Impertinent Poems
Edmund Cooke




Cooke Edmund Vance

Impertinent Poems




A PRE-IMPERTINENCE

Anticipating the intelligent critic of "Impertinent Poems," it may well be remarked that the chief impertinence is in calling them poems. Be that as it may, the editors and publishers of "The Saturday Evening Post," "Success" and "Ainslee's," and, in a lesser degree, "Metropolitan," "Independent," "Booklovers'" and "New York Herald" share with the author the reproach of first promoting their publicity. That they are now willing to further reduce their share of the burden by dividing it with the present publishers entitles them to the thanks of the author and the gratitude of the book-buying public.



    E. V. C.




DEAD MEN'S DUST


		You don't buy poetry. (Neither do I.)
		Why?
		You cannot afford it? Bosh! you spend
		Editions de luxe on a thirsty friend.
		You can buy any one of the poetry bunch
		For the price you pay for a business lunch.
		Don't you suppose that a hungry head,
		Like an empty stomach, ought to be fed?
		Looking into myself, I find this true,
		So I hardly can figure it false in you.

		And you don't read poetry very much.
		(Such
		Is my own case also.) "But," you cry,
		"I haven't the time." Beloved, you lie.
		When a scandal happens in Buffalo,
		You ponder the details, con and pro;
		If poets were pugilists, couldn't you tell
		Which of the poets licked John L.?
		If poets were counts, could your wife be fooled
		As to which of the poets married a Gould?
		And even my books might have some hope
		If poetry books were books of dope.

		"You're a little bit swift," you say to me,
		"See!"
		You open your library. There you show
		Your "favorite poets," row on row,
		Chaucer, Shakespeare, Tennyson, Poe,
		A Homer unread, an uncut Horace,
		A wholly forgotten William Morris.
		My friend, my friend, can it be you thought
		That these were poets whom you had bought?
		These are dead men's bones. You bought their mummies
		To display your style, like clothing dummies.
		But when do they talk to you? Some one said
		That these were poets which should be read,
		So here they stand. But tell me, pray,
		How many poets who live to-day
		Have you, of your own volition, sought,
		Discovered and tested, proved and bought,
		With a grateful glow that the dollar you spent
		Netted the poet his ten per cent.?

		"But hold on," you say, "I am reading you."
		True,
		And pitying, too, the sorry end
		Of the dog I tried this on. My friend,
		I can write poetry – good enough
		So you wouldn't look at the worthy stuff.
		But knowing what you prefer to read
		I'm setting the pace at about your speed,
		Being rather convinced these truths will hold you
		A little bit better than if I'd told you
		A genuine poem and forgotten to scold you.
		Besides, when I open my little room
		And see my poets, each in his tomb,
		With his mouth dust-stopped, I turn from the shelf
		And I must scold you, or scold myself.




IN NINETEEN HUNDRED AND NOW


		Thomas Moore, at the present date,
		Is chiefly known as "a ten-cent straight."
		Walter, the Scot, is forgiven his rimes
		Because of his tales of stirring times.
		William Morris's fame will wear
		As a practical man who made a chair.
		And even Shakespere's memory's green
		Less because he's read than because he's seen.
		Then why should a poet make his bow
		In the year of nineteen hundred and now?

		Homer himself, if he could but speak,
		Would admit that most of his stuff is Greek.
		Chaucer would no doubt own his tongue
		Was the broken speech of the land when young.
		Shelley's a sealed-up book, and Byron
		Is chiefly recalled as a masculine siren.
		Poe has a perch on the chamber door,
		But the populace read him "Nevermore."
		Spenser fitted his day, as all allow,
		But this is nineteen hundred and now.

		Tennyson's chiefly given away
		To callow girls on commencement day.
		Alfred Austin, entirely solemn,
		Is quoted most in the funny column.
		Riley's Hoosiers have made their pile
		And moved to the city to live in style.
		Kipling's compared to "The Man Who Was,"
		And the rest of us write with little cause,
		Till publishers shy at talk of per cents.,
		But offer to print "at author's expense."

		O, once the "celestial fire" burned bright,
		But the world now calls for electric light!
		And Pegasus, too, is run by meter,
		Being trolleyized to make him fleeter.
		So I throw the stylus away and set
		Myself at the typewriter alphabet
		To spell some message I find within
		Which shall also scratch your rawhide skin,
		For you must read it, if I learn how
		To write for nineteen hundred and now.




DON'T YOU?


