The Poetry Corner

The Bath

By R. C. Lehmann

Hang garlands on the bathroom door; Let all the passages be spruce; For, lo, the victim comes once more, And, ah, he struggles like the deuce! Bring soaps of many scented sorts; Let girls in pinafores attend, With John, their brother, in his shorts, To wash their dusky little friend. Their little friend, the dusky dog, Short-legged and very obstinate, Faced like a much-offended frog, And fighting hard against his fate. No Briton he! From palace-born Chinese patricians he descends; He keeps their high ancestral scorn; His spirit breaks, but never bends. Our water-ways he fain would'scape; He hates the customary bath That thins his tail and spoils his shape, And turns him to a fur-clad lath; And, seeing that the Pekinese Have lustrous eyes that bulge like buds, He fain would save such eyes as these, Their owner's pride, from British suds. Vain are his protests - in he goes. His young barbarians crowd around; They soap his paws, they soap his nose; They soap wherever fur is found. And soon, still laughing, they extract His limpness from the darkling tide; They make the towel's roughness act On back and head and dripping side. They shout and rub and rub and shout - He deprecates their odious glee - Until at last they turn him out, A damp gigantic bumble-bee. Released, he barks and rolls, and speeds From lawn to lawn, from path to path, And in one glorious minute needs More soapsuds and another bath.