The Project Gutenberg eBook of Something Else Again
Title: Something Else Again
Author: Franklin P. Adams
Release date: October 7, 2008 [eBook #26797]
Most recently updated: January 4, 2021
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Diane Monico, and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
SOMETHING
ELSE AGAIN
By
FRANKLIN P. ADAMS
Author of
"By and Large," "In Other Words,"
"Tobogganing on Parnassus,"
"Weights and Measures,"
Etc.
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
GARDEN CITY NEW YORK LONDON
1920
COPYRIGHT, 1920.
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF
TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES,
INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
To MONTAGUE GLASS
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The author wishes to thank the New York Tribune, Life, Harper's Magazine, Collier's Weekly, and The Home Sector, for their kind permission to include in this volume material which has appeared in their pages.
CONTENTS
| page | |
| Present Imperative | 3 |
| The Doughboy's Horace | 5 |
| From: Horace To: Phyllis | 7 |
| Advising Chloë | 8 |
| To an Aged Cut-up I | 9 |
| II | 10 |
| His Monument | 11 |
| Glycera Rediviva! | 12 |
| On a Wine of Horace's | 13 |
| "What Flavour?" | 14 |
| The Stalling of Q. H. F. | 15 |
| On the Flight of Time | 16 |
| The Last Laugh | 17 |
| Again Endorsing the Lady I | 19 |
| II | 20 |
| Propertius's Bid for Immortality | 21 |
| A Lament | 23 |
| Bon Voyage—and Vice Versa | 24 |
| Fragment | 25 |
| On the Uses of Adversity | 26 |
| After Hearing "Robin Hood" | 27 |
| Maud Muller Mutatur | 28 |
| The Carlyles | 31 |
| If Amy Lowell Had Been James Whitcomb Riley | 35 |
| If the Advertising Man Had Been Gilbert | 37 |
| If the Advertising Man Had Been Praed, or Locker | 39 |
| Georgie Porgie | 40 |
| On First Looking into Bee Palmer's Shoulders | 41 |
| To a Vers Librist | 43 |
| How Do You Tackle Your Work? | 45 |
| Recuerdo | 48 |
| On Tradition | 51 |
| Unshackled Thoughts on Chivalry, Romance, Adventure, Etc. | 52 |
| Results Ridiculous | 53 |
| Regarding (1) the U. S. and (2) New York | 54 |
| Broadmindedness | 55 |
| The Jazzy Bard | 56 |
| Lines on and from "Bartlett's Familiar Quotations" | 57 |
| Thoughts in a Far Country | 58 |
| When You Meet a Man from Your Own Home Town | 59 |
| The Shepherd's Resolution | 61 |
| "It Was a Famous Victory" | 62 |
| On Profiteering | 63 |
| Despite | 64 |
| The Return of the Soldier | 65 |
| "I Remember, I Remember" | 66 |
| The Higher Education | 68 |
| War and Peace | 69 |
| Fifty-Fifty | 70 |
| "So Shines a Good Deed in a Naughty World" | 71 |
| Vain Words | 72 |
| On the Importance of Being Earnest | 73 |
| It Happens in the B. R. Families | 74 |
| Abelard and Heloïse | 77 |
| Lines Written on the Sunny Side of Frankfort Street | 79 |
| Fifty-Fifty | 80 |
| To Myrtilla | 81 |
| A Psalm of Labouring Life | 82 |
| Ballade of Ancient Acts | 84 |
| To a Prospective Cook | 85 |
| Variation on a Theme | 86 |
| "Such Stuff as Dreams" | 88 |
| The Ballad of Justifiable Homicide | 89 |
| The Ballad of the Murdered Merchant | 90 |
| A Gotham Garden of Verses | 92 |
| Lines on Reading Frank J. Wilstach's "A Dictionary of Similes" | 94 |
| The Dictaphone Bard | 95 |
| The Comfort of Obscurity | 97 |
| Ballade of the Traffickers | 98 |
| To W. Hohenzollern, on Discontinuing The Conning Tower | 100 |
| To W. Hohenzollern, on Resuming The Conning Tower | 103 |
| Thoughts on the Cosmos | 105 |
| On Environment | 106 |
| The Ballad of the Thoughtless Waiter | 107 |
| Rus Vs. Urbs | 109 |
| "I'm Out of the Army Now" | 110 |
| "Oh Man!" | 112 |
| An Ode in Time of Inauguration | 113 |
| What the Copy Desk Might Have Done | 124 |
| Song of Synthetic Virility | 133 |
SOMETHING ELSE AGAIN
Present Imperative
Horace: Book I, Ode 11
"Tu ne quaesieris—scire nefas—quem mihi; quem tibi——"
AD LEUCONOEN
Eliminate the worry as to what the years may hoard!
