| Poems by Women |
SIMILAR CASES
Charlotte Perkins Stetson Gilman [1860-1935]
There was once a little animal,
No bigger than a
fox,
And on five toes he scampered
Over Tertiary rocks.
They called him
Eohippus,
And they called him very small,
And they thought him of no value
-
When they thought of him at all;
For the lumpish old Dinoceras
And
Coryphodon so slow
Were the heavy aristocracy
In days of long ago.
Said the little Eohippus,
"I am going to be a horse!
And on my middle
finger-nails
To run my earthly course!
I'm going to have a flowing
tail!
I'm going to have a mane!
I'm going to stand fourteen hands
high
On the psychozoic plain!"
The Coryphodon was horrified,
The Dinoceras was shocked;
And they
chased young Eohippus,
But he skipped away and mocked.
And they laughed
enormous laughter,
And they groaned enormous groans,
And they bade young
Eohippus
Go view his father's bones.
Said they, "You always were as
small
And mean as now we see,
And that's conclusive evidence
That
you're always going to be.
What! Be a great, tall, handsome
beast,
With hoofs to gallop on?
Why! You'd have to change your
nature!"
Said the Loxolophodon.
They considered him disposed of,
And
retired with gait serene;
That was the way they argued
In "the early
Eocene."
There was once an Anthropoidal Ape,
Far smarter than the rest,
And
everything that they could do
He always did the best;
So they naturally
disliked him,
And they gave him shoulders cool,
And when they had to
mention him
They said he was a fool.
Cried this pretentious Ape one day,
"I'm going to be a Man!
And stand
upright, and hunt, and fight,
And conquer all I can!
I'm going to cut down
forest trees,
To make my houses higher!
I'm going to kill the
Mastodon!
I'm going to make a fire!"
Loud screamed the Anthropoidal Apes
With laughter wild and gay;
They
tried to catch that boastful one,
But he always got away.
So they yelled
at him in chorus,
Which he minded not a whit;
And they pelted him with
cocoanuts,
Which didn't seem to hit.
And then they gave him
reasons
Which they thought of much avail,
To prove how his
preposterous
Attempt was sure to fail.
Said the sages, "In the first
place,
The thing cannot be done!
And, second, if it could be,
It would
not be any fun!
And, third, and most conclusive,
And admitting no
reply,
You would have to change your nature!
We should like to see you
try!"
They chuckled then triumphantly,
These lean and hairy shapes,
For
these things passed as arguments
With the Anthropoidal Apes.
There was once a Neolithic Man,
An enterprising wight,
Who made his
chopping implements
Unusually bright.
Unusually clever he,
Unusually
brave,
And he drew delightful Mammoths
On the borders of his cave.
To
his Neolithic neighbors,
Who were startled and surprised,
Said he, "My
friends, in course of time,
We shall be civilized!
We are going to live in
cities!
We are going to fight in wars!
We are going to eat three times a
day
Without the natural cause!
We are going to turn life upside
down
About a thing called gold!
We are going to want the earth, and
take
As much as we can hold!
We are going to wear great piles of
stuff
Outside our proper skins!
We are going to have diseases!
And
Accomplishments!! And Sins!!!"
Then they all rose up in fury
Against their boastful friend,
For
prehistoric patience
Cometh quickly to an end.
Said one, "This is
chimerical!
Utopian! Absurd!"
Said another, "What a stupid
life!
Too dull, upon my word!"
Cried all, "Before such things can
come,
You idiotic child,
You must alter Human Nature!"
And they all sat
back and smiled.
Thought they, "An answer to that last
It will be hard to
find!"
It was a clinching argument
To the Neolithic Mind!
From: Stevenson, Burton Egbert.
The Home Book of Verse, Volume 4.
This poet:
[Author index]
This collection assembled by Jone Johnson Lewis.
Collection © 1999-2002 Jone Johnson Lewis.
Citing poems from these pages:
| Author. "Poem Title." Women's History: Poems by Women. Jone Johnson Lewis, editor. URL: (date of logon) |

