<p><SPAN name="ch-07"></SPAN></p>
<h2>VII. THE SWANKS OF GOSH</h2>
<p><br/>
<br/>
Come mourn with me for the land of Gosh,<br/>
Oh, weep with me for the luckless Glugs<br/>
Of the land of Gosh, where the sad seas wash<br/>
The patient shores, and the great King Splosh<br/>
His sodden sorrow hugs;<br/>
Where the fair Queen Tush weeps all the day,<br/>
And the Swank, the Swank, the naughty Swank,<br/>
The haughty Swank holds sway--<br/>
The most mendacious, ostentatious,<br/>
Spacious Swank holds sway.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis sorrow-swathed, as I know full well,<br/>
And garbed in gloom and the weeds of woe,<br/>
And vague, so far, is the tale I tell;<br/>
But bear with me for the briefest spell,<br/>
And surely shall ye know<br/>
Of the land of Gosh, and Tush, and Splosh,<br/>
And Stodge, the Swank, the foolish Swank,<br/>
The mulish Swank of Gosh-<br/>
The meretricious, avaricious,<br/>
Vicious Swank of Gosh.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Oh, the tall trees bend, and green trees send<br/>
A chuckle round the earth,<br/>
And the soft winds croon a jeering tune,<br/>
And the harsh winds shriek with mirth,<br/>
And the wee small birds chirp ribald words<br/>
When the Swank walks down the street;<br/>
But every Glug takes off his hat,<br/>
And whispers humbly, "Look at that!<br/>
Hats off! Hats off to the Glug of rank!<br/>
Sir Stodge, the Swank, the Lord High Swank!"<br/>
Then the East wind roars a loud guffaw,<br/>
And the haughty Swank says, "Haw!"</i><br/>
<br/>
His brain is dull, and his mind is dense,<br/>
And his lack of saving wit complete;<br/>
But most amazingly immense<br/>
Is his inane self-confidence<br/>
And his innate conceit.<br/>
But every Glug, and great King Splosh<br/>
Bowed to Sir Stodge, the fuddled Swank,<br/>
The muddled Swank of Gosh--<br/>
The engineering, peeping, peering,<br/>
Sneering Swank of Gosh.<br/>
<br/>
In Gosh, sad Gosh, where the Lord Swank lives,<br/>
He holds high rank, and he has much pelf;<br/>
And all the well-paid posts he gives<br/>
Unto his fawning relatives,<br/>
As foolish as himself.<br/>
In offices and courts and boards<br/>
Are Swanks, and Swanks, ten dozen Swanks,<br/>
And cousin Swanks in hordes--<br/>
Inept and musty, dry and dusty,<br/>
Rusty Swanks in hordes.<br/>
<br/>
<i>The clouds so soft, that sail aloft,<br/>
Weep laughing tears of rain;<br/>
The blue sky spread high overhead<br/>
Peeps thro' in mild disdain.<br/>
All nature laughs and jeers and chaffs<br/>
When the Swank goes out to walk;<br/>
But every Glug bows low his head,<br/>
And says in tones surcharged with dread,<br/>
"Bow low, bow low, Glugs lean, Glugs fat!"<br/>
But the North wind snatches off his hat,<br/>
And flings it high, and shrieks to see<br/>
His ruffled dignity.</i><br/>
<br/>
They lurk in every Gov'ment lair,<br/>
'Mid docket dull and dusty file,<br/>
Solemnly squat in an easy chair,<br/>
Penning a minute of rare hot air<br/>
In departmental style.<br/>
In every office, on every floor<br/>
Are Swanks, and Swanks, distracting Swanks,<br/>
And Acting-Swanks a score,<br/>
And coldly distant, sub-assistant<br/>
Under-Swanks galore.<br/>
<br/>
In peaceful days when the countryside<br/>
Poured wealth to Gosh, and the skies were blue,<br/>
The great King Splosh no fault espied,<br/>
And seemed entirely satisfied<br/>
With Swanks who muddled thro'.<br/>
But when they fell on seasons bad,<br/>
Oh, then the Swanks, the bustled Swanks,<br/>
The hustled Swanks went mad--<br/>
The minute-writing, nation-blighting,<br/>
Skiting Swanks went mad.<br/>
<br/>
<i>The tall trees sway like boys at play,<br/>
And mock him when he grieves,<br/>
As one by one, in laughing fun,<br/>
They pelt him with their leaves.<br/>
And the gay green trees joke to the breeze,<br/>
As the Swank struts proudly by;<br/>
But every Glug, with reverence,<br/>
Pays homage to his pride immense--<br/>
