe are rightly mine.
       My life's monotonously grim
       Because I'm forced to work for him."
       I stopped a third young man to ask
       His attitude towards his task.
       A cheerful smile lit up his face;
       "I shan't be always in this place,"
       He said, "because some distant day
       A better job will come my way.
       "Your boss?" I asked, and answered he:
       "I'm going to make him notice me.
       "He pays me wages and in turn
       That money I am here to earn,
       But I don't work for him alone;
       Allegiance to myself I own.
       I do not do my best because
       It gets me favors or applause--
       I work for him, but I can see
       That actually I work for me.
       "It looks like business good to me
       The best clerk on the staff to be.
       If customers approve my style
       And like my manner and my smile
       I help the firm to get the pelf,
       But what is more I help myself.
       From one big thought I'm never free:
       That every day I work for me."
       Oh, youth, thought I, you're bound to climb
       The ladder of success in time.
       Too many self-impose the cross
       Of daily working for a boss,
       Forgetting that in failing him
       It is their own stars that they dim.
       And when real service they refuse
       They are the ones who really lose.
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本书目录

Just Folks
As It Goes
Hollyhocks
Sacrifice
Reward
See It Thrnugh
To the Humble
When Nellie's on the Job
The Old, Old Story
The Pup
Since Jessie Died
Hard Luck
Vacation Time
The Little Hurts
The Lanes of Memory
The Day of Days
A Fine Sight
Manhood's Greeting
Fishing Nooks
Show the Flag
Constant Beauty
A Patriotic Creed
Home
The Old-Time Family
The Job
Toys
The Mother on the Sidewalk
Memorial Day
Memory
The Stick-Together Familics
Childless
The Crucible of Life
Unimportant Differences
The Fishing Outfit
Grown Up
Departed Friends
Laughter
The Scoffer
The Pathway of the Living
Lemon Pie
The Flag on the Farm
Heroes
The Mother's Question
The Blue Flannel Shirt
Grandpa
Pa Did It
The Real Successes
The Sorry Hostess
Yesterday
The Beauty Places
The Little Old Man
The Little Velvet Suit
The First Steps
Signs
The Family's Homely Man
When Mother Cooked With Wood
Midnight in the Pantry
The World Is Against Me
Bribed
The Home Builders
My Books and I
Success
Questions
Sausage
Friends
A Boost for Modern Methods
The Man to Be
The Summer Children
October
On Quitting
The Price of Riches
The Other Fellow
The Open Fire
Improvement
Send Her a Valentine
Bud
The Front Seat
There Are No Gods
The Auto
The Handy Man
The New Days
The Call
Songs of Rejoicing
Another Mouth to Feed
The Little Church
Sue's Got a Baby
The Lure That Failed
The Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving
The Old-Fashioned Pair
At Pelletier's
At Christmas
The Little Army
Who Is Your Boss?
The Truth About Envy
Living
On Being Broke
The Broken Drum
Mother's Excuses
As It Is
A Boy's Tribute
Up to the Ceiling
Thanksgiving
The Boy Soldier
My Land
Daddies
Loafing
When Father Played Baseball
About Boys
Curly Locks
Baby's Got a Tooth
Home and the Baby
The Fisherman
The March of Mortality
Growing Down
The Roads of Happiness
June
When Mother Sleeps
The Weaver
The Few
Real Swimming
The Love of the Game
Roses and Sunshine