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Henry Van Dyke - Carmina FestivaHenry Van Dyke - Carmina Festiva
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THE LITTLE-NECK CLAM A modern verse-sequence, showing how a native American subject, strictly realistic, may be treated in various manners adapted to the requirements of different magazines, thus combining Art-for-Art`s-Sake with Writing-for-the-Market. Read at the First Dinner of the American Periodical Publishers` Association, in Washington, April, 1904. I THE ANTI-TRUST CLAM For McClure`s Magazine The clam that once, on Jersey`s banks, Was like the man who dug it, free, Now slave-like thro` the market clanks In chains of corporate tyranny. The Standard Fish-Trust of New York Holds every clam-bank in control; And like base Beef and menial Pork, The free-born Clam has lost its soul. No more the bivalve treads the sands In freedom`s rapture, free from guilt: It follows now the harsh commands Of Morgiman and Rockabilt. Rise, freemen, rise! Your wrath is just! Call on the Sherman Act to dam The floods of this devouring Trust, And liberate the fettered Clam. II THE WHITMANIAC CLAM For the Bookman Not Dante when he wandered by the river Arno, Not Burns who plowed the banks and braes of bonnie Ayr, Not even Shakspere on the shores of Avon,—ah, no! Not one of those great bards did taste true Poet`s Fare. But Whitman, loafing in Long Island and New Jersey, Found there the sustenance of mighty ode and psalm, And while his rude emotions swam around in verse, he Fed chiefly on the wild, impassioned, sea-born clam. Thus in his work we feel the waves` bewildering motion, And winds from mighty mud-flats, weird and wild: His clam-filled bosom answered to the voice of ocean, And rose and fell responsively with every tide. III IL MERCATORE ITALIANO DELLA CLAMMA For the Century Magazine “Clam O! Fres` Clam!” How strange it sounds and sweet, The Dago`s cry along the New York street! “Dago” we call him, like the thoughtless crowd; And yet this humble man may well be proud To hail from Petrarch`s land, Boccaccio`s home,— Firenze, Gubbio, Venezia, Rome,— From fair Italia, whose enchanted soil Transforms the lowly cotton-seed to olive-oil. To me his chant, with alien accent sung, Brings back an echo of great Virgil`s tongue: It seems to cry against the city`s woe, In liquid Latin syllables,—Clamo! As thro` the crowded street his cart he jams And cries aloud, ah, think of more than clams! Receive his secret plaint with pity warm, And grant Italia`s plea for Tenement-House Reform! IV THE SOCIAL CLAM For the Smart Set Fair Phyllis is another`s bride: Therefore I like to sit beside Her at a very smart set dinner, And whisper love, and try to win her. The little-necks,—in number six,— That from their pearly shells she picks And swallows whole,—ah, is it selfish To wish my heart among those shell-fish? “But Phyllis is another`s wife; And if she should absorb thy life `Twould leave thy bosom vacant.”—Well, I`d keep at least the empty shell! V THE RECREANT CLAM For the Outlook Low dost thou lie amid the languid ooze, Because thy slothful spirit doth refuse The bliss of battle and the strain of strife. Rise, craven clam, and lead the strenuous life!
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