Works
- Home Rhymes, from Breakfast Table Chat (1909)
- A Heap o' Livin' (1916)
- Just Glad Tidings (1916)
- Just Folks (1917)
- Over Here (1918)
- Poems of Patriotism (1918)
- The Path to Home (1919)
- A Dozen New Poems (1920)
- Sunny Songs (1920)
- When Day Is Done (1921)
- All That Matters (1922)
- The Passing Throng (1923)
- Mother (1925)
- The Light of Faith (1926)
- The Secret of The Ages (1926)
- You (1927)
- Harbor Lights of Home (1928)
- Rhymes of Childhood (1928)
- Poems for the Home Folks (1930)
- The Friendly Way (1931)
- Faith (1932)
- Life's Highway (1933)
- Collected Verse of Edgar Guest (1934)
- All in a Lifetime (1938)
- Between You and Me: My Philosophy of Life (1938)
- Today and Tomorrow (1942)
- Living the Years (1949)
Read more about this topic: Edgar Guest
Famous quotes containing the word works:
“And when discipline is concerned, the parent who has to make it to the end of an eighteen-hour daywho works at a job and then takes on a second shift with the kids every nightis much more likely to adopt the survivors motto: If it works, Ill use it. From this perspective, dads who are even slightly less involved and emphasize firm limits or character- building might as well be talking a foreign language. They just dont get it.”
—Ron Taffel (20th century)
“Reason, the prized reality, the Law, is apprehended, now and then, for a serene and profound moment, amidst the hubbub of cares and works which have no direct bearing on it;Mis then lost, for months or years, and again found, for an interval, to be lost again. If we compute it in time, we may, in fifty years, have half a dozen reasonable hours.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“They commonly celebrate those beaches only which have a hotel on them, not those which have a humane house alone. But I wished to see that seashore where mans works are wrecks; to put up at the true Atlantic House, where the ocean is land-lord as well as sea-lord, and comes ashore without a wharf for the landing; where the crumbling land is the only invalid, or at best is but dry land, and that is all you can say of it.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)