William Henry Davies

Safety-Clutch

Once I seen a human ruin

In a elevator-well.

And his members was bestrewin’

All the place where he had fell.

And I says, apostrophisin’

That uncommon woful wreck:

Your position’s so surprising

That I tremble for your neck!

Then that ruin, smilin’ sadly

And impressive, up and spoke:

Well, I wouldn’t tremble badly,

For it’s been a fortnight broke.

Then, for further comprehension

Of his attitude, he begs

I will focus my attention

On his various arms and legs–

How they all are contumacious;

Where they each, respective, lie;

How one trotter proves ungracious,

T’ other one an alibi.

These particulars is mentioned

For to show his dismal state,

Which I wasn’t first intentioned

To specifically relate.

None is worser to be dreaded

That I ever have heard tell

Than the gent’s who there was spreaded

In that elevator-well.

Now this tale is allegoric–

It is figurative all,

For the well is metaphoric

And the feller didn’t fall.

I opine it isn’t moral

For a writer-man to cheat,

And despise to wear a laurel

As was gotten by deceit.

For ’tis Politics intended

By the elevator, mind,

It will boost a person splendid

If his talent is the kind.

Col. Bryan had the talent

(For the busted man is him)

And it shot him up right gallant

Till his head began to swim.

Then the rope it broke above him

And he painful came to earth

Where there’s nobody to love him

For his detrimented worth.

Though he’s living’ none would know him,

Or at leastwise not as such.

Moral of this woful poem

Frequent oil your safety-clutch.”

William Henry Davies

Elegy

The cur foretells the knell of parting day;

The loafing herd winds slowly o’er the lea;

The wise man homewards plods; I only stay

To fiddle-faddle in a minor key.

William Henry Davies

Rimer

The rimer quenches his unheeded fires,

The sound surceases and the sense expires.

Then the domestic dog, to east and west,

Expounds the passions burning in his breast.

The rising moon o’er that enchanted land

Pauses to hear and yearns to understand.

William Henry Davies

To the Bartholdi Statue

O Liberty, God-gifted–

Young and immortal maid–

In your high hand uplifted,

The torch declares your trade.

Its crimson menace, flaming

Upon the sea and shore,

Is, trumpet-like, proclaiming

That Law shall be no more.

Austere incendiary,

We’re blinking in the light;

Where is your customary

Grenade of dynamite?

Where are your staves and switches

For men of gentle birth?

Your mask and dirk for riches?

Your chains for wit and worth?

Perhaps, you’ve brought the halters

You used in the old days,

When round religion’s altars

You stabled Cromwell’s bays?

Behind you, unsuspected,

Have you the axe, fair wench,

Wherewith you once collected

A poll-tax for the French?

America salutes you–

Preparing to ‘disgorge.’

Take everything that suits you,

And marry Henry George.