The Collected Poems of Freddy the Pig
   Walter R. Brooks
   Illustrated by Kurt Wiese
   The Overlook Press
   New York, NY
   Foreword
   Most of the poems included in this volume have previously appeared in one or another of the many volumes of Mr. Brooks’ monumental work on the history of the animals of the Bean farm. They are offered as a sample or foretaste of the pleasure awaiting those who will be able some day to purchase the Complete Poetical Works of this gifted pig. The latter volume is in preparation and will include many new poems not hitherto available in print (though no publication date has been announced or for that matter contemplated). It is perhaps unnecessary to call attention to the artistic perfection and intellectual brilliance of Freddy’s work: the poems speak for themselves. We hope that this selection will introduce them to wide audiences, both here and abroad, among both humans and others.
   Dealing primarily with farm life, and more specifically with the problems and pleasures of pigs, there is among them nevertheless something suited to every taste, applicable to every human situation.
   As you can see, other Bean animals caught the fever from Freddy. Their verse, of course, has absolutely none of the fine tones found in the pig’s work, but it was deemed fair and square to include it. If nothing else, their work affords relief from the mass of stuff by the pig and about the pig.
   —The Editors
   Contents
   Spring and Other Things
   Ode to Spring
   Spring Song
   Buds and Peepers
   On a Walk in the Rain
   Ode to the North Pole
   Ode to Nothing
   The Features
   No. 1: The Eyes
   No. 2: The Ears
   No. 3: The Nose
   No. 4: The Mouth
   No. 5: The Chin
   No. 6: The Whiskers
   No. 7: The Hair
   Marching Songs
   The Open Road
   On Roads
   The Homesick Pig
   Florida
   The Open Road Again
   Circus Marching Song
   The Animals’ Marching Song
   Camping Song
   Florida Weather Note
   Self-praise
   Admire the Pig
   P, as in Pig
   The Happiness of Pigs
   Vacation Song
   Self-Portrait
   The Courageous Pig
   Advantages of Being a Pig
   Ode to the Pig: His Tail
   Ode to the Pig: His Legs
   Flying Pigs
   Ranch and Range
   Home on the Farm
   Two-Gun Freddy
   From the Ballad of Two-Gun Freddy
   Warning to Rustlers
   Lament
   Serenade with Yodels
   Horribles
   Chant of the Horrible Ten
   More Horribles
   Pursuit of Bannister by Horribles
   Chant of the Horrible Twenty
   Salute to the Fearless Skunk
   Chant of the Horrible Thirty
   Not about Pigs
   Ants, Although Admirable, Are Awfully Aggravating
   Bees, Bothered by Bold Bears, Behave Badly
   Tribute to the Eagle
   Song of the Homesick Spider
   Diet of Robins
   Valentine for Jerry
   Laments
   Earthbound
   I Feel Awful
   The Days of My Youth
   Gloom Song
   Justice for the Pig
   A Waggable Tail
   Resignation
   Home Is Where the Heart Is
   The Wanderer Pig
   Queen’s Song
   By Other Animals
   Prisoners’ Songs
   Rats’ Song
   Rats on Freddy
   Thoughts on Talkers
   Valentine
   Spring and Other Things
   ODE TO SPRING
   O spring, O spring,
   You wonderful thing!
   O spring, O spring, O spring!
   O spring, O spring,
   When the birdies sing
   I feel like a king,
   O spring!
   SPRING SONG
   Hooray for the spring! What a glorious feeling!
   All the little lambs on the hillsides squealing!
   Tighten up your braces! Tuck in your shirt!
   All the little green things growing in the dirt!
   BUDS AND PEEPERS
   Spring is in the air;
   Birds are flying north;
   And though trees are bare,
   Now they’re putting forth
   Leaves. The fields are green.
   Sun is getting higher.
   Monday Mr. Bean
   Put out the furnace fire.
   Birds are building nests;
   In the swamp are peepers;
   Men discard their vests;
   Eggs are getting cheaper.
   ON A WALK IN THE RAIN
   When I set out upon this tour,
   I thought the skies would be much bluer.
   When I set out upon this tramp,
   How could I know ’twould be so damp?
   When I set out on this excursion,
   I did not think it meant submersion.
   When I set out upon this trip
   I should have started in a ship.
   ODE TO THE NORTH POLE
   O Pole, O Pole, O glorious Pole!
   To you I sing this song,
   Where bedtime comes but once a year,
   Since the nights are six months long.
   Yes, the nights are six months long, my dears,
   And the days are the same, you see,
   So breakfast and supper each last a week,
   And dinner sometimes three.
