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    The Collected Poems of Freddy the Pig

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      On the open road, when the sun goes down,

      Your home is wherever you are.

      The sky is your roof and the earth is your bed

      And you hang your hat on a star.

      You wash your face in the clear, cold dew,

      And you say good-night to the moon,

      And the wind in the tree-tops sings you to sleep

      With a drowsy boughs-y tune.

      Then it’s hey! for the joy of a roving life,

      From Florida up to Nome,

      For since I’ve no home in any one spot,

      Wherever I am is home.

      Then it’s out of the gate and down the road

      Without stopping to say good-bye,

      For adventure waits over every hill,

      Where the road runs up to the sky.

      We’re off to play with the wind and the stars,

      And we sing as we march away:

      O, it’s all very well to love your work,

      But you’ve got to have some play.

      Chorus

      Oh, the winding road is long, is long,

      But never too long for me.

      And we’ll cheer each mile with a song, a song,

      A song as we ramble along, along,

      So fearless and gay and free.

      ON ROADS

      Oh, it’s over the hill and down the road

      And we’ll borrow the moon for a light,

      And wherever we go, one thing we know:

      The road will lead us right.

      If you start from home by any road,

      And follow each dip and bend,

      What fortune you find, whether cold or kind,

      You find home again at the end.

      Oh, the roads run east, and the roads run west,

      And it’s lots of fun to roam

      When you know that whichever road you take—

      That road will lead you home.

      THE HOMESICK PIG

      Oh, a life of adventure is gay and free,

      And danger has its charm;

      And no pig of spirit will bound his life

      By the fence on his master’s farm.

      Yet there’s no true pig but heaves a sigh

      At the pleasant thought of the old home sty.

      But one tires at last of wandering,

      And the road grows steep and long,

      A treadmill round, where no peace is found,

      If one follows it overlong.

      And however they wander, both pigs and men

      Are always glad to get home again.

      FLORIDA

      Oh, the winding road to Florida

      Is a dusty road, and long,

      But we animals gay have cheered the way

      With many a merry song.

      Our hearts were bold—but our homes were cold,

      And that is why we’ve come

      To Florida, to Florida,

      From our far-off northern home.

      In Florida, in Florida,

      Where the orange-blossom blows,

      Where the alligator sings so sweet,

      And the sweet-potato grows;

      Oh, that is the place where I would be,

      And that is where I am—

      In Florida, in Florida,

      As happy as a clam.

      THE OPEN ROAD AGAIN

      We’re out on the winding road again,

      The road where we belong;

      By hill and valley, by meadow and stream,

      On the road that’s never too long.

      Never too long is the winding road,

      Though it climbs the steepest hill,

      Though dark the night, and heavy the load,

      When the rain drives hard and chill.

      For the stormiest weather will always mend;

      There’s a top to the highest hill;

      But the winding road has never an end,

      Whether for good or ill.

      And we travel the road for the love of the road,

      For love of the open sky,

      For love of the smell of fields fresh mowed,

      As we go tramping by.

      For love of the little wandering breeze,

      And the thunder’s deep bass song,

      Which rattles the hills and shakes the trees

      Like the roar of a giant’s gong.

      For love of the sun, and love of the moon

      And love of the lonely stars;

      And the treetoads’ trill, and the blackbirds’ tune,

      And the smell of Bill Wonks’ cigars.

      And there, where the road curves out of sight,

      Or surely, beyond that hill,

      Adventure lies, and perhaps a fight,

      And perhaps a dragon to kill.

      Or perhaps it’s a brand new friend we’ll make,

      Or a haunted house to visit,

      Or a party with peach ice cream and cake,

      Or something else exquisite.

      So now for us all, for pigs and men,

      For lions and tigers and bears,

      The open road lies open again,

      And we toss aside our cares.

      And we sing and holler and shout Hurray!

      No matter what the weather

      For we’ll not be back for many a day

      While we’re out on the road together.

      CIRCUS MARCHING SONG

      Red and gold wagons are coming down the street

      With a Boomschmidt, Boomschmidt, boom, boom, boom;

      With a shouting and music and tramp of marching feet

      And a Boomschmidt, Boomschmidt, boom, boom, boom.

      Hear the squeal of the cornets, rattle of the snares;

      The fifes scream shrilly and the trombone blares,

      And here come the lions and the tigers and the bears,

      With a Boomschmidt, Boomschmidt, BOOM!

      Here come the caribou and kangaroos and camels,

      The koodoos, zebus, zebras, and yaks,

      The hippopotamuses and the rhinoceroses

      And the big gray elephants with houses on their backs.

