I DO not ask for roses all the time,
For blue skies bending o'er me every day,
I do not ask for easy hills to climb,
And always for my feet a pleasant way.
In laughter I would not spend all my life,
And miss the joy of sweet and sacred pain;
I want to know life's burden and its strife,
And feel upon my cheek the splash of rain.
I merely pray for strength enough to bear
My burdens, and to tread the rugged way;
To keep the right, howe'er beset with care,
To stand, unflinching, face front, to the fray.
And I would claim life's roses for my own,
But I would win my right to know their sweet;
To level paths I'd march my way alone,
For victory I'd venture with defeat.
The Right To Joy
Edgar Albert Guest
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Poem topics: alone, feel, joy, laughter, pain, rain, strength, time, I miss you, pray, blue, venture, claim, face, march, level, easy, victory, stand, Valentine's Day, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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