A homage deep to lofty rank--<br/>
The Swank! The Swank! The pompous Swank!<br/>
But the wind-borne leaves await their chance<br/>
And round him gaily dance.</i><br/>
<br/>
Now, trouble came to the land of Gosh:<br/>
The fear of battle, and anxious days;<br/>
And the Swanks were called to the great King Splosh,<br/>
Who said that their system would not wash,<br/>
And ordered other ways.<br/>
Then the Lord High Swank stretched forth a paw,<br/>
And penned a minute re the law,<br/>
And the Swanks, the Swanks, the other Swanks,<br/>
The brother Swanks said, "Haw!"<br/>
These keen, resourceful, unremorseful,<br/>
Forceful Swanks said, "Haw!"<br/>
<br/>
Then Splosh, the king, in a royal rage,<br/>
He smote his throne as he thundered, "Bosh!<br/>
In the whole wide land is there not one sage<br/>
With a cool, clear brain, who'll straight engage<br/>
To sweep the Swanks from Gosh?"<br/>
But the Lord High Stodge, from where he stood,<br/>
Cried, "Barley! . . . Guard your livelihood!"<br/>
And, quick as light, the teeming Swanks,<br/>
The scheming Swanks touched wood.<br/>
Sages, plainly, labour vainly<br/>
When the Swanks touch wood.<br/>
<br/>
<i>The stealthy cats that grace the mats<br/>
Before the doors of Gosh,<br/>
Smile wide with scorn each sunny morn;<br/>
And, as they take their wash,<br/>
A sly grimace o'erspreads each face<br/>
As the Swank struts forth to court.<br/>
But every Glug casts down his eyes,<br/>
And mutters, "Ain't 'is 'at a size!<br/>
For such a sight our gods we thank.<br/>
Sir Stodge, the Swank! The noble Swank!"<br/>
But the West wind tweaks his nose in sport;<br/>
And the Swank struts into court.</i><br/>
<br/>
Then roared the King with a rage intense,<br/>
"Oh, who can cope with their magic tricks?"<br/>
But the Lord High Swank skipped nimbly hence,<br/>
And hid him safe behind the fence<br/>
Of Regulation VI.<br/>
And under Section Four Eight 0<br/>
The Swanks, the Swanks, dim forms of Swanks,<br/>
The swarms of Swanks lay low--<br/>
These most tenacious, perspicacious,<br/>
Spacious Swanks lay low.<br/>
<br/>
Cried the King of Gosh, "They shall not escape!<br/>
Am I set at naught by a crazed buffoon?"<br/>
But in fifty fathoms of thin red tape<br/>
The Lord Swank swaddled his portly shape,<br/>
Like a large, insane cocoon.<br/>
Then round and round and round and round.<br/>
The Swanks, the Swanks, the whirling Swanks,<br/>
The twirling Swanks they wound--<br/>
The swathed and swaddled, molly-coddled<br/>
Swanks inanely wound.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Each insect thing that comes in Spring<br/>
To gladden this sad earth,<br/>
It flits and whirls and pipes and skirls,<br/>
It chirps in mocking mirth<br/>
A merry song the whole day long<br/>
To see the Swank abroad.<br/>
But every Glug, whoe'er he be,<br/>
Salutes, with grave humility<br/>
And deference to noble rank,<br/>
The Swank, the Swank, the swollen Swank;<br/>
But the South wind blows his clothes awry,<br/>
And flings dust in his eye.</i><br/>
<br/>
So trouble stayed in the land of Gosh;<br/>
And the futile Glugs could only gape,<br/>
While the Lord High Swank still ruled King Splosh<br/>
With laws of blither and rules of bosh,<br/>
From out his lair of tape.<br/>
And in cocoons that mocked the Glug<br/>
The Swanks, the Swanks, the under-Swanks,<br/>
The dunder Swanks lay snug.<br/>
These most politic, parasitic,<br/>
Critic Swanks lay snug.<br/>
<br/>
Then mourn with me for a luckless land,<br/>
Oh, weep with me for the slaves of tape!<br/>
Where the Lord High Swank still held command,<br/>
And wrote new rules in a fair round hand,<br/>
And the Glugs saw no escape;<br/>
Where tape entwined all Gluggish things,<br/>
And the Swank, the Swank, the grievous Swank,<br/>
The devious Swank pulled strings--<br/>
The perspicacious, contumacious<br/>
Swank held all the strings.<br/>
<br/>
<i>The blooms that grow, and, in a row,<br/>
