[Apologies to J. K. Stephens.] We are weary of opinion, Of the supercilious crowd Who hold sacrosanct dominion Over magazines endowed; For it is a fearful trial, Which we suffer for no crime, That the hands upon the @3Dial@1 Try to regulate our time. Could we, with a knotty club, lick Common sense into the wits Who would mold the @3New Republic@1 On the old one's scattered bits? Will there ever come a season Which shall rid us of the curse Of a shrill @3Appeal to Reason@1 Which is Bolshevik or worse; When we'll dodge the fell afflatus Of these brilliant hare-spring brains, And the fates shall liberate us From the @3Liberator's@1 chains? Ah, with what unbounded glee, men Will be filled upon the day When the world is free of @3Freemen@1 And the @3Nations@1 pass away! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MARCO BOZZARIS by FITZ-GREENE HALLECK A MEDITATION FOR HIS MISTRESS by ROBERT HERRICK SANDALPHON by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW ADMIRAL, HAIL! by ANNA EMILIA BAGSTAD THE LORD SPEAKS by KARLE WILSON BAKER |