SURVIVORS On a sea island's green and swaying world Yet once that race envied the sky with tears; Mad butterflies: that hour a wind prepared Ridgely Torrence TOWARD CHILDHOOD Backward, O Time, and for a single hour Make a small child of him who stands before us At the advanced age of seventy-five Leander M. Coggswell, multimillionaire. In days when gross wealth drugs the very atmosphere, It would be vain to guard these present lines from its insidi ous approach. Shall I seem to overdo If I give Mr. C. one hundred millions? Very well; they're his. He lives today in semi-retirement, And has forgotten partly how the money came; Completely so, if asked officially. Others have now bent their backs to the great burden; He no longer keeps tab, he tells us, on the workings of the vast machine. He buys now and then a picture, a coronet, a castle; He smiles impartially on the great and on the small, On the heedless and on the inquisitive, Reads detective stories, And plays croquet. Now let us make him a little younger. We strip him first of his bland leisure And of his more puerile interests. He was aflame to found, to furnish, to fill His great museum, He the modern Medici-Cosimo and Lorenzo in one. Books, manuscripts, madonnas, choked his days; Art and learning walked captive at his heels. But Cæsar never grew so great, you say, Of course not. There was a previous period; By superhuman skill, and all was juggled Just a bit too swiftly for the questioning eye to follow- Of the Uncle of us all: Banks, foundries, railways, tanks, stock market, state legislatures, what you will; Everything brought about with suave and Mephistophelean mien By the great thaumaturge, While deft assistants at the lesser tables Passed on the properties and dressed the scene. Peeling away still further from our friend. His years, dexterity and grandeur, We find him on a lower stage, Toward Childhood Before a poorer audience, Doing less skilfully and on a smaller scale The tricks that made the man-himself. It seems, viewed restrospectively, a mere rehearsal Here, industrious, thrifty and alert (To give his qualities their better names), He practiced, in semi-privacy and with no possibility of praise, The qualities he lauded, later, In pamphlets and addresses aimed at the nation's youth. Back still farther: No company now; no firm; Just a lone young individual, Of parentage blent and non-distinguished, let us say, With a young helpmate of his own kind; Both struggling together for a foothold, Both putting forth their strained endeavors To feed and clothe a little flock, And to "get on." Next go his wife and children. We have left now only a young clerk or handy-man, Of lingo semi-rustic, semi-foreign, semi-citified, quite as you like; Moling away beneath the surface, Yet coming up, at intervals, E To see the Main Chance shining in the sky; Holding his own, and more, against all youthful rivals, And shaping vigorously the grand ideals Which, later, were to fire his heart-and ours. Next we deprive him of his office-stool, Or of his chance to labor hardily out in the sheds. Quick, quick, with slate and pencil; Sharp, sharp, among the playground's crowd. Next knee-trousers go. We have a child of four in laughable habiliments For the derisive adoration of the world; But with a look, sly and determined, in the eyes, Now but an infant-in-arms, Borne in long convoluted skirts. "Oh, what a forehead!" cries a visiting aunt, Pushing the frilled cap back. And, kissing such brows, mothers have often said with awe, "He may be president." Lastly, a new-born babe, Hugged close within a home |