Peep o'er each garden fence,<br/>
They nod and smile to note his style<br/>
Of ponderous pretence;<br/>
Each roving bee has fits of glee<br/>
When the Swank goes by that way.<br/>
But every Glug, he makes his bow,<br/>
And says, "Just watch him! Watch him now!<br/>
He must have thousands in the bank!<br/>
The Swank! The Swank! The holy Swank!"<br/>
But the wild winds snatch his kerchief out,<br/>
And buffet him about.</i><br/>
<br/></p>
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<p><SPAN name="ch-08"></SPAN></p>
<h2>VIII. THE SEER</h2>
<p><br/>
<br/>
Somewhere or other, 'tis doubtful where,<br/>
In the archives of Gosh is a volume rare,<br/>
A precious old classic that nobody reads,<br/>
And nobody asks for, and nobody heeds;<br/>
Which makes it a classic, and famed thro' the land,<br/>
As well-informed persons will quite understand.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis a ponderous work, and 'tis written in prose,<br/>
For some mystical reason that nobody knows;<br/>
And it tells in a style that is terse and correct<br/>
Of the rule of the Swanks and its baneful effect<br/>
On the commerce of Gosh, on its morals and trade;<br/>
And it quotes a grave prophecy somebody made.<br/>
<br/>
And this is the prophecy, written right bold<br/>
On a parchment all tattered and yellow and old;<br/>
So old and so tattered that nobody knows<br/>
How far into foretime its origin goes.<br/>
But this is the writing that set Glugs agog<br/>
When 'twas called to their minds by the Mayor of Quog:<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>When Gosh groaneth bastlie thro Greed and bys plannes<br/>
Ye rimer shall mende ye who mendes pottes and pans.</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
Now, the Mayor of Quog, a small suburb of Gosh,<br/>
Was intensely annoyed at the act of King Splosh<br/>
In asking the Mayor of Piphel to tea<br/>
With himself and the Queen on a Thursday at three;<br/>
When the King must have known that the sorriest dog,<br/>
If a native of Piphel, was hated in Quog.<br/>
<br/>
An act without precedent! Quog was ignored!<br/>
The Mayor and Council and Charity Board,<br/>
They met and considered this insult to Quog;<br/>
And they said, " 'Tis the work of the treacherous Og!<br/>
'Tis plain the Og influence threatens the Throne;<br/>
And the Swanks are all crazed with this trading in stone."<br/>
<br/>
Said the Mayor of Quog: "This has long been foretold<br/>
In a prophecy penned by the Seer of old.<br/>
We must search, if we'd banish the curse of our time,<br/>
For a mender of pots who's a maker of rhyme.<br/>
'Tis to him we must look when our luck goes amiss.<br/>
But, Oh, where in all Gosh is a Glug such as this?"<br/>
<br/></p>
<center>
<p><SPAN name="glugs-14"></SPAN><ANTIMG alt="" src="images/glugs-14.jpg"></p>
<p><b>O'er the prophecy pored</b></p>
</center>
<p><br/>
Then the Mayor and Council and Charity Board<br/>
O'er the archival prophecy zealously pored,<br/>
With a pursing of lips and a shaking of heads,<br/>
With a searching and prying for possible threads<br/>
That would lead to discover this versatile Glug<br/>
Who modelled a rhyme while he mended a mug.<br/>
<br/>
With a pursing of lips and a shaking of heads,<br/>
They gave up the task and went home to their beds,<br/>
Where each lay awake while he tortured his brain<br/>
For a key to the riddle, but ever in vain . . .<br/>
Then, lo, at the Mayor's front door in the morn<br/>
A tinker called out, and a Movement was born.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>"Kettles and pans! Kettles and pans!<br/>
Oh, the stars are the gods'; but the earth, it is man's.<br/>
But a fool is the man who has wants without end,<br/>
While the tinker's content with a kettle to mend.<br/>
For a tinker owns naught but the earth, which is man's.<br/>
