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The Junior God

 The Junior God looked from his place
 In the conning towers of heaven,
And he saw the world through the span of space
 Like a giant golf-ball driven.
And because he was bored, as some gods are, With high celestial mirth, He clutched the reins of a shooting star, And he steered it down to earth.
The Junior God, 'mid leaf and bud, Passed on with a weary air, Till lo! he came to a pool of mud, And some hogs were rolling there.
Then in he plunged with gleeful cries, And down he lay supine; For they had no mud in paradise, And they likewise had no swine.
The Junior God forgot himself; He squelched mud through his toes; With the careless joy of a wanton boy His reckless laughter rose.
Till, tired at last, in a brook close by, He washed off every stain; Then softly up to the radiant sky He rose, a god again.
The Junior God now heads the roll In the list of heaven's peers; He sits in the House of High Control, And he regulates the spheres.
Yet does he wonder, do you suppose, If, even in gods divine, The best and wisest may not be those Who have wallowed awhile with the swine?

Poem by Robert William Service
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Book: Shattered Sighs