What Grandfather Said

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(_An epistle from a narrow-minded old gentleman to a young artist of
superior intellect and intense realism._)


Your thoughts are for the poor and weak?
  Ah, no, the picturesque's your passion!
Your tongue is always in your cheek
  At poverty that's not in fashion.

You like a ploughman's rugged face,
  Or painted eyes in Piccadilly;
But bowler hats are commonplace,
  And thread-bare tradesmen simply silly.

The clerk that sings "God save the King,"
  And still believes his Tory paper,--
You hate the anæmic fool? I thought
  You loved the weak! Was that all vapour?

Ah, when you sneer, dear democrat,
  At such a shiny-trousered Tory
Because he doffs his poor old hat
  To what he thinks his country's glory,

To you it's just a coloured rag.
  You hate the "patriots" that bawl so.
Well, my Ulysses, there's a flag
  That lifts men in Republics also.

No doubt his thoughts are cruder far;
  And, where those linen folds are shaking,
Perhaps he sees a kind of star
  Because his eyes are tired and aching.

Banal enough! Banal as truth!
  But I'm not thinking of his banners.
I'm thinking of his pinched white youth
  And your disgusting "new art" manners.

His meek submission stirs your hate?
  Better, my lad, if you're so fervent,
Turn your cold steel against the State
  Instead of sneering at the servant.

He does his job. He draws his pay.
  You sneer, and dine with those that pay him;
And then you write a snobbish play
  For democrats, in which you play him.

Ah, yes, you like simplicity
  That sucks its cheeks to make the dimple.
But this domestic bourgeoisie
  You hate,--because it's all too simple.

You hate the hearth, the wife, the child,
  You hate the heavens that bend above them.
Your simple folk must all run wild
  Like jungle-beasts before you love them.

You own a house in Cheyne Walk,
  (You say it costs three thousand fully)
Where subtle snobs can talk and talk
  And play the intellectual bully.

Yes. I say "snobs." Are names alone
  Free from all change? Your word "Victorian"
Could bite and sting in ninety one
  But now--it's deader than the saurian.

You think I live in yesterday,
  Because I think your way the wrong one;
But I have hewed and ploughed my way,
  And--unlike yours--it's been a long one.

I let Victoria toll her bell,
  And went with Strindberg for a ride, sir.
I've fought through your own day as well,
  And come out on the other side, sir,--

The further side, the morning side,
  I read free verse (the Psalms) on Sunday.
But I've decided (you'll decide)
  That there is room for song on Monday.

I've seen the new snob on his way,
  The intellectual snob I mean, sir,
The artist snob, in book and play,
  Kicking his mother round the scene, sir.

I've heard the Tories talk like fools;
  And the rich fool that apes the Tory.
I've seen the shopmen break your rules
  And die like Christ, in Christ's own glory.

But, as for you, that liberal sneer
  Reminds me of the poor old Kaiser.
He was a "socialist," my dear.
  Well, I'm your grandson. You'll grow wiser.

© Alfred Noyes