		When the plan which I have, to grow suddenly rich
		Grows weary of leg and drops into the ditch,
		And scheme follows scheme
		Like the web of a dream
		To glamor and glimmer and shimmer and seem…
		Only seem;
		And then, when the world looks unfadably blue,
		If my rival sails by
		With his head in the sky,
		And sings "How is business?" why, what do I do?
		Well, I claim that I aim to be honest and true,
		But I sometimes lie. Don't you?

		When something at home is decidedly wrong,
		When somebody sings a false note in the song,
		Too low or too high,
		And, you hardly know why,
		But it wrangles and jangles and runs all awry…
		Aye, awry!
		And then, at the moment when things are askew,
		Some cousin sails in
		With a face all a-grin,
		And a "Do I intrude? Oh, I see that I do!"
		Well, then, though I aim to be honest and true,
		Still I sometimes lie. Don't you?

		When a man whom I need has some foible or fad,
		Not very commendable, not very bad;
		Perhaps it's his daughter,
		And some one has taught her
		To daub up an "oil" or to streak up a "water";
		What a "water"!
		And her grass is green green and her sky is blue blue,
		But her father, with pride,
		In a stagey aside
		Asks my "candid opinion." Then what do I do?
		Well, I claim that I aim to be honest and true,
		But I sometimes lie. Don't you?




YOU TOO


		Did you ever make some small success
		And brag your little brag,
		As if your breathing would impress
		The world and fix your tag
		Upon it, so that all might see
		The label loudly reading, "ME!"
		And when you thought you'd gained the height
		And, sunning in your own delight,
		You preened your plumes and crowed "All right!"
		Did something wipe you out of sight?
		Unless you did this many a time
		You needn't stop to read this rime.

		When I was mamma's little joy
		And not the least bit tough,
		I'd sometimes whop some other boy
		(If he were small enough),
		And for a week I'd wear a chip,
		And at the uplift of a lip
		I'd lord it like a pigmy pope,
		Until, when I had run my rope,
		Some bullet-headed little Swope
		Would clean me out as slick as soap.
		No doubt you were as bad, or worse,
		Or else you had not read this verse.

		All women were like pica print
		When I was young and wise;
		I'd read their very souls by dint
		Of looking in their eyes.
		And in those limpid souls I'd see
		A very fierce regard for me.
		And then – my, my, it makes me faint! —
		Peroxide and a pinkish paint
		Gave me the hard, hard heart complaint,
		I saw the sham, I felt the taint,
		Yet if she'd pat me once or twice,
		I'd follow like a little fyce.

		I never played a little game
		And won a five or ten,
		But, presto! I was not the same
		As common makes of men.
		Not Solomon and all his kind
		Held half the wisdom of my mind.
		And so I'd swell to twice my size,
		And throw my hat across my eyes,
		And chew a quill, and wear red ties,
		And tip you off the stock to rise —
		Until, at last, I'd have to steal
		The baby's bank to buy a meal.

		I speak as if these things remained
		All in the perfect tense,
		And yet I don't suppose I've gained
		A single ounce of sense.
		I scoff these tales of yesterday
		In quite a supercilious way,
		But by to-morrow I may bump
		Into some newer game and jump!
		You'll think I am the only trump
		In all the deck until – kerslump!
		Unless you'll do the same some time,
		Of course you haven't read this rime.




THE ETERNAL EVERYDAY


		O, one might be like Socrates
		And lift the hemlock up,
		Pledge death with philosophic ease,
		And drain the untrembling cup; —
		But to be barefoot and be great,
		Most in desert and least in state,
		Servant of truth and lord of fate!
		I own I falter at the peak
		Trod daily by the steadfast Greek.

		O, one might nerve himself to climb
		His cross and cruelly die,
		Forgiving his betrayer's crime,
		With pity in his eye; —
		But day by day and week by week
		To feel his power and yet be meek,
		Endure the curse and turn the cheek,
		I scarce dare trust even you to be
		As was the Jew of Galilee.

		O, one might reach heroic heights
		By one strong burst of power.
		He might endure the whitest lights
		Of heaven for an hour; —
		But harder is the daily drag,
		To smile at trials which fret and fag,
		And not to murmur – nor to lag.
		The test of greatness is the way
		One meets the eternal Everyday.




DON'T TAKE YOUR TROUBLES TO BED


		You may labor your fill, friend of mine, if you will;
		You may worry a bit, if you must;
		You may treat your affairs as a series of cares,
		You may live on a scrap and a crust;
		But when the day's done, put it out of your head;
		Don't take your troubles to bed.

