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Black Beetles in Amber

Chapter 156: THE VAN NESSIAD
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About This Book

The collection gathers short poems, sketches, and satirical vignettes that blend bitter humor, morbid imagination, and pointed social criticism. Many pieces turn on mortality, revenge, and ironic justice, employing grotesque or supernatural imagery and concise, epigrammatic endings. Political and cultural targets are skewered with sarcasm, while lyrical interludes and philosophical reflections punctuate the tone. Overall the volume alternates whimsy and cynicism, offering compact explorations of human folly, moral ambiguity, and the absurdities of public life.

THE VAN NESSIAD

  From end to end, thine avenue, Van Ness,
  Rang with the cries of battle and distress!
  Brave lungs were thundering with dreadful sound
  And perspiration smoked along the ground!
  Sing, heavenly muse, to ears of mortal clay,
  The meaning, cause and finish of the fray.

  Great Porter Ashe (invoking first the gods,
  Who signed their favor with assenting nods
  That snapped off half their heads—their necks grown dry
  Since last the nectar cup went circling by)
  Resolved to build a stable on his lot,
  His neighbors fiercely swearing he should not.
  Said he: "I build that stable!" "No, you don't,"
  Said they. "I can!" "You can't!" "I will!" "You won't!"
  "By heaven!" he swore; "not only will I build,
  But purchase donkeys till the place is filled!"
  "Needless expense," they sneered in tones of ice—
  "The owner's self, if lodged there, would suffice."
  For three long months the awful war they waged:
  With women, women, men with men engaged,
  While roaring babes and shrilling poodles raged!

  Jove, from Olympus, where he still maintains
  His ancient session (with rheumatic pains
  Touched by his long exposure) marked the strife,
  Interminable but by loss of life;
  For malediction soon exhausts the breath—
  If not, old age itself is certain death.
  Lo! he holds high in heaven the fatal beam;
  A golden pan depends from each, extreme;
  This feels of Porter's fate the downward stress,
  That bears the destiny of all Van Ness.
  Alas! the rusted scales, their life all gone,
  Deliver judgment neither pro nor con:
  The dooms hang level and the war goes on.
  With a divine, contemptuous disesteem
  Jove dropped the pans and kicked, himself, the beam:
  Then, to decide the strife, with ready wit,
  The nickel that he did not care for it
  Twirled absently, remarking: "See it spin:
  Head, Porter loses; tail, the others win."
  The conscious nickel, charged with doom, spun round,
  Portentously and made a ringing sound,
  Then, staggering beneath its load of fate,
  Sank rattling, died at last and lay in state.

  Jove scanned the disk and then, as is his wont,
  Raised his considering orbs, exclaiming: "Front!"
  With leisurely alacrity approached
  The herald god, to whom his mind he broached:
  "In San Francisco two belligerent Powers,
  Such as contended round great Ilion's towers,
  Fight for a stable, though in either class
  There's not a horse, and but a single ass.
  Achilles Ashe, with formidable jaw
  Assails a Trojan band with fierce hee-haw,
  Firing the night with brilliant curses. They
  With dark vituperation gloom the day.
  Fate, against which nor gods nor men compete,
  Decrees their victory and his defeat.
  With haste, good Mercury, betake thee hence
  And salivate him till he has no sense!"

  Sheer downward shot the messenger afar,
  Trailing a splendor like a falling star!
  With dimming lustre through the air he burned,
  Vanished, nor till another sun returned.
  The sovereign of the gods superior smiled,
  Beaming benignant, fatherly and mild:
  "Is Destiny's decree performed, my lad?—
  And has he now no sense?" "Ah, sire, he never had."