sent in by atheos
'Polterguest, My Polterguest'
I've put Miss Hopper upon the train,
And I hope to do so never again,
For must I do so, I shouldn't wonder
If, instead of upon it, I put her under.
Never has host encountered a visitor
Less desirable, less exquisiter,
Or experienced such a tangy zest
In beholding the back of a parting guest.
Hoitful-toitful Hecate Hopper
Haunted our house and haunted it proper,
Hecate Hopper left the property
Irredeemably Hecate Hopperty.
The morning paper was her monopoly
She read it first, and Hecate Hopperly,
Handing on to the old subscriber
A wad of Dorothy Dix and fiber.
Shall we coin a phrase for "to unco-operate"?
How about trying "to Hecate Hopperate"?
On the maid's days off she found it fun
To breakfast in bed at quarter to one.
Not only was Hecate on a diet,
She insisted that all the family try it,
And all one week end we gobbled like pigs
On rutabagas and salted figs.
She clogged the pipes and she blew the fuses,
She broke the rocker that Grandma uses,
And she ran amok in the medicine chest,
Hecate Hopper, the Polterguest.
Hecate Hopper, the Polterguest
Left stuff to be posted or expressed,
And absconded, her suavity undiminished,
With a mystery story I hadn't finished.
If I pushed Miss Hopper under the train
I'd probably have to do it again,
For the time that I pushed her off the boat
I regretfully found Miss Hopper could float.
-- Ogden Nash
I think there's something about Nash that's irresistible. He just
sweeps you up and away with him.
This one is my absolute favourite. You find yourself in sympathy
with his - even if only in jest - homicidal tendencies. Everybody
has met one of these irritating people. Heck, it could even be
ourselves... Grin.
atheos.
>From The Pocket Book of Ogden Nash, with an introduction by Louis
Untermeyer (I personally think Untermeyer gushes too much, but I thought I
should type everything out because it has some rather nice lines
interspersed between the longwinded prose.):
"There seem to be at least three Ogden Nashes. There are, for
example: 1. the experimental craftsman 2. the social critic 3. the
skylarking humourist. Sometimes Nash keeps these three selves
fairly well segregated. But, more often than not, he lets down the
bars and allows 1. the innovator, 3. the philosopher, and 3. the
funny fellow to kick up their heels in happy unison. This volume
is chiefly given over to the best of those tripartite romps.
It was Nash in the role of experimental craftsman who first made
readers aware that something new had happened to light verse in
America. Accustomed to smoothly paired rhymes and neatly measured
stanzas, readers were suddenly stopped by the impact of lines
like:
I sit in an office at 244 Madison Avenue
And say to myself you have a responsible job, havenue?
Cajoled by talk of babies, even parents were startled to find:
A bit of talcum
Is always walcum.
The reader of Nash learned his lessons in a new school; he learned
of too much affection which:
.. leads to breaches of promise
If you go lavishing it around on red hot momise.
He pondered the theatrical reflection that:
In the Vanities
No one wears panities.
He learned to decipher the weird but comforting axiom that:
A girl who is bespectacled,
She may not get her necktacled;
But safety pins and bassinets
Await the girl who fassinets.
Here and elsewhere Nash invents lines that run blithely on without
benefit of metre and rhymes so madcap as to be irresponsible.
Instead of pleasing the reader with the customary niceties, Nash
assaults him with a series of breathless outrages. One or two
fanatical source-hunters claim to have found the origin of Nash's
eccentric lines in W.S. Gilbert's "Lost Mr. Blake". But an
unprejudiced comparison will show that the two styles have little
in common and that, whereas Gilbert made the experiment just once,
Nash uses it so freely and so efficiently that he has put his
trademark upon it.
So with the rhymes. Nash is the master of surprising words that
nearly but do-not-quite match, words which rhyme reluctantly,
words which never before had any relation with each other and
which will never be on rhyming terms again.
Here are those apparently improvised monologues in which the
distortions are more lively - and more quotable - than any
prepared accuracy.
What would you do if you were up a dark alley with Caesar Borgia
And he was coming torgia...
But the slightly lunatic manner is deceptive. Disguised as a
buffoon who cannot resist a parody and a pun, there is the social
critic. Here again Nash has a fresh set of surprises up his ample
sleeve... Even without his unique bag of technical tricks, Nash
creates the deftest light verse being written today. The longer
and more elaborately contrived poems are topical and timely; but
there is something timeless in the nimble gallantry of "To a Lady
Passing Time Better Left Unpassed". the whimsical appeal of
"Complaint to Four Angels", the submerged but not too supressed
anger of "To a Small Boy Standing on My Shoes While I Am Wearing
Them", the affable sentiment of "An Introduction To Dogs". and the
merry malice in what is perhaps the most philosophic and certainly
the funniest poem in the collection, "The Seven Spritual Ages of
Mrs. Marmaduke Moore".
Nash the rhyming clown may win us first, but it is Nash the
laughing philosopher who holds us longest. Only Nash could have
combined the tones of banter and burlesque to tell us:
Our daily diet grows odder and odder-
It's a wise child that knows its fodder.
Finally there emerges from this collection a portrait of Nash
himself, the whole person not quite concealed by the poet. We are
made aware of his intimate dislikes or (since most of them begin
with a "p") his prejudices; they include politicians and people's
names and parsley ("parsley is gharsley") and poems by Edgar A.
Guest and professors and parties next door. We see him leaping
about without effort from childlike fancy to mature irony; a crazy
storyteller one moment, a satirist the next, a wry clown and a
chuckling critic. It is then that we recognize how rounded the man
really is, how much more than the haphazard rhymer he reveals. His
is an inspired method which has just the right measure of madness
in it, a recklessness that is never without reason. In other and
flatter words, Nash is our greatest combiner of common sense and
uncommon nonsense, the undisputed American heir of Edward Lear,
Lewis Carroll and W. S. Gilbert.
-- Louis Untermeyer
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