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WILLIAM B. TAPPAN
(1794-1849)

A
t the age of thirty-two, the Reverend William B. Tappan entered the service of the American Sunday School Union, and he continued working for them until he died. During this time, however, he also wrote poetry, over twelve volumes’ worth. As one might expect given his affiliation, his poems are all of unflagging moral rectitude commingled with enthusiastic, even bouncy, zeal. Tappan was prone to sermonizing in his verse, especially about such topics as the evils of alcohol. But even he succumbed to temptation when it came to the retelling of horrific disasters. He let his hair down by writing turgid poems such as his “Burning of the Orphan Asylum,” which talks about the “dear innocents—who fed the funeral pyre.” Yet the ever-sermonizing Tappan was always sure to find the moral issue hidden in a tragedy—and blatantly point it out to his readers.

Obey Your Parents

Two brothers once, of merry mood,
   Were sporting in their simple play,
When, chafed and furious from the wood,
   A lion roared against his prey.

Between them and the help they claimed,
   Was interposed a lofty wall;
And hark! beyond it, each is named—
   It is the anxious father’s call:

“O, children haste! ye shall not fail
   Of safety with your sire and friend”;
“Folly,” said one, “for us to scale
   Yon stones, which men can scarce ascend.”

“See you not that so rough the path,
   So high the wall, its topmost stone
Ere we could gain, the beast in wrath,
   Might rend and break us bone by bone.”

“I,” said the other, “come what may,
   Will not despise our father’s call;
’T is safest always to obey,—
   I’ll strive to climb yon lofty wall.”

He ran, and saw, when drawing nigh,
   A
ladder
reaching from its height;
Safe now, he turned a wistful eye,
   His mangled brother met his sight.

from
Song of the Three Hundred Thousand Drunkards in the United States

Onward! though ever in our march,
   Hang Misery’s countless train;
Onward for hell—from rank to rank
   Pass we the cup again!

We come! we come! to fill our graves,
   On which shall shine no star;
To glut the worm that never dies—
   Hurrah! hurrah! hurrah!

from
The Last Drunkard

He stood, the last—the last of all
   The ghastly, guilty band,
Whose clanking chains and cry of thrall
   Once rang throughout the land.

….

A sound of moral agony;
   Upon his ear it fell;
A bitter and undreamed of cry,
   With mingled laugh of hell.

….

It calls him! and, probation past,
   He shouts, “Ye Fiends, I come!
Open, foul pit, and take the last,
   The last doomed slave of Rum!”

REV. SAMUEL WESLEY SR.
(1660-1735)

T
he Reverend Samuel Wesley the elder is possibly best known as the father of John Wesley, the founder of Methodism. But Rev. Samuel Wesley deserves to be remembered in his own right—even though his publisher (and friend), John Dunton, noted that “those that allow of no second-rate in [poetry] have endeavoured to lessen his reputation.”

Although Wesley mainly wrote on religious topics, his first volume was much more esoteric. Published in 1685, it had the intriguing title
Maggots, or Poems on Several Subjects Never Before Handled.
Among the poems included are “On a Cow’s Tail,” “Three Skipps of a Louse,” and “A Tame Snake Left in a Box of Bran Was Devoured by Mice after a Great Battle”—subjects happily bearing out the promise of the volume’s title.

from
On Two Souldiers Killing One Another for a Groat

Full doleful Tales have oft been told,
By Chimney warm in Winter cold,
About the Sacred Thirst for Gold;
   To hear em half ’twould mad ye.

To Jayl how many Headlong run,
How many a hopeful Youth’s undone,
How many a vile ungracious Son
   For this has murder’d Daddy?

from
A Pindaricque on the Grunting of a Hog

Freeborn Pindaric never does refuse,
Either a lofty, or a humble muse.…
Now out of sight she flys,
Roving with gaudy Wings,
A-cross the stormy skys,
Then down again,
Her self she Flings,
Without uneasiness, or Pain
To Lice, and Dogs,
To Cows, and Hogs,
And follows their melodious grunting
o’er the Plain.

….

