if this were all (music)

20
by Edgar A. Guest

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Post on 08-May-2015

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Page 1: If This Were All  (Music)

by

Edgar A. Guest

Page 2: If This Were All  (Music)

If this were all of life we'll know,

Page 3: If This Were All  (Music)

If this brief space of breath

Page 4: If This Were All  (Music)

Were all there is to human toil

Page 5: If This Were All  (Music)

If death were really death,

Page 6: If This Were All  (Music)

And never should the soul arise A finer world to see,

Page 7: If This Were All  (Music)

How foolish would our struggles seem,

How grim the earth would be!

Page 8: If This Were All  (Music)

If living were the whole of life, To end in seventy years,

Page 9: If This Were All  (Music)

How pitiful its joys would seem! How idle all its tears!

Page 10: If This Were All  (Music)

There'd be no faith to keep us true, No hope to keep us strong,

Page 11: If This Were All  (Music)

And only fools would cherish dreams—No smile would last for long.

Page 12: If This Were All  (Music)

How purposeless the strife would beIf there were nothing more,

Page 13: If This Were All  (Music)

If there were not a plan to serve, An end to struggle for!

Page 14: If This Were All  (Music)

No reason for a mortal's birth Except to have him die--

Page 15: If This Were All  (Music)

How silly all the goals would seem For which men bravely try.

Page 16: If This Were All  (Music)

There must be something after death; Behind the toil of man

Page 17: If This Were All  (Music)

There must exist a God divine Who's working out a plan;

Page 18: If This Were All  (Music)

And this brief journey that we know As life must really be

Page 19: If This Were All  (Music)

The gateway to a finer

world That some day

we shall see.

Page 20: If This Were All  (Music)

Note: This poem is written in my mother's hand on the last page of a Bible I found while cleaning our my father's library in 1997. The Bible is inscribed as follows:

To Ruby Lee Perry: For the best composition on the Life of Paul. From your Leader….W. L Watkins There is no date, but it must have been given to her in Park Street Baptist Church in Columbia, S.C., around 1921 when she was a teenager. It is one of only two writings I have in my mother's hand. My mother did not live her "seventy years". She died at age 33 on Christmas Day, 1941, when I was seven. Two younger siblings died in their early years and her sister, Margaret Perry, died at age 21. Perhaps that is why this poem meant a lot to her. Until my children were born, I was the only surviving member of the Perry family. My father, James P. Wesberry died exactly 51 years after my mother, on Christmas Day 1992. I look forward to the

"gateway to a finer world"…James P. Wesberry, Jr.