The Poetry Corner

Black Kate

By Henry Kendall

Kate, they say, is seventeen Do not count her sweet, you know. Arms of her are rather lean Ditto, calves and feet, you know. Features of Hellenic type Are not patent here, you see. Katie loves a black clay pipe Doesnt hate her beer, you see. Spartan Helen used to wear Tresses in a plait, perhaps: Kate has ochre in her hair Nose is rather flat, perhaps. Rose Lorraines surpassing dress Glitters at the ball, you see: Daughter of the wilderness Has no dress at all, you see. Lauras lovers every day In sweet verse embody her: Katies have a different way, Being frank, they waddy her. Amy by her suitor kissed, Every nightfall looks for him: Kittys sweetheart isnt missed Kitty humps and cooks for him. Smith, and Brown, and Jenkins, bring Roses to the fair, you know. Darkies at their Katie fling Hunks of native bear, you know. English girls examine well All the food they take, you twig: Kate is hardly keen of smell Kate will eat a snake, you twig. Yonder ladys sitting room Clean and cool and dark it is: Kittys chamber needs no broom Just a sheet of bark it is. You may find a pipe or two If you poke and grope about: Not a bit of starch or blue Not a sign of soap about. Girl I know reads Lalla Rookh Poem of the heady sort: Kate is better as a cook Of the rough and ready sort. Byrons verse on Waterloo, Makes my darling glad, you see: Kate prefers a kangaroo Which is very sad, you see. Other ladies wear a hat Fit to write a sonnet on: Kitty has the naughty cat Neither hat nor bonnet on! Fifty silks has Madame Tate She who loves to spank it on: All her clothes are worn by Kate When she has her blanket on. Let her rip! the Phrygian boy Bolted with a brighter one; And the girl who ruined Troy Was a rather whiter one. Katies mouth is hardly Greek Hardly like a rose it is: Katies nose is not antique Not the classic nose it is. Dryad in the grand old day, Though she walked the woods about, Didnt smoke a penny clay Didnt hump her goods about. Daphne by the fairy lake, Far away from din and all, Never ate a yard of snake, Head and tail and skin and all.