      Boom—be quick! Buy a ticket at the wicket.

      Boom—get your pink lemonade. Get your gum.

      Boom—get your peanuts, popcorn, lollipops,

      Boom—Mr. Boom—Mr. Boomschmidt’s come!

      THE ANIMALS’ MARCHING SONG

      There’s a muttering of marching feet upon the windless air;

      Far across the peaceful hills of Bean the distant torches flare;

      For the animals are coming, you can hear the trumpets blare

      And the drums beat victory.

      Hail, all hail to Mrs. Wiggins;

      Hail, all hail to Mrs. Wiggins;

      Hip, hurray for Mrs. Wiggins,

      For our next Pres-i-dent!

      In our hundreds and our thousands we are marching through the night.

      Underneath the tossing banners, in the torches’ smoky light,

      We sing our song of triumph, and we shout with all our might

      For Wiggins—and victory!

      When the Farmers’ Party marches let all other parties cower;

      We will shatter and defeat them with our overwhelming power;

      We will scatter them like chickens in a sudden thunder shower

      As we march to victory!

      Hail, all hail to Mrs. Wiggins!

      Hail, all hail to Mrs. Wiggins!

      Hip, hurray for Mrs. Wiggins

      For our next Pres-i-dent!

      CAMPING SONG

      By the old hotel at Lakeside, looking southward ’cross the sea,

      There’s a bright campfire a’burning, and I know it burns for me.

      For the wind is in the pine trees, and the murmuring needles say:

      Come you back, you pig detective—come you back to Jones’s Bay;

      Come you baaaack to Jones’s Ba-a-a-ay!

      Oh, the road to Jones’s Bay! Where the flying flapjacks play!

      You can hear the bacon sizzling from your bed at break of day.

      On the roa
    d to Jones’s Ba-hay, we will sing and shout hooray;

      A-and when your breakfast’s ready, they will bring it o-on a tray!

      FLORIDA WEATHER NOTE

      The weather grew torrider and torrider,

      And the orange-blossoms smelt horrider and horrider

      As we marched down into Florida.

      Self-Praise

      ADMIRE THE PIG

      O the swallows fly about the sky,

      And they swoop among the trees,

      And they catch small bugs in their little mugs

      And swallow them down with ease.

      It’s fun, no doubt, to whirl about

      In a swift and airy jig;

      But as for me, I’d much rather be

      A pig.

      The rabbit, at night, when the moon is bright,

      Waits till it’s nearly dawn;

      Then out he hops, with his friends plays cops

      And robbers upon the lawn.

      It’s fun, I suppose, to wriggle your nose

      And live on a lettuce diet;

      But it’s not my dish, and I wouldn’t wish

      To try it.

      O cats are slim and full of vim

      And they stay out late at night;

      They’re merry blades, who sing serenades

      On the fence, by the moon’s pale light.

      It may be fun to wash with your tongue

      And sing like the late Caruso,

      But I’ll tell you square, I wouldn’t care

      To do so.

      Now take the pig. His brains aren’t much bigger than cats’ or swallows’ or rabbits’,

      But in debate his words carry weight,

      And he’s formed very regular habits.

      Pigs know all the answers; they’re conceded as dancers,

      To be light as a bird on a twig.

      So it mustn’t gall you if people call you

      A pig.

      P, AS IN PIG

      This is the song of Frederick,

      Patriot, poet, and pig;

      In pedigree, princely, patrician;

      In appearance, both pleasing and plig.*

      Precise he may be, and peculiar,

      Preferring potatoes to pie

      Yet his perfect uprightness and polished politeness

      No person can ever deny.

      In the pen where he pens all his poems

      He will often sit pensive for hours,

      Yet a panther in battle they’ve proved him,

      This pig of great personal powers.

      Of all pigs he’s the pink of perfection

      Of all pigs he’s the pearl beyond price

      Though by no means the biggest,

      Of all the pigs he’s the piggest,

      And that will go everywhere twice.

      *“Excuse me,” said Freginald, “but what does ‘plig’ mean?”

      “I made it up,” said Freddy. “It just came to me. Sounds well, don’t you think?”

      THE HAPPINESS OF PIGS

      Some people think pigs should feel pain

      Because they’re so awfully plain,

      But they don’t, and the reason

      Is easy to seize on:

      Being handsome’s a terrible strain.

      If you’re handsome, you’re always obsessed

      With a doubt you’re not looking your best,

      And then you get worried

      And hurried and flurried

      And spill things all over your vest.

      Whereas, if you’re homely as sin,

      You just have to bear it and grin,

      For no perseverance

      Will improve your appearance;

      You’re beaten before you begin.

