Those men who
help
my dad each day,
They wear those
mason rings.
A Square and
Compass
set in gold,
The praise of
which
I sing.
My dad, he hurt
his back you know,
One cold and
wintery
day.
He slipped and
fell upon the ice,
The insurance
would
not pay.
And since that
time
those rings I see,
On hands that
help
us much.
With mowing
lawns and hauling trash,
Each day my heart
they touch.
They even
built
a house for me,
Amid our backyard
tree.
Where all
the neighbor kids,
Would play
with laughter full of glee.
My Mom she
cried
from happiness,
The time the
Masons
came.
To aid our family
in distress,
Without a
thought of gain.
And when I'm
big,
just like my dad,
Of this it must
be told.
I want to wear
a ring like his,
A Square and
Compass
gold.
Long years
have
passed since when
My dad was in
that
plaster cast.
And since I swore
that Solemn Oath,
Which
unites
us to the last.
But more than
that
I'm proud to say,
I wear his Mason
ring.
The one dad wore
for many years,
Until his death
this spring.
And one last
time
his comrades came,
To aid my weeping
mother.
They praised and
bid a fond farewell,
To our fallen
Brother.
And after
which
MY son did ask,
About their
Aprons
white.
And of the rings
upon their hands.
Of gold so shiny
bright.
With
tearful
eyes I said with pride,
They're men of
spirit pure.
Those men who
wear
those Mason rings,
Of that you can
be sure.
And before he
went
to bed that night,
The family he
foretold.
Someday I'll wear
a ring like dad's,
A Square and
Compass
gold.