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America's Thanksgiving

By James Whitcomb Riley

Topics: classic

1900      Father all bountiful, in mercy bear      With this our universal voice of prayer -          The voice that needs must be          Upraised in thanks to Thee,      O Father, from Thy children everywhere.      A multitudinous voice, wherein we fain      Wouldst have Thee hear no lightest sob of pain -          No murmur of distress,          Nor moan of loneliness,      Nor drip of tears, though soft as summer rain.      And, Father, give us first to comprehend,      No ill can come from Thee; lean Thou and lend          Us clearer sight to see          Our boundless debt to Thee,      Since all Thy deeds are blessings, in the end.      And let us feel and know that, being Thine,      We are inheritors of hearts divine,          And hands endowed with skill,          And strength to work Thy will,      And fashion to fulfilment Thy design.      So, let us thank Thee, with all self aside,      Nor any lingering taint of mortal pride;          As here to Thee we dare          Uplift our faltering prayer,      Lend it some fervor of the glorified.      We thank Thee that our land is loved of Thee      The blessed home of thrift and industry,          With ever-open door          Of welcome to the poor -      Thy shielding hand o'er all abidingly.      E'en thus we thank Thee for the wrong that grew      Into a right that heroes battled to,          With brothers long estranged,          Once more as brothers ranged      Beneath the red and white and starry blue.      Ay, thanks - though tremulous the thanks expressed -      Thanks for the battle at its worst, and best -          For all the clanging fray          Whose discord dies away      Into a pastoral-song of peace and rest.

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"1900..." by James Whitcomb Riley

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James Whitcomb Riley

About James Whitcomb Riley

James Whitcomb Riley (1849–1916) was an American poet known as the "Hoosier Poet." His dialect poems—including "Little Orphant Annie" and "When the Frost Is on the Punkin"—celebrate rural Indiana life and childhood nostalgia.

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