The Little Old Man

By Edgar Albert Guest

The little old man with the curve in his back

And the eyes that are dim and the skin that is slack,

So slack that it wrinkles and rolls on his cheeks,

With a thin little voice that goes “crack!” when he speaks,

Never goes to the store but that right at his feet

Are all of the youngsters who live on the street.

And the little old man in the suit that was black,

And once might have perfectly fitted his back,

Has a boy's chubby fist in his own wrinkled hand,

And together they trudge off to Light-Hearted Land;

Some splendid excursions he gives every day

To the boys and the girls in his funny old way.

The little old man is as queer as can be;

He'd spend all his time with a child on his knee;

And the stories he tells I could never repeat,

But they're always of good boys and little girls sweet;

And the children come home at the end of the day

To tell what the little old man had to say.

Once the little old man did n't trudge to the store,

And the tap of his cane was n't heard any more;

The children looked eagerly for him each day

And wondered why he did n't come out to play

Till some of them saw Doctor Brown ring his bell,

And they wept when they heard that he might not get well.

But after awhile he got out with his cane,

And called all the children around him again;

And I think as I see him go trudging along

In the center, once more, of his light-hearted throng,

That earth has no glory that's greater than this:

The little old man whom the children would miss.