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The Law of Life |
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The following poem was part of a package of Eagle Court of Honor
materials which was distributed by the Bucks County Council Chapter of
the National Eagle Scout Association. No author or source was given for
the poem and its title was shown as "The Law of Life" in the original
distribution. I have since been told that it was written by Douglas Malloch
and the actual title of the poem is "Good Timber."
Good TimberThe tree that never had to fight For sun and sky and air and light, That stood out in the open plain And always got its share of rain, Never became a forest king, But lived and died a scrubby thing. The man who never had to toil To heaven from the common soil, Who never had to win his share Of sun and sky and light and air, Never became a manly man, But lived and died as he began. Good timber does not grow in ease. The stronger wind, the tougher trees, The farther sky, the greater length, The more the storm, the more the strength, By sun and cold, by rain and snows, In tree or man, good timber grows. Where thickest stands the forest growth We find the patriarchs of both; And they hold converse with the stars Whose broken branches show the scars Of many winds and much of strife--- This is the common law of life. |