   Then there’s tea and lunch, and we sometimes munch
   Occasional snacks between—
   Such mountains of candies and cakes and pies
   Have never before been seen.
   Let the wild winds howl about the Pole,
   Let the snowflakes swirl and swoop;
   We’re snug and warm and safe from harm
   And they’re bringing in the soup.
   We’ll sit at the table as long as we’re able,
   We’ll rise and stretch, and then,
   Since there’s nothing to do but gobble and chew,
   We’ll sit right down again.
   We’ll tuck our napkins under our chins
   To keep our waistcoats neat,
   And then we’ll eat and eat and eat
   And eat and eat and eat
   ODE TO NOTHING
   Let others sing of fall and spring,
   Of love and dove, of eyes and sighs;
   My song is not of anything;
   It tells no whats, it gives no whys.
   And is it sad? Or is it gay?
   I do not know. I cannot say.
   It seeks no meaning to convey,
   It has no subject, point or plot.
   It must mean something, you will say—
   But I assure you it does not.
   No scowls across my features creep,
   No tears bedew my handkerchief;
   I do not try to make you weep,
   To moan with anguish, sob with grief.
   Contrariwise, no smiles contort
   My face; I wish to give no cause
   For anyone to roar and snort
   With uncontrollable guffaws.
   And if you ask me: is this so?
   I cannot say. I do not know.
   The Features
   NO. 1: THE EYES
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   The eyes are brown or black or blue
   Or grey, and of them there are two.
   They are arranged beside the nose,
   One to each side, which, I suppose
   Was done because no other place
   Was vacant in the human face.
   How helpfully eyes scan the dish
   And watch for bones when eating fish,
   Or with a side glance, indirect, eyes
   Warn us of grease spots on our neckties.
   Then, eyes are used to show our feelings,
   In place of yells and sobs and squealings.
   For instance, to express surprise,
   You raise the lids and pop the eyes;
   In showing grief, the lids are dropped
   And tears (if any) gently sopped
   Up with a handkerchief—a white one
   (And preferably clean) ’s the right one.
   The eyes are cleverly equipped
   With little lids, which can be flipped
   Up in the morning, down at night,
   To let in or shut out the light.
   We could fill pages with our cries
   Of admiration for the eyes;
   They’re indispensable (see above).
   True, eyebrows are well spoken of;
   The ears are hard to do without;
   The nose is useful too, no doubt;
   But eyes! Do not dispense with those!
   Abandon ears; give up your nose;
   But we most earnestly advise:
   Hang on most firmly to your eyes.
   NO. 2: THE EARS
   The ears are two in number, and
   Beside the head, on either hand,—
   One to the left, one to the right—
   They are attached extremely tight.
   Their purpose is twofold, to wit:
   To give the hat a place to sit,
   So that it will not lose its place
   And, slipping down, engulf the face.
   Also to ventilate the brain,
   When heated by great mental strain,
   By standing at right angles out
   To catch whatever wind’s about,
   Or when the summer breeze is napping,
   To substitute by gently flapping.
   Do not, therefore, attempt to pull
   The ears from off the parent skull.
   Though ears look odd and out of place,
   And add so little to the face,
   Though as adornment they’re lamentable,
   Without them you’d be unpresentable;
   And he who rashly grabs the shears
   Will find too late, with bitter tears,
   That there’s no substitute for ears.
   NO. 3: THE NOSE
   The nose, in general, finds its place
   About the center of the face,
   Continuing the forehead south
   Between the eyes, down towards the mouth,
   Above which, usually it
   Stops short, in order not to hit
   The chin, which in its normal place
   Below the mouth, completes the face.
   (Though here of ears we make no mention,
   They are well worthy of attention.)
   And thus we see, by its position,
   The nose has an important mission;
   For, gathered round it in a troop,
   The other features thus can group
   Themselves upon it, each in place
   Symmetrically to form a face.
   Without a nose to rally round
   The other features would be bound
   To wander off in all directions
   And with the face lose all connections.
   Without a nose, I rather guess
   Your face would be an awful mess.
   A nose, too, if not badly bent
   Can be a handsome ornament
   Which one can wear with joy and pride,
   So do not lay your nose aside.
   Preserve your nose at any cost;
   You can’t replace it if it’s lost.
   And wear it in its normal place,
   Right in the middle of your face.
   NO. 4: THE MOUTH
   The mouth is located below
   The nose, and is constructed so
   That when it grins, it stretches wide
   To touch the ears on either side.
