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The Second Book of Modern Verse; a Selection from the Work of Contemporaneous American Poets
Contents:
Have You an Eye. [Edwin Ford Piper]
Have you an eye for the trails, the trails, The old mark and the new? What scurried here, what loitered there, In the dust and in the dew?
Have you an eye for the beaten track, The old hoof and the young? Come name me the drivers of yesterday, Sing me the songs they sung.
O, was it a schooner last went by, And where will it ford the stream? Where will it halt in the early dusk, And where will the camp-fire gleam?
They used to take the shortest cut The cattle trails had made; Get down the hill by the easy slope To the water and the shade.
But it’s barbed wire fence, and section line, And kill-horse travel now; Scoot you down the canyon bank, — The old road’s under plough.
Have you an eye for the laden wheel, The worn tire or the new? Or the sign of the prairie pony’s hoof Was never trimmed for shoe?
Contents:
Chicago:
Jessie Belle Rittenhouse, "Have You an Eye. [Edwin Ford Piper]," The Second Book of Modern Verse; a Selection from the Work of Contemporaneous American Poets, ed. Keil, Heinrich, 1822-1894 and trans. Seaton, R. C. in The Second Book of Modern Verse; a Selection from the Work of Contemporaneous American Poets (New York: George E. Wood, 1850), Original Sources, accessed July 14, 2025, http://www.originalsources.com/Document.aspx?DocID=9HM2HA5F7K9TTC8.
MLA:
Rittenhouse, Jessie Belle. "Have You an Eye. [Edwin Ford Piper]." The Second Book of Modern Verse; a Selection from the Work of Contemporaneous American Poets, edited by Keil, Heinrich, 1822-1894, and translated by Seaton, R. C., in The Second Book of Modern Verse; a Selection from the Work of Contemporaneous American Poets, New York, George E. Wood, 1850, Original Sources. 14 Jul. 2025. http://www.originalsources.com/Document.aspx?DocID=9HM2HA5F7K9TTC8.
Harvard:
Rittenhouse, JB, 'Have You an Eye. [Edwin Ford Piper]' in The Second Book of Modern Verse; a Selection from the Work of Contemporaneous American Poets, ed. and trans. . cited in 1850, The Second Book of Modern Verse; a Selection from the Work of Contemporaneous American Poets, George E. Wood, New York. Original Sources, retrieved 14 July 2025, from http://www.originalsources.com/Document.aspx?DocID=9HM2HA5F7K9TTC8.
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