You only waste your time upon the Babylonian Table—
(Slang for the Ouija board).
May add a lot of winters to our portion here below,
Or this impinging season is to be our very last one—
Really, I'd hate to know.
The Doughboy's Horace
Horace: Book III, Ode 9
"Donec eram gratus tibi——"
You put the notion in my dome
That I was the Molasses Kid.
I batted strong. I'll say I did.
To other boys my heart was stone.
When I was all that you could see
No girl had anything on me.
With one Babette, of Northern France.
If that girl gave me the command
I'd dance a jig in No Man's Land.
With Charley—say, that boy is there!
I'd just as soon go out and die
If I thought it'd please that guy.
And start things up with you again?
Suppose I promise to be good?
I'd love you, Lyd. I'll say I would.
And you're a stormy, fickle doughboy,
Go give the Hun his final whack,
And I'll marry you when you come back.
From: Horace
To: Phyllis
Subject: Invitation
Book IV, Ode 11
"Est mihi nonum superantis annum——"
(Alban, B. C. 49),
Parsley wreaths, and, for your tresses,
Ivy that your beauty blesses.
Frondage decks the altar stair—
Sacred vervain, a device
For a lambkin's sacrifice.
What a festival prepares!
Everybody's superintending—
See the sooty smoke ascending!
Of the day we celebrate?
13th April, month of Venus—
Birthday of my boss, Mæcenas.
Touching Telephus, a bird
Ranking far too high above you;
(And the loafer doesn't love you).
From Phaëton—how he was burned!
And recall Bellerophon was
One equestrian who thrown was.
My philandering days are past.
Sing you, in your clear contralto,
Songs I write for the rialto.
Advising Chloë
Horace: Book I, Ode 23
"Vitas hinnuleo me similis, Chloë——"
Is mine with intention to kill.
And yet like a llama you run to your mamma;
You tremble as though you were ill.
To An Aged Cut-up
Horace: Book III, Ode 15
I
"Uxor pauperis Ibyci,
Tandem nequitiæ fige modum tuæ——"
IN CHLORIN
Your manners and your speech are over-bold;
To chase around the sporty way you do is far from nice;
Believe me, darling, you are growing old.
A débutante has got to think of men;
But you were twenty-seven over thirty years ago—
You ought to be asleep at half-past ten.
II
What's fit for Pholoë, a fluff,
Is not for Ibycus's wife—
A woman at your time of life!
The shimmy and "the Bacchus Jazz";
Your presence with the maidens jars—
You are the cloud that dims the stars.
Out nights upon the Appian Way;
Her love for Nothus, as you know,
Makes her as playful as a doe.
His Monument
Horace: Book III, Ode 30
"Exegi monumentum aere perennius——"
And loftier than the Pyramids which mock the years that pass.
Nor blizzard can destroy it, nor furious rain corrode—
Remember, I'm the bard that built the first Horatian ode.
A part of me shall never pass the mortuary portal;
And when I die my fame shall stand the nitric test of time—
The fame of me of lowly birth, who built the lofty rhyme!
Glycera Rediviva!
Horace: Book I, Ode 19
"Mater sæva Cupidinum"
The Cupids (symbolising Love),
Bids me to muse upon and sigh
For things to which I've said "Good-bye!"
I give this Glycera girl a lot:
Pure Parian marble are her arms—
And she has eighty other charms.
And will not let me pull a pome
About the Parthians, fierce and rough,
The Scythian war, and all that stuff.
On a Wine of Horace's
O Mr. Q. Horatius Flaccus,
In praise of many an ancient wine—
You twanged a wicked lyre to Bacchus!—
I wondered, like a Yankee hick,
If that old stuff contained a kick.
I glimpsed Falernian, I said: "Waiter,
I'll emulate that ancient bard,
And pass upon his merits later."
