The God Of Common-Sense – Sympathy Poems

My Daddy used to wallop me for every small offense:
“Its takes a hair-brush back,” said he, “to teach kids common-sense.”
And still to-day I scarce can look a hair-brush in the face.
Without I want in sympathy to pat a tender place.
For Dad declared with unction: “Spare the brush and spoil the brat.”
The dear old man! What e’er his faults he never did do that;
And though a score of years have gone since he departed hence,
I still revere his deity, The God of Common-sense.

How often I have played the ass (Man’s universal fate),
Yet always I have saved myself before it was too late;
How often tangled with a dame – you know how these things are,
Yet always had the gumption not to carry on too far;
Remembering that fancy skirts, however high they go,
Are not to be stacked up against a bunch of hard-earned dough;
And sentiment has little weight compared with pounds and pence,
According to the gospel of the God of Common-sense.

Oh blessing on that old hair-brush my Daddy used to whack
With such benign precision on the basement of my back.
Oh blessings on his wisdom, saying: “Son, don’t play the fool,
Let prudence be your counselor and reason be your rule.
Don’t get romantic notions, always act with judgment calm,
Poetical emotions ain’t in practice worth a damn/
let solid comfort be your goal, self-interest your guide. . . .”
Then just as if to emphasize, whack! whack! the brush he plied.
And so I often wonder if my luck is Providence,
or just my humble tribute to the God of Common-sense.
(by Robert William Service)

For The Foxes – Sympathy Poems

Don’t feel sorry for me. I am a competent,
satisfied human being.

Be sorry for the others who fidget complain,
who constantly rearrange their lives like furniture.

Juggling mates and attitudes,
their confusion is constant.

And it will touch,
whoever they deal with.

Beware of them:
one of their key words is LOVE.

And beware those who,
only take instructions from their God.

For they have failed completely,
to live their own lives.

Don’t feel sorry for me,
because I am alone.

For even at the most terrible moments,
humor is my companion.

I am a dog walking backwards,
I am a broken banjo,
I am a telephone wire strung up in Toledo, Ohio

I am a man eating a meal,
this night in the month of September.

Put your sympathy aside.
they say
water held up Christ:
to come through
you better be nearly as lucky.
(by Charles Bukowski)

My Picture – Sympathy Poems

I put in it, and all I knew
Of canvas-cunning and of Art,
Of tenderness and passion true.
A worshipped Master came to see;
Oh he was kind and gentle, too.
He studied it with sympathy,
And sensed what I had sought to do.

Said he: “Your paint is fresh and fair,
And I can praise it without cease;
And yet a touch just here and there
Would make of it a masterpiece.”
He took the brush from out my hand;
He touched it here, he touched it there.
So well he seemed to understand,
And momently it grew more fair.

Oh there was nothing I could say,
And there was nothing I could do.
I thanked him, and he went his way,
And then – I slashed my picture through.
For though his brush with soft caress
Had made my daub a thing divine,
Oh God! I wept with bitterness,
. . . It wasn’t mine, it wasn’t mine.
(by Robert William Service)