THE LAY OF THE CIVIL SERVANT

I am the very model of a modern Civil Servant,—

My ambition for the strenuous life’s particularly fervent.

I know a host of pleasant facts and many a pleasing fiction,

Among which last I may include, a member’s “firm conviction.”

I know the day and month of every statutory feast,—

But why these days are “Holy Days,” it matters not the least.

I know the Civil Service List and everybody’s pay

And why they came, why they’re here, and their likely length of stay;

I can see a hole in a ladder and know a Pull when I feel it,

And the modus operandi of getting a thing without having to steal it.

I know the Civil Service Act and how it’s circumvented

Who is who in Parliament, what’s real and what pretended.

I know about Elipse of Stress and why a bridge breaks down

And all about the vested rights and the powers of the Crown.

I know when to work moderato and when fortissimo,

What’s the diff. between in and out, in fact I’m in the know;

I know about contractors and their peculiar ways,

How honestly they always act, especially when it pays.

I’m very well acquainted, too, with social etiquette,

Have shook Gov.-General’s hands and Ministers have met.

And yet with all my knowing it grieves me much to say

That as yet I’ve not discovered how to get a raise in pay.

I have a ready flow of words, which passes for profundity,

But really a few scattered wits, are all that fills, my head’s rotundity.

The dead level is the devil.


You need great ballast in your mind to spread a vast canvas of vanity to the wind.


A brave man may run from danger, a coward fight, a fool do wisdom, and a wise man folly; so consider a reputation, but count it not too high.