FFA advisor Dan Birdsell introduced us to Demeter and the classical symbolism of ancient farm tools by having us memorize the organization’s opening ritual. As youth we may not always have understood the meaning behind these emblems, but we came to know spring from fall barley, sickles from scythes, and that a bushel of wheat weighed about sixty pounds. Mr. Birdsell also arranged to have us periodically attend local Grange meetings in the neighboring hamlet of Winona for extracurricular practice in parliamentary procedure. Members met monthly for rural fellowship and to promote agrarian interests in state and national politics, and raised the roof with the Patrons of Husbandry unofficial anthem, Knowles Shaw and George Minor’s familiar hymn “Bringing in the Sheaves” (“Waiting for the harvest, and the time of reaping….”). The organization’s official songbook, The Patron (1925), contained numerous selections commemorating the significance of field labors:
“Harvest Song”
“Grain that was in verdure waving,
Weareth now a hue of gold,
And the yellow heads are bending,
With the fruitage they hold.
That the ripened fruit be gathered,
Speed the sickle to and fro;
For the countless hosts of kernels,
Snowy loaves ere long will show.”
“Soon from out the noisy thresher,
There shall golden streams be pour’d,
That the farmer’s heart will gladden,
And shall bring his just reward.
Smiles the land today with plenty,
Plenty for the needy throng;
Let all classes and conditions,
Join to swell the harvest song.”
“The Gleaner”
“When the earth is crowned with fatness,
And the yellow harvest yields
To the sickle of the reaper,
Toiling in the sunny fields;
Mark the glad, contented gleaner,
Gather one by one her store—
Ev’ry act of cheerful labor
Makes her richer than before.”
“Golden treasures, thickly scattered,
Strew the world’s surface o’er;
Man is but a humble gleaner,
Finding knowledge, seeking more.
Step by step he plods his way,
One by one his blessings rise;
He who binds his store together,
He alone is truly wise.”