What care I how fair she be?
BY OUR OWN JEROME D. KERN, AUTHOR OF "YOU'RE HERE AND I'M HERE"
If she doesn't seem beautiful to me,
I won't waste away if she's fair as day,
Or prettier than meadows in the month of May;
As long as you are there for me to see,
I don't care and you don't care
How many others are beyond compare—
You're the only one I like to have around.
If she doesn't seem wonderful to me,
I won't fret if she's everybody's pet,
Or considered by all as the one best bet;
As long as you and I are only we,
I don't care and you don't care
How many others are beyond compare,
You're the only one I like to have around.
"It Was a Famous Victory"
(1944)
Old Kaspar was at home,
Sitting before his cottage door—
Like in the Southey pome—
And near him, with a magazine,
Idled his grandchild, Geraldine.
To the child upon the floor,
"Why don't you ask me what I did
When I was in the war?
They told me that each little kid
Would surely ask me what I did.
For thirty years or more."
"Don't bother, Grandpa," said the child;
"I find such things a bore.
Pray leave me to my magazine,"
Asserted little Geraldine.
To whom his gaffer said:
"You'd like to hear about the war?
How I was left for dead?"
"No. And, besides," declared the youth,
"How do I know you speak the truth?"
The hero of this pome,
And walked, with not unsprightly step,
Down to the Soldiers' Home,
Where he, with seven other men,
Sat swapping lies till half-past ten.
On Profiteering
A profiteer
With unabat-
Ed loathing;
Though I detest
The price they smear
On pants and vest
And clothing;
Despite
Of Kansas says alarm me;
And yet somehow we won the war
In spite of the Regular Army.
Are bitter and cruel and hard;
And yet we walloped the enemy
In spite of the National Guard.
Too late were our forces sent;
And yet we smeared the horrible Hun
In spite of the President.
Cried many a Senator;
And yet we handed the Kaiser his
In spite of the Sec. of War.
The Return of the Soldier
Ere I sailed the sea,
Bitterly bereft you
Told me you would be.
When I fought the foe,
How my heart would soften,
Pitying your woe!
It was my belief
That my mere returning
Would annul your grief.
"I Remember, I Remember"
The house where I was born;
The rent was thirty-two a month,
Which made my father mourn.
He said he could remember when
His father paid the rent;
And when a man's expenses did
Not take his every cent.
My mother telling my cousin
That eggs had gone to twenty-six
Or seven cents a dozen;
And how she told my father that
She didn't like to speak
Of things like that, but Bridget now
Demanded four a week.
The Higher Education
(Harvard's prestige in football is a leading factor. The best players in the big preparatory schools prefer to study at Cambridge, where they can earn fame on the gridiron. They do not care to be identified with Yale and Princeton.—Joe Vila in the Evening Sun.)
"Your pleading finds me deaf;
Although I know you speak the truth
About the course at Shef.
But think you that I have no pride,
To follow such a trail?
I cannot be identified
With Princeton or with Yale."
Emerging from his prep;
"I know you are a Princeton grad,
But the coaches have no pep.
But though the Princeton profs provide
Fine courses to inhale;
I cannot be identified
With Princeton or with Yale."
War and Peace
"With its countless numbers of needless dead;
A futile warfare it seems to me,
Fought for no principle I can see.
Alas, that thousands of hearts should bleed
For naught but a tyrant's boundless greed!"
As he went to adulterate salable food.
"Isn't this war a disgraceful thing?
Heartless, cruel, and useless, too;
It doesn't seem that it can be true.
Think of the misery, want, and fear!
We ought to be grateful we've no war here.
Fifty-Fifty
I've written things that aimed to teach
Our careless mealy-mouthéd mummers
To be more sedulous of speech.
So limping and so careless they
About distinct enunciation,
Often I don't know what they say.
Declaiming of some lines I heard,
I hailed a public benefactor,
As I distinguished every word.
Thorn on the celebrated rose
And fly within the well-known ointment!
(Allusions everybody knows.)
"So Shines a Good Deed in a Naughty World"
He gave away his millions to the colleges and sich;
And people cried: "The hypocrite! He ought to understand
The ones who really need him are the children of this land."
The people said they rather thought he did it as a trick,
And writers said: "He thinks about the drooping girls and boys,
But what about conditions with the men whom he employs?"
His profits with his laborers, for that was only fair,
And people said: "Oh, isn't he the shrewd and foxy gent?
It cost him next to nothing for that free advertisement."