Then, bring out your kettles! Ho, kettles and pans!"</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
From the mayoral bed with unmayoral cries<br/>
The magistrate sprang ere he'd opened his eyes.<br/>
"Hold him!" he yelled, as he bounced on the floor.<br/>
"Oh, who is this tinker that rhymes at my door?<br/>
Go get me the name and the title of him 1"<br/>
They answered. "Be calm, sir. 'Tis no one but Sym.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis Sym, the mad tinker, the son of old Joi,<br/>
Who ran from his home when a bit of a boy.<br/>
He went for a tramp, tho' 'tis common belief,<br/>
When folk were not looking he went for a thief;<br/>
Then went for a tinker, and rhymes as he goes.<br/>
Some say he's crazy, but nobody knows."<br/>
<br/>
'Twas thus it began, the exalting of Sym,<br/>
And the mad Gluggish struggle that raged around him.<br/>
For the good Mayor seized him, and clothed him in silk,<br/>
And fed him on pumpkins and pasteurised milk,<br/>
And praised him in public, and coupled his name<br/>
With Gosh's vague prophet of archival fame.<br/>
<br/>
The Press interviewed him a great many times,<br/>
And printed his portrait, and published his rhymes;<br/>
Till the King and Sir Stodge and the Swanks grew afraid<br/>
Of his fame 'mid the Glugs and the trouble it made.<br/>
For, wherever Sym went in the city of Gosh,<br/>
There were cheers for the tinker, and hoots for King Splosh.<br/>
<br/>
His goings and comings were watched for and cheered;<br/>
And a crowd quickly gathered where'er he appeared.<br/>
All the folk flocked around him and shouted his praise;<br/>
For the Glugs followed fashion, and Sym was a craze.<br/>
They sued him for words, which they greeted with cheers,<br/>
For the way with a Glug is to tickle his ears.<br/>
<br/>
"0, speak to us, Tinker! Your wisdom we crave!"<br/>
They'd cry when they saw him; then Sym would look grave,<br/>
And remark, with an air, "'Tis a very fine day."<br/>
"Now ain't he a marvel?" they'd shout. "Hip, Hooray!"<br/>
"To live," would Sym answer, "To live is to feel!"<br/>
"And ain't he a poet?" a fat Glug would squeal.<br/>
<br/>
Sym had a quaint fancy in phrase and in text;<br/>
When he'd fed them with one they would howl for the next.<br/>
Thus he'd cry, "Love is love 1" and the welkin they'd lift<br/>
With their shouts of surprise at his wonderful gift.<br/>
He would say "After life, then a Glug must meet death!"<br/>
And they'd clamour for more ere he took the next breath.<br/>
<br/>
But Sym grew aweary of this sort of praise,<br/>
And he longed to be back with his out-o'-door days,<br/>
With his feet in the grass and his back to a tree,<br/>
Rhyming and tinkering, fameless and free.<br/>
He said so one day to the Mayor of Quog,<br/>
And declared he'd as lief live the life of a dog.<br/>
<br/>
But the Mayor was vexed; for the Movement had grown,<br/>
And his dreams had of late soared as high as a throne.<br/>
"Have a care! What is written is written," said he.<br/>
"And the dullest Glug knows what is written must be.<br/>
'Tis the prophet of Gosh who has prophesied it;<br/>
And 'tis thus that 'tis written by him who so writ:<br/>
<br/>
"'Lo, the Tinker of Gosh he shall make him three rhymes:<br/>
One on the errors and aims of his times,<br/>
One on the symptoms of sin that he sees,<br/>
And the third and the last on whatever he please.<br/>
And when the Glugs hear them and mark what they mean<br/>
The land shall be purged and the nation made clean."'<br/>
<br/>
So Sym gave a promise to write then and there<br/>
Three rhymes to be read in the Great Market Square<br/>
To all Glugs assembled on Saturday week.<br/>
"And then," said the Mayor, "if still you must seek<br/>
To return to your tramping, well, just have your fling;<br/>
But I'll make you a marquis, or any old thing . . ."<br/>
Said Sym, "I shall tinker, and still be a king."<br/>
<br/></p>
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