		You may batter your way through the thick of the fray,
		You may sweat, you may swear, you may grunt;
		You may be a jack-fool if you must, but this rule
		Should ever be kept at the front: —
		Don't fight with your pillow, but lay down your head
		And kick every worriment out of the bed.

		That friend or that foe (which he is, I don't know),
		Whose name we have spoken as Death,
		Hovers close to your side, while you run or you ride,
		And he envies the warmth of your breath;
		But he turns him away, with a shake of his head,
		When he finds that you don't take your troubles to bed.




FAILURE


		What is a failure? It's only a spur
		To a man who receives it right,
		And it makes the spirit within him stir
		To go in once more and fight.
		If you never have failed, it's an even guess
		You never have won a high success.

		What is a miss? It's a practice shot
		Which a man must make to enter
		The list of those who can hit the spot
		Of the bull's-eye in the centre.
		If you never have sent your bullet wide,
		You never have put a mark inside.

		What is a knock-down? A count of ten
		Which a man may take for a rest.
		It will give him a chance to come up again
		And do his particular best.
		If you never have more than met your match,
		I guess you never have toed the scratch.




GOOD


		You look at yourself in the glass and say:
		"Really, I'm rather distingué.
		To be sure my eyes
		Are assorted in size,
		And my mouth is a crack
		Running too far back,
		And I hardly suppose
		An unclassified nose
		Is a mark of beauty, as beauty goes;
		But still there's something about the whole
		Suggesting a beauty of – well, say soul."
		And this is the reason that photograph-galleries
		Are able to pay employees' salaries.
		Now, this little mark of our brotherhood,
		By which each thinks that his looks are good,
		Is laudable quite in you and me,
		Provided we not only look, but be.

		I look at my poem and you hear me say:
		"Really, it's clever in its way.
		The theme is old
		And the style is cold.
		These words run rude;
		That line is crude;
		And here is a rhyme
		Which fails to chime,
		And the metre dances out of time.
		Oh, it isn't so bright it'll blind the sun,
		But it's better than that by Such-a-one."
		And this is the reason I and my creditors
		Curse the "unreasoning whims" of editors,
		And yet, if one writes for a livelihood,
		He ought to believe that his work is good,
		Provided the form that his vanity takes
		Not only believes, but also makes.

		And there is our neighbor. We've heard him say:
		"Really, I'm not the commonest clay.
		Brown got his dust
		By betraying a trust;
		And Jones's wife
		Leads a terrible life;
		While I have heard
		That Robinson's word
		Isn't quite so good as Gas preferred.
		And Smith has a soul with seamy cracks,
		For he talks of people behind their backs!"
		And these are the reasons the penitentiary
		Holds open house for another century.
		True, we want no man in our neighborhood
		Who doesn't consider his character good,
		But then it ought to be also true
		He not only knows to consider, but do.




LET'S BE GLAD WE'RE LIVING



I

		Oh, let's be glad that we're living yet; you bet!
		The sun runs round and the rain is wet
		And the bird flip-flops its wing;
		Tennis and toil bring an equal sweat;
		It's so much trouble to frown and fret,
		So easy to laugh and sing,
		Ting ling!
		So easy to laugh and sing!
		(And yet, sometimes, when I sing my song,
		I'm almost afraid my method is wrong.)


II

		Many have money which I have not, God wot!
		But victual and keep are all they've got,
		And the stars still dot the sky.
		Heaven be praised that they shine so bright,
		Heaven be praised for an appetite,
		So who is richer than I?
		Hi yi!
		Say, who is richer than I?
		(And yet I'm hoping to sell this screed
		For several dollars I hardly need.)


III

		Ducats and dividends, stocks and shares, who cares?
		Worry and property travel in pairs,
		While the green grows on the tree.
		A banquet's nothing more than a meal;
		A trolley's much like an automobile,
		With a transfer sometimes free,
		Tra lee!
		With a transfer sometimes free!
		(And yet you're unwilling, I plainly see,
		To leave the automobile to me.)


IV

		A note you give and a note you get; don't fret,
		For they both may go to protest yet,
		And the roses blow perfume.
		Fortune is only a Dun report;
		The Homestead Law and the Bankrupt Court
		Have fostered many a boom,
		Boom, boom!
		Have fostered many a boom.
		(But I see you smile in a rapturous way
		On the man who is rated double A.)


