HUSH.

By Edmund Vance Cooke

What's the best thing that you ever have done?

The whitest day,

The cleverest play

That ever you set in the shine of the sun?

The time that you felt just a wee bit proud

Of defying the cry of the cowardly crowd

And stood back to back with God?

Aye, I notice you nod,

But silence yourself, lest you bring me shame

That I have no answering deed to name.

What's the worst thing that ever you did?

The darkest spot,

The blackest blot

On the page you have pasted together and hid?

Ah, sometimes you think you've forgotten it quite,

Till it crawls in your bed in the dead of the night

And brands you its own with a blush.

What was it? Nay, hush!

Do n't tell it to me, for fear it be known

That I have an answering blush of my own.

But whenever you notice a clean hit made,

Sing high and clear

The sounding cheer

You would gladly have heard for the play you played,

And when a man walks in the way forbidden,

Think you of the thing you have happily hidden

And spare him the sting of your tongue.

Do I do that which I've sung?

Well, it may be I do n't and it may be I do,

But I'm telling the thing which is good for you!