Edgar Albert Guest

Checking the Day

‘I had a full day in my purse
    When I arose, and now it’s gone!
I wonder if I can rehearse
    The squandered hours, one by one,
And count the minutes as I do
    The pennies and the dimes I’ve spent.
I’ve had a day, once bright and new,
    But, oh, for what few things it went!
 
There were twelve hours when I began,
    Good hours worth sixty minutes each,
Yet some of them so swiftly ran
    I had no time for thought or speech.
Eight of them to my task I gave,
    Glad that it did not ask for mre.
Part of the day I tried to save,
    But now I cannot say what for.
 
An hour I spent for idle chat,
    Gossip and scandal I confess;
No better off am I for that,
    Would I had talked a little less.
I watched steel workers bolt a beam,
    What time that cost I don’t recall.
How very short the minutes seem
    When they are spent on trifles small.
 
Quite empty is my purse to-night
    Which held at dawn a twelve-hour day,
For all of it has taken flight—
    Part wisely spent, part thrown away.
I did my task and earned its gain,
    But checking deeds with what they cost,
Two missing hours I can’t explain,
    They must be charges as lost.’
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