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     THE CALF PATH 
    by Sam Walter Foss One day thru 
    the primeval wood 
    A calf walked home, as good calves should; 
    But made a trail, all bent askew, 
    A crooked trail, as all calves do. 
    Since then 300 years have fled, 
    And I infer the calf is dead. 
    But still, he left behind his trail 
    And thereby hangs my mortal tale. 
     
    The trail was taken up next day 
    By a lone dog that passed that way. 
    And then, a wise bell weathered sheep 
    Pursued the trail, o'er~vale and steep, 
    And drew the flocks behind him too 
    As good bell weathers always do. 
    And from that day, o'er hill and glade 
    Thru those old woods, a path was made. 
     
    And many men wound in and out, 
    And dodged, and turned, and bent about, 
    And uttered words of righteous wrath 
    Because 'twas such a crooked path, 
    But still they followed, do not laugh, 
    The first migrations of that calf. 
    And thru the winding woods they stalked 
    Because he wobbled when he walked. 
     
    This forest path became a lane 
    That bent, and turned, and turned again. 
    This crooked lane became a road 
    Where many a poor horse with his load 
    Toiled on beneath the burning sun 
    And traveled some three miles in one. 
    And thus a century and a half 
    They trod the footsteps of that calf. 
     
    The years passed on in swiftness fleet, 
    The road became a village street. 
    And this, before men were aware, 
    A city's crowed thoroughfare. 
    And soon the central street was this 
    Of a renowned metropolis. 
    And men, two centuries and a half 
    Trod the footsteps of that calf. 
     
    Each day a 100 thousand route 
    Followed the zig-zag calf about, 
    And o'er his crooked journey went 
    The traffic of a continent. 
    A 100 thousand men were led 
    By one calf, near three centuries dead. 
    They followed still his crooked way 
    And lost 100 years per day. 
    For this such reverence is lent 
    To well establish precedent. 
     
    A moral lesson this might teach 
    Were I ordained , and called to preach. 
    For men are prone to go it blind 
    Along the calf paths of the mind, 
    And work away from sun to sun 
    To do what other men have done. 
    They follow in the beaten track, 
    And out, and in, and forth, and back, 
    And still their devious course pursue 
    To keep the paths that others do. 
     
    They keep the paths a sacred groove 
    Along which all their lives they move. 
    But how the wise old wood gods laugh 
    Who saw that first primeval calf. 
    Ah, many things this tale might teach, 
    But I am not ordained to preach.  | 
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