Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Béranger's "Ma Vocation" by Eugene Field
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Béranger's "Ma Vocation"

    By Eugene Field



    Misery is my lot,
    Poverty and pain;
    Ill was I begot,
    Ill must I remain;
    Yet the wretched days
    One sweet comfort bring,
    When God whispering says,
    "Sing, O singer, sing!"

    Chariots rumble by,
    Splashing me with mud;
    Insolence see I
    Fawn to royal blood;
    Solace have I then
    From each galling sting
    In that voice again,--
    "Sing, O singer, sing!"

    Cowardly at heart,
    I am forced to play
    A degraded part
    For its paltry pay;
    Freedom is a prize
    For no starving thing;
    Yet that small voice cries,
    "Sing, O singer, sing!"

    I was young, but now,
    When I'm old and gray,
    Love--I know not how
    Or why--hath sped away;
    Still, in winter days
    As in hours of spring,
    Still a whisper says,
    "Sing, O singer, sing!"

    Ah, too well I know
    Song's my only friend!
    Patiently I'll go
    Singing to the end;
    Comrades, to your wine!
    Let your glasses ring!
    Lo, that voice divine
    Whispers, "Sing, oh, sing!"



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