Source of book: I own this
I have mentioned in the past that I have a collection of offbeat writers that I love, and which few have heard of these days. One of those is Don Marquis, who I discovered in high school.
I won’t repeat all of the biographical information, or explain who archy and mehitabel are, because I already did that a decade ago when I reviewed archy and mehitabel.
This book is the second of the three collections published in the 1920s and 30s, which contain the various poems Marquis published in The Evening Sun as part of his regular column. There are modern anthologies available as well, but I have managed to collect the original three in used hardback form.
As the title suggests, this book contains some of the backstory for mehitabel the cat - her early life and traumatic adventures. They are told with a certain amount of wry sarcasm by archy the cockroach (who was a free verse poet in a previous life - his break from traditional forms led to his punishment by the gods by being reincarnated as a roach), who considers mehitabel to be a friend, but an unreliable one.
We also get, at the end of the collection, an account of archy and mehitabel’s misadventures in Hollywood - mehitabel is certain she is destined to be a movie star, but flames out, returning to New York City with nothing to show for her trouble but a litter of platinum blonde kittens.
The other poems are, as usual, satires on American life in the early 20th Century, as archy sees humans from the insect point of view. They are often hilarious, but rather pointed. Like James Thurber (another favorite author of the era), there is a certain voice of New York of this period, and I find it delightful.
I’ll quote a bit from the introduction, as it both introduces the character, and pokes fun at would-be poets.
Archy the Cockroach made his initial appearance in my office a good many years ago, in fact about the same time that free verse began to commend itself to the multitudes because it looked as if it would be so easy to write. There was a period which many persons still more or less alive may remember when you could not scratch a taxi-driver, an insurance agent, or a newspaper reporter without finding a free-verse poet under the skin.
This is the truth even today. Free verse looks easy to write, but, if anything, it is more difficult than traditional forms. At least if you want to write it well. There is a LOT of utter dreck in free verse form out there, much of which is forgotten within a year of its writing. The truly good stuff - the poetry that will endure as classics - is a lot more difficult to write, because poetry isn’t just expressing an idea in a few words. It requires the melding of the music of the sounds with meaning “written slant” as Emily Dickinson put it.
Don Marquis wrote some darn good free verse, with words and line breaks chosen to create a meaning of its own. Here are the ones I liked the best in this collection.
the return of archy
where have i been so long
you ask me
i have been going up
and down like the devil
seeking what i may devour
i am always hungry always hungry
and in the end i shall
eat everything
all the world shall come at
last to the multitudinous maws
of insects
a civilization perishes
before the tireless teeth
of little little germs
ha ha i have thrown off the mask
at last
you thought i was only
an archy
but i am more than that
i am anarchy
where have i been you ask
i have been organizing the insects
the ants the worms the wasps
the bees the cockroaches
the mosquitoes
for a revolt against mankind
i have declared war
upon humanity
i even i shall fling
the mighty atom
that splits a planet asunder
i ride the microbe
that crashes down olympus
where have i been you ask me where
i am jove and from my seat
on the edge of a bowl of beef stew
i launch the thunderous
molecule
that smites a cosmos into bits
where have i been you ask
but you had better ask
who follows in my train
there is an ant
a desert ant a tamerlane
who ate a pyramid in rage
that he might get at and devour
the mummies of six hundred
kings who in remote
antiquity had stepped upon
and crushed ascendants of his
my myrmidons
are trivial things
and they have always ruled
the world
and now they shall strike down mankind
i shall show you how
a solar system
pivots on the nubbin
of a flageolet bean
i shall show you how a blood clot
moving in a despots brain
flung a hundred million men
to death and disease
and plunged a planet into woe
for twice a hundred years
we have the key
to the fourth dimension
for we know the little things
that swim and swarm
in protoplasm
i can show you love and hate
and the future
dreaming side by side
in a cell
in the little cells where
matter is so fine it merges
into spirit
you ask me where i have been
but you had better
ask me where i am
and what
i have been drinking
exclamation point
archy
And this amusing one, which I will quote only in part - it is pretty long:
archy experiences a seizure
“Where have you been so long? And what on earth do you mean by coming in here so soused?” we asked Archy as he zigzagged from the door to the desk.
He climbed onto the typewriter keys and replied indignantly:
soused yourself i havent had a drink
and yet i am elevated i admit it i have
been down to a second hand book
store eating a lot of kiplings earlier
poetry it always excites me if i eat
a dozen stanzas of it i get all lit up
and i try to imitate it get out of my
way now i feel a poem in the kipling
manner taking me
And before we could stop him he began to butt on the keys:
the cockroach stood by the mickle
wood in the flush of the astral dawn
and he sniffed the air from the hidden
lair where the khyber swordfish spawn
and the bilge and belch of the glutton
welsh as they smelted their warlock cheese
surged to and fro where the grinding
floe wrenched at the headlands knees
And on and on it goes in that vein. It is a truly delightful parody of Kipling’s style and silly bravado. Throughout, there are the usual Victorian Colonialist catch-phrases, from “teeth and claw” to “jungle lore.” It’s brilliant. You can read the whole thing here.
