PoemÀ Bas Ben Adhem
Author / PoetOgden Nash
TagsArrogance

My fellow man I do not care for.
I often ask me, What’s he there for?
The only answer I can find
Is, Reproduction of his kind.
If I’m supposed to swallow that,
Winnetka is my habitat.
Isn’t it time to carve Hic Jacet
Above that Reproduction racket?

To make the matter more succinct:
Suppose my fellow man extinct.
Why, who would not approve the plan
Save possibly my fellow man?
Yet with a politician’s voice
He names himself as Nature’s choice.

The finest of the human race
Are bad in figure, worse in face.
Yet just because they have two legs
And come from storks instead of eggs
They count the spacious firmament
As something to be charged and sent.

Though man created cross-town traffic,
The Daily Mirror, News and Graphic,
The pastoral fight and fighting pastor,
And Queen Marie and Lady Astor,
He hails himself with drum and fife
And bullies lower forms of life.

Not that I think much depends
On how we treat our feathered friends,
Or hold the wrinkled elephant
A nobler creature than my aunt.
It’s simply that I’m sure I can
Get on without my fellow man.

Ogden Nash
Ogden Nash
19 Aug 1902 - 19 May 1971
Region: North America
Period: Contemporary
Movement: Light Verse
Awards: National Book Award

more poems by Ogden Nash

Poem NameTopic
Morning PrayerMorning, Prayer, Spiritual
Introspective ReflectionReflection
If He Were Alive Today, Mayhap, Mr. Morgan Would Sit on the Midget’s LapDream, Trust
More About PeopleDeath, People
First Child … Second ChildChild, Parenthood
Family CourtFamily
Always Marry An April GirlLove, Spring, Weather
Bankers Are Just Like Anybody Else, Except RicherBanks, Wealth
A Caution To EverybodyHumanity

all poems by Ogden Nash

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