Harmonious Hog draw near!
   No bloody Butchers here,
   Thou need’st not fear.
Harmonious Hog draw near, and from they beauteous
   Snowt,
   Whilst we attend with Ear
   Like thine prik’t up devout,
To taste thy sugry Voice, which hear, and there,
With wanton Curls, Vibrates around the Circling Air,
Harmonious Hog! Warble some Anthem out!

CORNELIUS WHUR
(1782-1853)

C
ornelius Whur claimed he lived a rather eventful life—but the few particulars known about his life seem to indicate the opposite. A Wesleyan minister, Whur filled his time with work, pottering about the countryside, and talking with a female “bosom companion.”

In 1837 he produced his first volume of poems,
Village Musings on Moral and Religious Subjects.
His sentimental poetic ramblings were very well received by local clergy and friends in the area, and the book went through three printings. The good reverend was so encouraged that he penned another volume, with the rather long title
Gratitude’s Offering, Being Original Productions on a Variety of Subjects,
which appeared in 1845.

As one can see from the following selections, his “musings” were often a bit macabre—centering on such topics as mutilation, poisoning, graveyards, and death in general.

This poem is said to have been inspired when the good reverend saw an artist who had been born without arms and who earned a living for himself and his family by painting.

from
The Armless Artist

Alas! Alas! the father said,
O what a dispensation!
How can we be by mercy led,
In such a situation?
Be not surprised at my alarms,
The dearest boy is without arms!

I have no hope, no confidence,
The scene around is dreary;
How can I meet such vast expense?
I am by trying weary.
You must, my dearest, plainly see
This armless boy will ruin me.

This excerpt from a long, dull poem on a walking stick provides a unique allusion to death by poisonous mushroom.

from
The Unfortunate Gentleman

 … [I]n a dark and trying hour
   (Man hath his days of woe!)
He found in vegetable power
   A dreadful, deadly foe!

ELLA WHEELER WILCOX
(1850-1919)

T
he Times
of London called this American “the most popular poet of either sex or age, read by thousands who never opened Shakespeare.” Unlike Shakespeare, Wilcox wrote her first book at age ten, and throughout her life she wrote at least two poems a day.

“I think,” the vigorous poetess once said, “the word ‘poetess’ to the average American, until recent years, suggested a sentimental person with ringlets and an absence of practical good sense.” Early on, Wilcox set out to disprove this notion, realizing that popular poetry could be turned into cold, hard cash which could buy such delightful things as Connecticut beach houses.

So she churned out poem after poem, dispensing enthusiastic good advice with a late Victorian air. “Do not thrust upon a man’s
mind continually the idea that you are a vastly higher order of being than he is,” she once wrote in a book of advice for women. “He will reach your standard much sooner if you come half-way and meet him on the plane of common sense and human understanding.” It was on this plane that Wilcox operated—and earned—so well.

from
Drops of Water

And he held me fast, and he said, “At last
   I claim thee as mine—all mine.”
But I turned my face from love’s embrace,
   For the dew on his lips was
wine.

Then he mounted his steed, and he rode indeed
   Like a knight of the old crusade;
And he wedded soon, e’er the fall of the moon,
   A queenly and haughty maid;
And he drank up his health, and drank up his wealth,
   And his youth, and strength and grace
And now bereft, he has nothing left
   But a bloated, hideous face.

During World War I Wilcox read her poems to soldiers on the Western Front—including the following work, a stirring call to soldiers at war to resist temptation in the form of other women and return to their loved ones at home with a clean “sword.” The reaction of the troops is not known.

Come Back Clean

This is the song for a soldier
To sing as he rides from home
To the fields afar where the battles are
Or over the ocean’s foam:
“Whatever the dangers waiting
In the lands I have not seen,
If I do not fall—if I come back at all,
Then I will come back clean.

“I may lie in the mud of the trenches,
I may reek with blood and mire,
But I will control, by the God in my soul,
The might of my man’s desire.
I will fight my foe in the open,
But my sword shall be sharp and keen
For the foe within who would lure me to sin,
And I will come back clean.”

