Upton Sinclair, ed. (1878–1968). rn The Cry for Justice: An Anthology of the Literature of Social Protest. 1915.
The Ballad of KiplingsonRobert Buchanan
(An English poet and journalist, 18411901, who through his lifetime fought valiantly against militarism and imperialism)T
“Hi, open the door, you fellah there, to a British rat-tat-tat!”
“Who’s there?” he muttered, “a single man, or a regiment of Grenadiers?”
Who claims by Jingo, his patron Saint, the entry to Paradise!”
The spectacled ghost of a little man, with an infant’s flag in his hand.…
As far as the Flag of England waves, and the Tory prints are read?
And a wonderful Literary Gent, I emerged upon Hindostan!…
And I grew the joy of the Cockney cliques, and the pet of the Jingo Jew!
A fust-rate Gawd who dropt, d’ye see, the ‘h’ in Heaven and Hell!…
“The only genius ever born who was Tory at twenty-one!”
“A Tory at twenty-one! Good God! At fifty what would you have been?
Have tried to upset the very Throne, and reform both Sire and Son!
Is a brat that talks like a weary man, or a youth with a cynic’s leer.
“Hi, here, old fellah,” said Kiplingson, “by Jingo! just you wait—
That I’m ’cute in almost everything, and have probed Creation through!”
“The Flag of England!” cried Kiplingson, “and the thin black penny-a-line!
Wherever the thin black line is spread, the Bulldog bites and brags!…
Across the plains of the earth still creeps the thin black penny-a-line!
His voice was drown’d in a thunder-crash, for the Saint bang’d-to the Gate!