      It is no use to sit down and squall

      If you can’t be the belle of the ball;

      If you’re cross-eyed and fat

      You just say: “That’s that!”

      And you don’t have to worry at all.

      Now the pig, as I previously said,

      About looks never worries his head.

      The pig has no passion

      For being in fashion

      And painting his fingernails red.

      And that is why pigs are so gay,

      Always laughing and shouting Hooray!

      Their looks they ignore;

      They don’t care any more;

      And they sing and rejoice all the day.

      VACATION SONG

      Freddy sings:

      O, I am the King of Detectives,

      And when I am out on the trail

      All the animal criminals tremble,

      And the criminal animals quail,

      For they know that I’ll trace ’em and chase ’em and place ’em

      Behind the strong bars of the jail.

      Jinx sings:

      O, I am the terror of rodents.

      I can lick a whole army of rats

      Like that thieving, deceiving old Simon

      And his sly sneaking, high squeaking brats.

      For I, when I meet ’em, defeat ’em and eat ’em—

      I’m the boldest and bravest of cats.

      Both sing:

      In our chosen careers we’ll admit that

      We haven’t much farther to climb,

      But we’re weary of trailing and jailing,

      Of juries, disguises and crime.

      We want a vacation from sin and sensation—

      We don’t want to work all the time.

      Then it’s out of the gate and down the road

      Without stopping to say good-bye,

      For adventure waits over every hill,

      Where the road runs up to the sky.

      We’re off to play with the wind and the stars,

      And we sing as we march away:

      O, it’s all very well to love your work,

      But you’ve got to have some play.

      SELF-PORTRAIT

      No better detective than Freddy

      Can be found in the State of New York;

      Always calm, always cool, always ready,

      Though a pig, he’s by no means just pork.

      Of animals he is the smartest,

      Of pigs he’s the brightest by far;

      At following clues he’s an artist,

      At tracking down crime he’s a star.

      THE COURAGEOUS PIG

      It was dark in the woods,

      It was very, very scary,

      But the pig trudged along,

      Always watchful and wary.

      The pig trudged along,

      And he made a little song

      (He was rather literary).

      It was quite extraordinary

      How he sang his little song

      In a voice clear and strong.

      Though it’s rather customary

      For a pig, when something’s wrong

      In a forest dark and scary,

      Dim and dark and solitary.

      To sneak quietly along

      Not to be so very, very

      Brave and bold and military.

      But this pig, he was bold,

      He was brave as a lion,

      And he walked through the woods

      Without yellin’ or cryin’—*

      * At this point something startled the singer and he stopped singing.

      ADVANTAGES OF BEING A PIG

      Little sparrow, wren or crow,

      Little singing vireo,

      Little robin on a twig,

      Don’t you wish you were a pig?

      You can fly among the trees,

      Chase the buzzing bumblebees;

      You can swoop about the sky,

      Very low or very high.

      Such a life is very fine,

      But it’s not as nice as mine.

      Don’t you sometimes wish that you

      Had four legs instead of two?

      You have bugs and things to eat;

      I am fed on proper meat.

      You must live up in the sky;

      I’ve a comfortable sty.

      Honest, don’t you think you’d be


      Better off down here like me?

      ODE TO THE PIG: HIS TAIL

      My tail is not impressive

      But it’s elegant and neat.

      In length it’s not excessive—

      I can’t curl it round my feet—

      But it’s awfully expressive,

      And its weight is not excessive,

      And I don’t think it’s conceit,

      Or foolishly possessive

      If I state with some aggressiveness that it’s the final master touch

      That makes a pig complete.

      ODE TO THE PIG: HIS LEGS

      The pig has two legs at each end,

      Yet he also has two on each side;

      And consider him closely, my friend,

      He’s with one at each corner supplied.

      That makes twelve if my count is correct,

      Yet my count’s unaccountably wrong,

      For you see only four,

      There aren’t any more,

      And that is the end of my song.

      FLYING PIGS

      Oh, the young pigs fly

      About the sky

      And they zoom and dive and roll;

      They yell and whoop

      As they spin and loop

      Under the sky’s blue bowl.

      They sing and shout

      As they whiz about,

      For there’s elbow room in the sky;

      And it’s lots more fun

      Up there in the sun

      Than down in their stuffy sty.

      Oh, the pig is bold

      And when he’s told

      That a hurricane’s on the way,

      Does he turn and run?

      He does like fun!

      He hollers and shouts Hurray!

      Oh, not a fig

      Cares the fearless pig

      When the thunder bangs and crashes;

      Right into the heart

      Of the storm he darts,

      And plays tag with the lightning flashes.

     


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