UNMENTIONABLE.

There is a thing of which I fain would speak,

Yet shun the deed;

Lest hot disgust flush the averted cheek

Of those who read.

And yet it is as common in our sight

As dust or grass;

Loathed by the lifted skirt, the tiptoe light,

Of those who pass.

We say no word, but the big placard rests

Frequent in view,

To sicken those who do not with requests

Of those who do.

“Gentlemen will not,” the mild placards say.

They read with scorn.

“Gentlemen must not”—they defile the way

Of those who warn.

On boat and car the careful lady lifts

Her dress aside;

If careless—think, fair traveller, of the gifts

Of those who ride!

On every hall and sidewalk, floor and stair,

Where man’s at home,

This loathsomeness is added to the care

Of those who come.

As some foul slug his trail of slime displays

On leaf and stalk,

These street-beasts make a horror in the ways

Of those who walk.

We cannot ask reform of those who do—

They can’t or won’t.

We can express the scorn, intense and true,

Of those who don’t.