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When an old man gets to thinking of the years
he's traveled through,
He hears again the laughter of the little ones
he knew.
He isn't counting money, and he isn't planning
schemes;
He's at home with friendly people in the shadow
of his dreams.

When he's lived through
all life's trials and his sun is in the west,
When he's tasted all life's pleasures and he
knows which ones were best,
Then his mind is stored with riches, not of
silver and of gold,
But of happy smiling faces and the joys he
couldn't hold.

Could we see what he is seeing as he's dreaming
in his chair,
We should find no scene of struggle in the
distance over there.
As he counts his memory treasures, we should see
some shady lane
Where he's walking with his sweetheart,
young, and arm in arm again.

We should meet with friendly people, simple,
tender folk and kind,
That had once been glad to love him. In his
dreaming he should find
All the many little beauties that enrich the
lives of men
That the eyes of youth scarce notice and the
poets seldom pen.

Age will tell you that the memory is the
treasure-house of man,
Gold and fleeting fame may vanish, but life's
riches never can;
For the little home of laughter and the voice of
every friend,
And the joys of real contentment linger with us
to the end.
Edgar A. Guest
1881-1959


Midi playing ~ "Day
Is Dying In the West"
Courtesy of the
Moore's Chapel United Methodist Church

Mist by Betty
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