Professor Mendell, quelque sport,
Suggested that we split a quart.
"What Flavour?"
Horace: Book III, Ode 13
"O fons Bandusiæ, splendidior vitro——"
O fountain of Bandusian onyx,
To-morrow shall a goatling's bleat
Mix with the sizz of thy carbonics.
A life of love and war—but vainly!
For thee his sanguine life shall end—
He'll spill his blood, to put it plainly.
That blazes in the days of Sirius,
But men shall quaff thy soda sweet,
And girls imbibe thy drinks delirious.
The Stalling of Q. H. F.
Horace: Epode 14
"Mollis inertia cur tantam diffuderit imis"
Demanding I turn out a rhyme;
Insisting on reasons, you hurry me;
You want my iambics on time.
You say my ambition's diminishing;
You ask why my poem's not done.
The god it is keeps me from finishing
The stuff I've begun.
On the Flight of Time
Horace: Book I, Ode 2
"Tu ne quæsieris, scire nefas, quem mihi, quem tibi"
AD LEUCONOEN
Seek not to find what the Answer may be;
Let no Chaldean clairvoyant compute your
Time of existence.... It irritates me!
Patiently, playing it through like a sport,
Whether the end of your breathing is Never,
Or, as is likely, your time will be short.
The Last Laugh
Horace: Epode 15
"Nox erat et cælo fulgebat Luna sereno——"
"Upon this bank!" that starry night—
The night you vowed you'd be devoted—
I'll tell the world you held me tight.
Should cease to whip the wintry sea,
Until the lamb should love the lion,
You would, you swore, be all for me.
No mollycoddle swain am I.
I shall not sit and pine, by gorry!
Because you're with some other guy!
Upon some truer, fairer Jane;
And all your prayer and genuflexion
For my return shall be in vain.
Again Endorsing the Lady
Book II, Elegy 2
"Liber eram et vacuo meditabar vivere lecto——"
I
"A truce to sentiment," I said. "My nights shall be my own."
But Love has double-crossed me. How can Beauty be so fair?
The grace of her, the face of her—and oh, her yellow hair!
Jove's sister—ay, or Pallas—hath no statelier a stride.
Fair as Ischomache herself, the Lapithanian maid;
Or Brimo when at Mercury's side her virgin form she laid.
II
That I had Love upon the shelf;
"Hereafter," I declared in glee,
"I'll have my evenings to myself."
How can such mortal beauty live?
(Ah, Jove, thine errings I forgive!)
Her hands are featly formed, and taper;
Her—well, the rest ought not be told
In any modest family paper.
Fair as Ischomache, and bright
As Brimo. Quæque queen is right.
Propertius's Bid for Immortality
Book III, Ode 3
"Carminis interea nostri redæmus in orbem——"
To our accustomed round of rhyme;
And let my songs' familiar art
Not fail to move my lady's heart.
Had power to tame the wildest brute;
That "Variations on a Theme"
Of his would stay the swiftest stream.
Cithæron's rocks were moved along
To Thebes, where, as you may recall,
They formed themselves to frame a wall.
Beneath wild Etna's fastness stayed
Her horses, dripping with the mere,
Those Polypheman songs to hear.
Apollo grasp me by the hand,
That all the maidens you have heard
Should hang upon my slightest word?
Are not; nor any golden dome;
No parks have I, nor Marcian spring,
Nor orchards—nay, nor anything.
Some readers love my lyric line;
And never is Calliope
Awearied by my poetry.
Hath fallen upon my sheaf of lays!
And every song of mine is sent
To be thy beauty's monument.
The House of Jove that soars so high,
Mausolus' tomb—they are not free
From Death his final penalty.
A Lament
Propertius: Book II, Elegy 8
"Eripitur nobis iam pridem cara puella——"
From arms that held her many years,
Dost thou regard me, friend, with scorn,
Or seek to check my tears?
And hot the hates of Eros are;
My hatred, slay me an thou wilt,
For thee'd be gentler far.
Upon another's arm? Shall they
No longer call that lady "mine"
Who "mine" was yesterday?
The town of Thebes is draped with moss,
And Ilium's well-known topless towers
Are now a total loss.
Bon Voyage—and Vice Versa
Propertius: Elegy VIII, Part 1
"Tune igitur demens, nec te mea cura moratur?"