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A. B. A.Lines Written by Louisa M. Alcott to Her Father

By Louisa May Alcott

Topics: classic

Like Bunyan's pilgrim with his pack,          Forth went the dreaming youth         To seek, to find, and make his own          Wisdom, virtue, and truth.         Life was his book, and patiently          He studied each hard page;         By turns reformer, outcast, priest,          Philosopher and sage.         Christ was his Master, and he made          His life a gospel sweet;         Plato and Pythagoras in him          Found a disciple meet.         The noblest and best his friends,          Faithful and fond, though few;         Eager to listen, learn, and pay          The love and honor due.         Power and place, silver and gold,          He neither asked nor sought;         Only to serve his fellowmen,          With heart and word and thought.         A pilgrim still, but in his pack          No sins to frighten or oppress;         But wisdom, morals, piety,          To teach, to warn and bless.         The world passed by, nor cared to take          The treasure he could give;         Apart he sat, content to wait          And beautifully live;         Unsaddened by long, lonely years          Of want, neglect, and wrong,         His soul to him a kingdom was,          Steadfast, serene, and strong.         Magnanimous and pure his life,          Tranquil its happy end;         Patience and peace his handmaids were,          Death an immortal friend.         For him no monuments need rise,          No laurels make his pall;         The mem'ry of the good and wise          Outshines, outlives them all.

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Author:Louisa May Alcott

"Like Bunyan's pilgrim with his pack,..." by Louisa May Alcott

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Louisa May Alcott

About Louisa May Alcott

Louisa May Alcott (1832–1888) was an American novelist and poet best known for "Little Women." Her poetry reflects her abolitionist views, Transcendentalist upbringing, and experiences as a Civil War nurse.

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