A GRIEVANCE

DEAR Mr. Editor: I wish to say—

If you will not be angry at my writing it—

But I've been used, since childhood's happy day,

When I have thought of something, to inditing it;

I seldom think of things; and, by the way,

Although this metre may not be exciting, it

Enables one to be extremely terse,

Which is not what one always is in verse.

I used to know a man, such things befall

The observant wayfarer through Fate's domain

He was a man, take him for all in all,

We shall not look upon his like again;

I know that statement's not original;

What statement is, since Shakespere? or, since Cain,

What murder? I believe 'twas Shakespere said it, or

Perhaps it may have been your Fighting Editor.

Though why an Editor should fight, or why

A Fighter should abase himself to edit,

Are problems far too difficult and high

For me to solve with any sort of credit.

Some greatly more accomplished man than I

Must tackle them: let's say then Shakespere said it;

And, if he did not, Lewis Morris may

(Or even if he did). Some other day,

When I have nothing pressing to impart,

I should not mind dilating on this matter.

I feel its import both in head and heart,

And always did,—especially the latter.

I could discuss it in the busy mart

Or on the lonely housetop; hold! this chatter

Diverts me from my purpose. To the point:

The time, as Hamlet said, is out of joint,

And perhaps I was born to set it right,—

A fact I greet with perfect equanimity.

I do not put it down to "cursed spite,"

I don't see any cause for cursing in it. I

Have always taken very great delight

In such pursuits since first I read divinity.

Whoever will may write a nation's songs

As long as I'm allowed to right its wrongs.

What's Eton but a nursery of wrong-righters,

A mighty mother of effective men;

A training ground for amateur reciters,

A sharpener of the sword as of the pen;

A factory of orators and fighters,

A forcing-house of genius? Now and then

The world at large shrinks back, abashed and beaten,

Unable to endure the glare of Eton.

I think I said I knew a man: what then?

I don't suppose such knowledge is forbid.

We nearly all do, more or less, know men,—

Or think we do; nor will a man get rid

Of that delusion, while he wields a pen.

But who this man was, what, if aught, he did,

Nor why I mentioned him, I do not know;

Nor what I "wished to say" a while ago.

J. K. Stephen.