Another one too long to quote in full is “peace - at a price.” I think it is one of the best of Marquis’ work on the absurdity of human arrogance and violence. Here are some of the best parts:
one thing the human
bean never seems to
get into it is the
fact that humans
appear just as unnecessary to
cockroaches as cockroaches
do to humans
…
how came this monster with the heavy
foot harsh voice and cruel heart to
rule the world
had it been dogs or cats or elephants
i could have acquiesced and found a
justice working in the decree but man
gross man the bloody minded
crossed unsocial death dispenser of this
sphere who slays for pleasure slays
for sport for whim
who slays from habit breeds to slay and
slays
whatever breed has humors not his own
the whole apparent universe one sponge
blood filled from insect mammal fish
and bird
which he squeezes down his vast
gullet
…
as a friend of both
parties i should regret war
what we need is
intelligent propaganda who is
better qualified to handle
the propaganda than
yours truly
Archy
Another poem that satirizes human arrogance is “quote and only man is vile quote.” Here is a bit of it:
as a representative
of the insect world
i have often wondered
on what man bases his claims
to superiority
everything he knows he has had
to learn whereas we insects are born
knowing everything we need to know
for instance man had to invent
airplanes before he could fly
…
i should describe the human race
as a strange species of bipeds
who cannot run fast enough
to collect the money
which they owe themselves
…
man is a queer looking gink
who uses what brains he has
to get himself into trouble with
and then blames it on the fates
…
I also enjoyed this one, a bit of a satire of social reform movements.
archy s mission
well boss i am
going to quit living
a life of leisure
i have been an idler
and a waster and a
mere poet too long
my conscience has waked up
wish yours would do the same
i am going to have
a moral purpose in my life
hereafter and a cause
i am going to reclaim
cockroaches and teach them
proper ways of living
i am going to see if i cannot
reform insects in general
i have constituted
myself a missionary
extraordinary
and minister
plenipotentiary
and entomological
to bring idealism to
the little struggling brothers
the conditions in the insect
world today would shock
american reformers
if they knew about them
the lives they lead
are scarcely fit to print
i cannot go into
details but the contented
laxness in which i find
them is frightful
a family newspaper is no place
for these revelations
but i am trying to have
printed in paris
for limited circulation
amongst truly earnest
souls a volume which will
be entitled
the truth about the insects
i assure you there is nothing
even in the old testament
as terrible
i shall be the cotton mather
of the boll weevil
archy
The “cotton mather of the boll weevil” is just hilarious to me. The best sort of wordplay.
Also amusing is this one:
book review
boss a new book
has appeared
which should be
read by every one
it is entitled
the cockroach
its life history
and how to deal
with it and
the author
is frederick laing
who is assistant
in the department
of entomology in the
british museum
of natural history
it is one of the
best books i ever
tasted i am eating
the binding from
a copy with
a great deal of
relish and
recommend it
to all other
insects yours
truly
archy
As in the previous volume, there is a poem of “archygrams” - aphorisms from the bug. This one in particular made me smile.
honesty is a good
thing but
it is not profitable to
its possessor
unless it is
kept under control
if you are not
honest at all
everybody hates you
and if you are
absolutely honest
you get martyred
I’ll end with this one:
human nature aint that bad
A bulletin from Archy, who is back in New York and glad of it.
thought i would never get home
did i tell you about the two bums
i listened to in california
named spike and cheesy
they were washing selves and clothes
in an irrigation ditch
cheesy says this valley was once the bottom
of the ocean dont that give you a queer feeling
now i know why i feel at home here says spike
my old man always said i would sink lower
than any other human on earth
and it appears i have attained my goal at last
the long struggle of my life has ended
in complete victory i am finally at
where i was going to please pass the canned heat
i want to drink to the boy who made good
i suppose said cheesy we have been getting
a lot of handouts and nickels
really intended for workingmen out of jobs
never look a gift horse in the mouth said spike
but what i am really afraid of said cheesy
is that this depression will end some time
and people will start offering me jobs again
cheer up said spike dont be a pessimist
we weathered lots of good times before
and we will manage to get through somehow
when they come again
you gotta look on the bright side of things
this depression is making the public gift minded
i dont know said cheesy i am scared
it will be just hell for me
when prosperity returns with an open job
on every four corners
listen said spike you are plain selfish
dont you know there are a lot of people
in this world who really like to work
cheesy took the canned heat and thought and thought
and thought and thought before he spoke again
i dont believe it he said finally
after all human nature aint that bad
archy
Anyway, I enjoy Don Marquis, and think his books are worth seeking out.
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