Monthly Archives: February 2023

A Beautiful Life

And just as you want men to do to you, you also do to them likewise.

—Luke 6:31

A Beautiful Life
Also known as “Each Day I’ll Do a Golden Deed”
By William M. Golden (1918)

Each day I’ll…do a golden deed,…
By helping those…who are in need;…
My life on earth…is but a span,…
And so I’ll do the best I can…the best I can.

Refrain:
Life’s evening sun…is sinking low,…
A few more days, …and I must go…
To meet the deeds…that I have done,…
Where there will be no setting sun…no setting sun.

To be a child…of God each day,…
My light must shine…along the way;…
I’ll sing His praise…while ages roll,…
And strive to help some troubled soul…some troubled soul.
[Refrain]

The only life…that will endure,…
Is one that’s kind…and good and pure;…
And so for God…I’ll take my stand,…
Each day I’ll lend a helping hand…a helping hand.
[Refrain]

I’ll help someone…in time of need,…
And journey on…with rapid speed;…
I’ll help the sick…and poor and weak,…
And words of kindness to them speak…to them speak.
[Refrain]

While going down…life’s weary road,…
I’ll try to lift…some trav’ler’s load;…
I’ll try to turn…the night to day,…
Make flowers bloom along the way…along the way.
[Refrain]

“A Beautiful Life” is a Christian hymn that was written by William M. Golden. It was published in 1918. Golding was born on January 28, 1878, in Webster County, Mississippi. He died on May 13, 1934, in a traffic accident near Eupora, Mississippi. It is said he wrote most of his songs while serving an eight-year sentence in the state penitentiary. In addition to “A Beautiful Life,”  he was also known for the song “Where the Soul Never Dies” and many others.

I used to love to sing this song in church. The congregation had to know what they were doing to sing this song properly. In the video below, you can hear it sung alternating between tenor and bass. The song begins with the tenors singing, and where the ellipses are, it alternates to the basses repeating the phrase before. It always reminds me of the Johnny Cash song, “Daddy Sang Bass.” When done properly, “A Beautiful Life” is a beautiful song.

Not only is it a beautiful song to listen to, but it also has a beautiful message. If each day we’d “do a golden deed by helping those who are in need” and did the best we can, how wonderful would this earth be! We should make the effort to let our light “shine along the way” and “strive to help some troubled soul.” If we do our best to live a life “that’s kind and good and pure,” how can we go wrong? And so, the song goes. It’s just a really good message on how to live one’s life, and if we just strove to do what this song suggests, then we really could make this world a better place.

Many of you may not have ever heard this song before. If you haven’t, I hope you’ll listen to the Statler Brothers’ version below. I looked and listened to a number of versions of this song, but these are closest to how I remember it always being sung sans the instrumental musical accompaniment.  Growing up in the church of Christ, we always sang A Capella. Musical instruments were not allowed. 


Pic of the Day


Moment of Zen: Backwards Caps

I’m not sure why I find guys with their caps on backwards to be sexy, but I suspect it’s because when I was in high school, all the cool guys always looked sexy with their caps worn like this. I’ll also admit that I was really cute looking back then when I wore my cap this way, at least that’s what I was told on more than one occasion. No pictures of that exist though.


Pic of the Day


Pic of the Day


Migraine

I had a terrible migraine yesterday. I had been doing some better with my migraines, but for a number of reasons, yesterday was pretty rough. It came on rather suddenly around lunchtime, and I had to leave work shortly after that. Not only was I in a lot of pain, but I started getting nauseated, which is always a sign that the migraine is going to be a bad one.


Pic of the Day


SOTU

I stayed up and watched the President Biden’s State of the Union address last night. As a general rule, I hate listening to politicians speak; however, I have always found Biden to be more pleasant to listen to than most. He has a few phrases that drive me a little crazy because he uses them too much and it makes him sound folksy, although that is also part of his appeal. He seems like a real person unlike a lot of politicians. I thought this was on of the most masterful SOTU addresses I’ve ever seen. It wasn’t the usual self-serving drivel. Instead, he baited the Republicans and did two things. First, he got them to look like absolute fools, even though McCarthy had warned them not to heckle Biden. They did anyway and for some of the stupidest reasons. Second, Biden laid a trap to get them to agree with some of his policies and and stand and applaud him. It was an interesting tactic, and Biden was so forceful at time. He wasn’t “angry racist white man” like Trump always came across looking like, but he came across as a genuine defender of the people and democracy. Trump always pandered only to his base and shipped them up into a frenzy like the fascist he is. Biden didn’t say everything just like all those in his party wanted. Instead, he spoke to the people, and I personally thought he did a great job.

If you watched it, what did you think?


Pic of the Day


Dust of Snow

Dust of Snow
By Robert Frost – 1874-1963

The way a crow
Shook down on me
The dust of snow
From a hemlock tree

Has given my heart
A change of mood
And saved some part
Of a day I had rued.

“Dust of Snow” is a short poem by Robert Frost, published in the Pulitzer Prize-winning volume New Hampshire (1923). The poem’s speaker, possibly the poet himself, is initially unhappy. But a sprinkling of snow, dislodged by a crow in the tree above the speaker, brings an element of surprise that partly “save[s]” the speaker’s bad day. The poem thus shows how nature can lift people’s mood, if only temporarily.