   This elasticity is handy
   In eating pie, or hunks of candy.
   Though hunks that stretch the mouth too tight
   (By some considered impolite)
   Require much earnest concentration,
   And interfere with conversation.
   In fact, there are extremely few
   Who can, with charm, both talk and chew.
   It’s best to keep the two things separate;
   When dinner’s served, just salt and pepper it,
   And for your conversation wait
   Until there’s nothing on your plate.
   NO. 5: THE CHIN
   Proceeding south upon the face
   The forehead first takes up some space,
   Beneath which you will find the eyebrows
   And then the eyes (called “orbs” by highbrows).
   Along the nose continue south
   And presently you reach the mouth
   And see, beyond, on the horizon,
   The chin’s bold promontory risin’.
   Consider, then, the chin. Although it’s
   Never been praised by famous poets,
   Yet do not sneer at it, nor scoff,
   And never, never chop it off,
   For if removed, the face is shortened,
   The mouth no longer looks important
   But rests directly on the collar—
   Which makes the public laugh and holler.
   For with no chin you’d be no vision
   Of beauty. You’d invite derision.
   You’d look half-witted; you’d look funny;
   No one would ever lend you money;
   And dentists, putting in a filling,
   Would have no place to lean when drilling.
   The chin is used in mastication;
   Thrust out, it shows determination;
   And other uses I could mention—
   But I’m afraid that your attention
   Is wandering. Confidentially,
   This verse is even boring me.
   As for the chin, I must admit
   I’m getting good and sick of it.
   NO. 6: THE WHISKERS
   The whiskers on some men are quite
   The most important things in sight.
   On Mr. Bean or General Grant.
   Among the foliage you can’t
   Tell ears from eyes or mouth from nose;
   The beard among the features grows
   Luxuriant, it overflows
   The chin, cascading down the chest,
   Conceals the collar, tie and vest.
   (Were I with whiskers so bedecked, I
   ’d never, never wear a necktie.)
   But there are dangers to be feared,
   For of one aged man I’ve heerd
   Who had a most enormous beard
   And chipmunks, mice and other creatures,
   Who ventured in among his features
   Got lost among those bushy cheeks
   And wandered there for weeks and weeks.
   Yes, some, they say, went in and then
   Vanished, were never seen again.
   Such stories, though, can hardly be
   Accepted unreservedly.
   It’s possible, of course, they’re true;
   For one bewhiskered gent I knew,
   A traveling man from Kalamazoo,
   Who used his beard to keep things in—
   His pipe, tobacco, and a tin
   Or two of Portuguese sardines,
   Boxes of crackers, cans of beans,
   And several current magazines.
   When traveling on local trains,
   In steamships or in aeroplanes,
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   His simple wants he kept supplied
   With what he had concealed inside
   That whiskered shade—as gum, or smokes,
   Light lunches or a book of jokes.
   Thus were his lonely journeys cheered—
   But that’s enough about the beard.
   NO. 7: THE HAIR
   The hair is an adornment
   Which grows upon the head;
   It’s black or yellow, brown or grey,
   Occasionally red;
   But never blue or green or puce;
   Such colors would look like the deuce.
   That’s just one pig’s opinion—
   Some have a preference
   For hair that’s not so usual,
   For colors more intense.
   They go for violet or carmine,
   And think that pink is simply charmin’.
   So if you’re really anxious
   To change to green or red,
   Just tell your barber what you want
   And when he soaps your head,
   The functionary who shampoos you
   Will tint your hair light blue or fuchsia.
   Aside from being pretty
   The hair can be of help
   If someone bangs you on the head
   So hard it makes you yelp!
   If you have hair that’s thick and tangled
   You’re not so likely to get mangled.
   Without hair you’d look funny,
   And rather like a squash,
   And every morning you would have
   A lot more face to wash.
   Your face would go up past your forehead,
   And you’ll agree that would look horrid.
   Grass only grows in summer,
   Hair grows the whole year through;
   It must be mowed quite frequently,
   And raked twice daily, too.
   Your hair (called “locks,” and sometimes “tresses”)
   If never combed, an awful mess is.
   Yet some folks never cut it—
   Prefer to let it grow.
   This has advantages of course,
   And even though it’s slow,
   In time they get enough to fill a
   Small mattress, or to stuff a pillow.
   Marching Songs
   THE OPEN ROAD
   Oh, the sailor may sing of his tall, swift ships,
   Of sailing the deep blue sea,
   But the long, white road where adventures wait
   Is the better life for me.
   
 
 The Collected Poems of Freddy the Pig Page 1