V

		Life is a show for you and me; it's free!
		And what you look for is what you see;
		A hill is a humped-up hollow.
		Riches are yours with a dollar bill;
		A million's the same little digit still,
		With nothing but naughts to follow,
		So hollo!
		There's nothing but naughts to follow.
		(But you and I, as I've said before,
		Could get along with a trifle more.)




SUCCESS


		It's little the difference where you arrive;
		The serious question is how you strive.
		Are you up to your eyes in a wild romance?
		Does your lady lead you a dallying dance?
		Do you question if love be fate, or chance?
		Oh, the world will ask: "Did he get the girl?"
		Though gentleman, coxcomb, clown or churl,
		Master or menial of passion's whirl.
		But it isn't that. The world will run
		Though you never bequeath it daughter or son,
		But what, O lover, will come to you
		If you be not chivalrous, honest, true?
		As far ahead as a man may think,
		You can see your little soul shrivel and shrink.
		It's not, "Do you win?"
		It is, "What have you been?"

		Are you stripped for the world-old, world-wide race
		For the metal which shines like the sun's own face
		Till it dazzles us blind to the mean and base?
		Do you say to yourself, "When I have my hoard,
		I will give of the plenty which I have stored,
		If the Lord bless me, I will bless the Lord"?
		And do you forget, as you pile your pelf,
		What is the gift you are giving yourself?
		Though your mountain of gold may dazzle the day,
		Can you climb its height with your feet of clay?
		Oh, it isn't the stamp on the metal you win;
		It's the stamp on the metal you coin within.
		It's not what you give;
		It is "What do you live?"

		Are you going to sail the polar seas
		To the point of ninety-and-north degrees,
		Where the very words in your larynx freeze?
		Well, the mob may ask "Did he reach the pole?
		Though fair, or foul, did he touch the goal?"
		But if that be the spirit which stirs your soul,
		Off, off from the land below the zeroes;
		For you are not of the stuff of heroes.
		Ho! many a man can lead men forth
		To the fearsome end of the Farthest North,
		But can you be faithful for woe or weal
		In a land where nothing but self is leal?
		Oh, it isn't "How far?"
		It is what you are.
		And it isn't your lookout where you arrive,
		But it's up to you as to how you strive.




THE GRILL


		Why do you?
		What's it to you?
		I know you do, for I've seen the gruesome feeling simmer through you.
		I've seen it rise behind your eyes
		And take your features by surprise.
		I've seen it in your half-hid grin
		And the tilting-upness of your chin.
		Good-natured though you are and fair, as you have often boasted,
		Still you like to hear the other man artistically roasted.

		Whenever the star secures the stage with the spotlight in the centre,
		Why should the anvil chorus think it has the cue to enter?
		Whenever the prima donna trills the E above the clef,
		Why should the brasses orchestrate the bass in double f?

		It's funny,
		But it's even money,
		You like to spy the buzzing fly in the other fellow's honey.
		Though you have said that honest bread
		Demands no honey on it spread,
		And if we eat the crusty wheat
		With appetite, it needs no sweet,
		Still I have noticed you were not at all inclined to cry
		Because the man the bees had blest was bothered with the fly.

		Whenever the chef concocts a dish which sets the world to tasting,
		Why does the cooking-school get out its recipes for basting?
		Whenever a sprinter beats the bunch from the pistol-shot, why is it
		The heavy hammer throwers get together for a visit?
		Excuse me!
		Did you accuse me
		Of turning the spit a little bit myself? Why, you amuse me!
		Didn't I scratch the sulphurous match
		And blow the flame to make it catch?
		Didn't you trot to get the pot
		To heat the water good and hot?
		Then, seizing on our victim, if we found no greater sin,
		Didn't we call him "a lobster," and cheerfully chuck him in?




THE VISION


		At the door of Success, I've been tempted to knock
		Both the door and the man who went through it,
		But I find that the fellow was greasing the lock
		All the time that he strove to undo it,
		So I either stay out, or must look for the key
		Which slipped back the bolt which impeded,
		And I'm certain to find it, as soon as I see
		The reason my rival succeeded.

		Yes, I own when the man is a rank also-ran




Конец ознакомительного фрагмента.


Текст предоставлен ООО «ЛитРес».

Прочитайте эту книгу целиком, купив полную легальную версию (https://www.litres.ru/cooke-edmund-vance/impertinent-poems/) на ЛитРес.

Безопасно оплатить книгу можно банковской картой Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, со счета мобильного телефона, с платежного терминала, в салоне МТС или Связной, через PayPal, WebMoney, Яндекс.Деньги, QIWI Кошелек, бонусными картами или другим удобным Вам способом.


