Good Timber By Douglas Malloch – Full Text Of The Poem

Good Timber By Douglas Malloch – Full Text Of The Poem

GOOD TIMBER BY DOUGLAS MALIOCH – In this topic, we are going to read the full text of the poem Good Timber By Douglas Malloch.

Good Timber By Douglas Malloch

As mentioned above, it is written be Douglas Malloch who is also known as the “Lumbermen’s Poet”.

In this poem, he compares good men to good timber. Its message is that people grow and reach their true potential, like trees.

It also show that through struggles, like a tree that is fighting through forest growth to reach the sun, that people grow and discover their true potential.

Here is the full poem uplifted from Family Friend Poems:

The tree that never had to fight
     For sun and sky and air and light,
But 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 gain and farm his patch of 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 with ease,
     The stronger wind, the stronger trees,
The further sky, the greater length,
     The more the storm, the more the strength.
By sun and cold, by rain and snow,
     In trees and men good timbers grow.

Where thickest lies the forest growth
     We find the patriarchs of both.
And they hold counsel with the stars
     Whose broken branches show the scars
Of many winds and much of strife.
     This is the common law of life.

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