Franklin P. Adams

Here you will find the Poem The Doughboy's Horace of poet Franklin P. Adams

The Doughboy's Horace

Horace: Book III, Ode 9

"Donec eram gratus tibi--"

HORACE, PVT. --TH INFANTRY, A.E.F., WRITES:


While I was fussing you at home 
You put the notion in my dome 
That I was the Molasses Kid. 
I batted strong. I'll say I did.

LYDIA, ANYBURG U.S.A., WRITES:

While you were fussing me alone 
To other boys my heart was stone. 
When I was all that you could see 
No girl had anything on me.

HORACE:

Well, say, I'm having some romance 
With one Babette, of Northern France. 
If that girl gave me the command 
I'd dance a jig in No-Man's Land.

LYDIA:

I, too, have got a young affair 
With Charley--say, that boy is there! 
I'd just as soon go out and die 
If I thought it'd please that guy

HORACE:

Suppose I can this foreign wren 
And start things up with you again? 
Suppose I promise to be good? 
I'd love you Lyd. I'll say I would.

LYDIA:

Though Charley's good and handsome--oh, boy! 
And you're a stormy fickle doughboy, 
So give the Hun his final whack, 
And I'll marry you when you come back.