To do away with poverty and other ills of man,
But he feared the public jeering, and the folks who would defame him,
So he never told the plan he had, and I can hardly blame him.
Vain Words
It is merely to construct
Some occasion or condition
When I may say "usufruct."
On the Importance of Being Earnest
To borrow a line from Mr. Gilbert;
She hated War with a hate untold,
She was a pacifistic filbert.
If you said "Perhaps"—she'd leave the hall.
You couldn't argue with her at all.
(Pardon my love for a good quotation).
To talk of war was his only joy,
And his single purpose was Preparation.
It Happens in the B. R. Families
WITH THE CUSTOMARY OBEISANCES
From Deal to Newport lie
That I roused from sleep in a huddled heap
An elderly wealthy guy.
And graying and long was he;
And I heard this grouch on the shore avouch,
In a singular jazzless key:
And the maid of the second floor,
And a strong chauffeur and a housekeeper.
And the man who tends the door!"
And he started to frisk and play,
Till I couldn't help thinking the man had been drinking,
So I said (in the Gilbert way):
Of the ways of societee,
But I'll eat my friend if I comprehend
However you can be
And the maid of the second floor,
And a strong chauffeur and a housekeeper,
And the man who tends the door."
And a gulp in his throat he swallows,
And that elderly guy he then lets fly
Substantially as follows:
And we led a simple life;
There was only I," said the elderly guy,
"And my daughter and my wife.
And the maid of the second floor,
And a strong chauffeur and a housekeeper,
And the man who tends the door.
She up and left us flat.
She was getting a hundred and ten a mon-
Th, but she couldn't work for that.
And she wouldn't stay no more;
And our strong chauffeur eloped with her
Who was maid of the second floor.
So I had to cook and wait.
It was quite absurd," wept the elderly bird.
"I deserve a better fate.
Till the housekeeper up and quit;
And the man at the door found that a bore,
Which is why I am, to wit:
Abelard and Heloïse
["There are so many things I want to talk to you about." Abelard probably said to Heloïse, "but how can I when I can only think about kissing you?"—Katharine Lane in the Evening Mail.]
"Your tresses blowing in the breeze
Enchant my soul; your cheek allures;
I never knew such lips as yours."
"I know that it is cruel, hard,
To make you fold your yearning arms
And think of things besides my charms."
"Pray let's discuss the Portuguese;
Their status in the League of Nations.
... Come, slip me seven osculations."
"Are pure Woodrovian fallacies."
Said Abelard: "Ten times fourteen
The points you have, O beaucoup queen!"
I've heard the same old thing enough."
"But," answered Abelard, "your lips
Put all my thoughts into eclipse."
"Don't take so many liberties."
"O Heloïse," said Abelard,
"I do it but to show regard."
Lines Written on the Sunny Side of Frankfort Street
(I credit Milton in parenthesis),
Among the speculations that she made
Was this:
A slave to duty's harsh commanding call,
Will you, I wonder, ever sigh and yearn
At all?"
(Emotion is a thing I do not plan.)
I could not fairly answer then, but now
I can.
Fifty-Fifty
[We think about the feminine faces we meet in the streets, and experience a passing melancholy because we are unacquainted with some of the girls we see.—From "The Erotic Motive in Literature," by Albert Mordell.]
How many girls I see
Whose form and features I applaud
With well-concealéd glee!
Or willowy or obese,
Were I not fearful, and afraid
She'd yell for the police.
Marks me then as her own,
Because I lack the nerve to greet
The girls I might have known.
(As I remarked before),
There is one sweetly solemn thought
Comes to me o'er and o'er:
To Myrtilla
(Eheu fugaces! maybe more)
I wrote of the directoire skirt
You wore.
The hobble skirt engaged my pen.
That was, I calculate, in Nine-
Teen Ten.
The phony furs of yesterfall,
The current shoe—I tried to kid
Them all.
Silly all my sulphuric song.
Rube Goldberg said a bookful; it
'S all wrong.
But you, despite my angriest Note,
Were never swayed by anything
I wrote.
A Psalm of Labouring Life
Life is but a name for work!
For the labour that encumbers
Me I wish that I could shirk.
And the wealthy have no soul;
Why should you be picking cotton?
Why should I be mining coal?
Is my destined end or way;
But to act that each to-morrow
Finds me idler than to-day.
Money is the thing I crave;
But my heart continues punching
Funeral time-clocks to the grave.
In the swindle known as life,
Be not like the stockyards cattle—
Stick your partner with a knife!
Capital is but a curse!
Strike,—strike in the living present!