GEORGE WITHER
(1588-1667)

G
eorge Wither was one of the most important poets of his time, known widely for his love poems, hymns, and satirical works. His poetry fell out of favor during the Restoration, yet interest in him revived when literary notables such as Charles Lamb and Robert Southey praised his work. Alexander Pope referred to him as “wretched Wither.” Many other people, both in his time and later, were also less impressed with Wither. This opinion may have saved Wither’s life. As the story, possibly apocryphal, has it, Wither was
captured by Royalists during the English Civil War and slated for execution. But Royalist poet Sir John Denham asked the king to spare Wither’s life. When asked why, Denham replied, “Because that so long as Wither lived, Denham would not be accounted the worst poet in England.”

The following lines lend credence to a comment in England’s
Dictionary of National Biography
about Wither’s work: “It usually lacks any genuine literary quality and often sinks into imbecilic doggerel.”

A Love Sonnet

I loved a lass, a fair one,
   As fair as e’er was seen,
She was indeed a rare one,
   Another Sheba queen
But fool as then I was,
   I thought she loved me too;
But now, alas! sh’ ’as left me,
   Falero, lero, loo.

Her hair like gold did glister,
   Each eye was like a star;
She did surpass her sister,
   Which passed all others far.
She would me honey call;
   She’d, O she’d kiss me too,
But now, alas! sh’ ’as left me.
   Falero, lero, loo.

POEMS BY UNKNOWN AUTHORS

T
his poem originally appeared in the Fayetteville
North Carolinian
on February 21, 1857. Although the poet is unknown, apparently he or she chose a subject very near and dear to the hearts of local residents, namely a ditch. This particular ditch was a local landmark, known for its strong smell of sewage and collection of interesting debris. As the
North Carolinian
stated only two months earlier, “that celebrated ditch in our vicinity is now in first-rate skating order—the only inconvenience being a bone sticking up here and there.”

Ode to a Ditch

Oh, ditch of all ditches,
   Death’s store-house of riches,
Where wan disease slumbers mid festoons of slime!
   Oh, dark foetid sewer
   Where death is the brewer
And
ail
is the liquor he brews all the time!

Oh, hot-bed of fever,
   That fatal bereaver
Whose fiery breath blights the blossom of life!
   Oh, palace of miasm
   Whose hall is a chasm
Where pestilence revels and poison is rife!

Where, where on the earth,
   From the place of Sol’s birth
To the couch of his rest in the cloud-curtained West,
   Is a ditch full as thou
Of the treasures which now
The phantom king hides in thy green oozy breast?

Oh, wonderful sewer,
   Each year brings a newer
And ghostlier charm to thy cavernous deeps!
   More puppies and cats,
   To say nothing of rats,
And offal and filth of all manner in heaps.

Another dental poem, written in a less learned vein than the great dental work “Dentologia,”—this particular selection was written in the 1890s by an unknown American poet who obviously had a facility for vivid imagery.

My Last Tooth

You have gone, old tooth,
   Though hard to yield,
You have long stood alone,
   Like a stub in the field.

Farewell, old tooth …
   That tainted my breath,
And tasted as smells
   A woodpecker’s nest.

The following selection is from the 1890s, when a poet’s topic of choice was death, and apparently strolling around the graveyard was a wonderful way to spend the afternoon.

[Untitled]

There is a greater charm to me,
   The wondrous chiseled diction
That on a moss-grown slab we see,
   Than reading modern fiction.

Although the poet of the following work is unknown, his goal was clear. He hoped not only to render biblical events in verse but also to interpret biblical events in light of more mundane—and scientific—knowledge. He accomplished his aim through the use of the innovative device of the explanatory (and often befuddling) footnote in the body of the poem.

Battles of Joshua

Lest Poets paint each Jewish saint
   And all his deeds declare:
Not one we find amongst mankind
   With Joshua can compare.…

O’er Gideon’s top he made it [the Sun] stop;
*
   He also made the moon
Afraid to run and leave the sun;
   She stood o’er Adjalon.
Those who rely on God defy
   All unbelievers, when
The war’s begun; for only one
   Shall chase a thousand men.
*

Brave Joshua when he lost some men
   Was filled with grief profound;
   So great his woes he tore his clothes,
   And fell upon the ground.
*

 … These tales of Josh are true, by Gosh,
   As any saint can wish,
None can relate accounts more straight
   Of Jonah and the fish.

BOOK: Very Bad Poetry
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