Fill, oh fill, the bulging purse!
We can make our lives a crime,
And, departing, leave behind us
Bills for double overtime.
Working for a stingy ten
Bucks a day, some mining brother
Seeing, shall walk out again.
Ballade of Ancient Acts
AFTER HENLEY
And where the smiles they made to flow?
Where's Caron's seltzer siphon laid,
A squirt from which laid Herbert low?
Where's Charlie Case's comic woe
And Georgie Cohan's nasal drawl?
The afterpiece? The olio?
Into the night go one and all.
That Fields and Lewis used to throw?
Where is the horn that Shepherd played?
The slide trombone that Wood would blow?
Amelia Glover's l. f. toe?
The Rays and their domestic brawl?
Bert Williams with "Oh, I Don't Know?"
Into the night go one and all.
L'ENVOI
At us who gleefully would fall
For acts that played the Long Ago,
Into the night go one and all.
To a Prospective Cook
Thou shalt not wash dishes, nor yet weed the flowers,
But stand in the kitchen and cook a fine meal,
And ride every night in an automobile.
Thou needst not to rise until mid-afternoon;
Thou mayst be Croatian, Armenian, or Greek;
Thy guerdon shall be what thou askest per week.
Variation on a Theme
June 30, 1919.
Than ever was blared by a bugle or zoomed by a saxophone;
And the sound that opens the gates for me of a Paradise revealed
Is something akin to the note revered by the blesséd Eugene Field,
Who sang in pellucid phrasing that I perfectly well recall
Of the clink of the ice in the pitcher that the boy brings up the hall.
But sweeter to me than the sparrow's song or the goose's autumn honks
Is the sound of the ice in the shaker as the barkeeper mixes a Bronx.
Comes a pause in the day's tribulations that is known as the cocktail hour;
And my soul is sad and jaded, and my heart is a thing forlorn,
And I view the things I have written with a sickening, scathing scorn.
Oh, it's then I fare with some other slave who is hired for the things he writes
To a Den of Sin where they mingle gin—such as Lipton's, Mouquin's, or Whyte's,
And my spirit thrills to a music sweeter than Sullivan or Puccini—
The swash of the ice in the shaker as he mixes a Dry Martini.
By the ice in the shaker that holds a drink like orange or lemonade;
But on the word of a travelled man and a bard who has been around,
The sound of tin on ice and gin is a snappier, happier sound.
And I mean to hymn, as soon as I have a moment of leisure time,
The chill susurrus of cocktail ice in an adequate piece of rhyme.
But I've just had an invitation to hark, at a beckoning bar,
To the sound of the ice in the shaker as the barkeeper mixes a Star.
"Such Stuff as Dreams"
The Ballad of Justifiable Homicide
And I feared lest I should swing.
"O tell me, tell me,—and make it brief—
Why hast thou done this thing?
Or lived a gunman's life,
Had he set fire to cottages,
Or run off with thy wife?"
Nor lived a gunman's life;
He hath set fire to no cottage,
Nor run off with my wife.
It now my lips unlocks:
I learned he was the man who planned
The second balcony box."
The Ballad of the Murdered Merchant
All cold and stark lay he.
And who hath killed this fair merchant?
Now tell the truth to me.
Will never again draw breath;
Oh, I have made this fair merchant
To come unto his death.
Whose corse I now behold?
And why hast caused this man to lie
In death all stark and cold?
Whose kith and kin make moan,
For that he hath stolen my precious time
When he useth the telephone.
The receiver did I seize.
"Hello!" quoth I, and quoth a girl,
"Hello!... One moment, please."
And moments three and four,
And then I sought that fair merchant
And spilled his selfish gore.
His moments sae rich and fine
In calling a man to the telephone
Shall never again waste mine!
Shall cause me a moment's loss,
I'll forthwith fare to that office
And stab to death her boss.
A Gotham Garden of Verses
The subway is delayed a lot;
In winter, quite the selfsame thing;
In autumn also, and in spring.
That transportation is askew
In this—I pray, restrain your mirth!—
In this, the Greatest Town on Earth?
The neighbours dance for my delight;
I hear the people dance and sing
Like practically anything.
All making curious kinds of noise
And dancing in so weird a way,
I never saw the like by day.
As that which yesternight occurred:
They danced and sang, as I have said,
As I lay wakeful on my bed.
And play upon the phonograph;
And endlessly I count the sheep,
Endeavouring to fall asleep.
This town is full of meat and drink;
That is, I'd think it very nice
If my papa but had the price.