Oh! Mr. Malthus!

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"Mother, Mother, here comes Malthus,
  Mother, hold me tight!
  Look! It's Mr. Malthus, Mother!
  Hide me out of sight."
  This was the cry of little Jane
  In bed she moaning lay,
  Delirious with Stomach Pain,
  That would not go away.
  All because her small Existence
  Over-pressed upon Subsistence;
  Human Numbers didn't need her;
  Human Effort couldn't feed her.
  Little Janie didn't know
  The Geometric Ratio.
  Poor Wee Janie had never done
  Course Economics No. 1;
  Never reached in Education
  Theories of Population, -
  Theories which tend to show
  Just how far our Food will go,
  Mathematically found
  Just enough to go around.
  This, my little Jane, is why
  Pauper Children have to die.
  Pauper Children underfed
  Die delirious in Bed;
 Thus at Malthus's Command
  Match Supply with true Demand.
  Jane who should have gently died
  Started up and wildly cried, -

  "Look, mother, look, he's there again
  I see him at the Window Pane,
  Father, - don't let him, - he's behind
  That shadow on the window blind, -"
  In vain the anxious parents soothe, -
  What can avail their useless Love?
  "Darling, lie down again; don't mind;
  Branches are moving in the Wind."
  With panting Breath, with Eyes that stare,
  Again she cries, "He's there, he's there!"
  The frightened Parents look, aghast,
  Is it that something really passed?
  What is it that they seem to scan,
  Ghost or Abstraction, Dream or Man? -
  That long drawn Face, the cloven Lip,
  The crooked Fingers all a-grip,
  The sunken Face, cadaverous,
  The dress, Ah, God deliver us!
  What awful Sacrilege is that?
  The Choker and the Shovel Hat,
  The Costume black and sinister,
  The dress of God's own minister!
  What fiend could ever urge a Man
  To personate a Clergyman!
  The Father strides with angry fist
  "Out, out! you damned Economist!"
  His wife restrains his threatening Paw, -
  "William, it's economic Law!"
  She shrieks, - "Oh William! don't you know
  The Geometric Ratio? -
  William, God means it for the best
  Our Darling's taken! we've transgressed - "
  And crying, "Two times two makes four,"
  She crashes swooning to the Floor.
  And when her Senses come again
  Janie had passed from mortal Pain
  And scowling Malthus had moved on
  Murm'ring, "That's one more Infant gone,"
  To other Windows, one by one; -
  Later he came and took their Son.
  With Jane and John gone, out of seven,
  They kept at five and just broke even.
  "Mary," the chastened Father said,
  "I feel God's wisdom; two are dead
  The world has only food for five,
  Quintuplets are the thing that thrive."
  She sobbed, - "We'll do it if we can!
  But, oh that awful Malthus Man."

  Such is the tale, we have it straight from Wordsworth's pious Pen
  He happened to be out, not late, just after sunset, when
  He met a little cottage Girl, she was eight years old, (she said),
  Her Hair was thick, he saw, with Curls that clustered on her Head;
  And he recalls in pious Verse the Interview she gave
  While sitting eating Porridge on her Sister Janie's Grave,
  Reciting with her Baby Voice and placid Infant's Breath
  The orthodox complacent Thought on pauper Children's death;
  And thus the plump and happy Child, her Belly full of food,
  Drowsy with Sunset Porridge smiled, - the World was pretty good.
  With her little Belly fully
  Satisfied, her Mind got woolly;
  She was just like all the rest
  Couldn't stand an acid Test,
  Took her thoughts too near the Place
  Where Digestion had its Base.
  What the Child mistook for Knowledge
  Just fresh air and lots of Porridge, -
  Here is where Biology
  Moves into Ontology.

  But Willie, Willie Wordsworth, if again you walk the Street
  Just meet a little Cottage Girl, and get the thing complete.
  You'll find her just as charming as a Child upon a Grave,
  And her Hair in Curl is permanent with what she calls a Wave.
  She needs no babbling Innocence, no baby Words to show,
  The danger spots of little Tots in moving Ratio.
  That population is a Thing that all the world must shun,
  She'll show you as a Theorem in Economics One, -
  At least until four years ago, when all the World went crack
  And all the world got overfed, and all the World got slack.
  And by the Bump we call the Slump, Production's Force was torn
  And Coffee Beans went up in Flames beside ungathered Corn
  And Melons floated out to Sea and Hogs were left unborn,
  And beer rolled down the Tennessee and California Wine
  Was used as Blood for Hollywood, and Rye thrown in the Rhine
  And Super-Products in a Stack, -
  But stop, a bit, we must turn back.

  Turn back to Malthus as he walked o'er English Fields and Downs
  And walked at night the crooked Streets of crooked English Towns,
  Lifeless, undying, Shade or Man, as one that could not die
  A hundred years his Shadow fell, a hundred Years to lie,
  The Shadow on the Window Pane when Malthus' Ghost went by.

  He chuckled as he passed at night God's Acre filled with Dead;
  The little Graves were packed as tight as Paupers in a Bed.
  But he never heard the little wings that rustled overhead,
  Or heard the Voices in the Air
  Of unborn Souls lamenting there.

  He wandered in the Summer Lanes when all the World was green,
  And he never heard the Wedding Bells of Brides that might have been,
  Tall English Flowers that drooped and fell and withered on the stem,
  Victims of Malthus' evil Spell, - what should he know of them?
  In rustled Silk and Lavender the Garden Path they trod
  And listened where the Hollyhocks and tall Delphiniums nod,
  And whisper to the blushing Face behind the Bonnet hid,
  Of Wedding Bells that were to ring, - that were, but never did.
  And he never knew the empty Homes with angry Quarrels rent,
  He never knew the blighted Souls, out of their Nature bent,
  The blighted life of Man and Wife where Children are not sent,
  And Love's Illusion wears away
  And Single Self comes back to stay.

  He scowled to see the Working Class was disobedient still,
  The teaching that the Gentry grasped was lost on Jane and Bill,
  And round the Slum
  The Children come,
  As Children ever will.

  In vain upon the Brain of Jane and Bill was cast the Thought
  That Hope of Social Gain was nil and Poverty their lot,
  That social Betterment could not
  Permit a Baby in the Cot.
  "All right," says Bill, "we'll have them still,"
  And Jane she said, "Whoi not?"
  "I likes to see 'em, reverend sir,
  A crawling round, and so does her;
  We're not like Gentry Folks, you see,
  There ain't much else for her and me."

  And all the while the World roared on, each Decade passing by,
  Machine and Power and glowing Sun to Malthus gave the Lie.
  The silly Pedants could not see
  Man's Food grows faster far than he.
  The Wheat Plant easily can grow
  A hundred grains per Seed
  Three times a year, what, Baker, Ho!
  How much is it you need?
  One Buckwheat Pancake, only one,
  Swells in three months to half a ton.
  The Barley of a single Year
  Would turn the Rhine to Lager Beer.
  The oyster with a million Lives,
  If each potential Oyster thrives,
  As with Encouragement they do,
  Can turn the World to Oyster Stew,
  Our social Future only wants
  Bigger and Brighter Restaurants.

  Thus from a hundred dusty Chairs in dusty Schools of Thought,
  Professors' talks with Boards and Chalks the Work of Malthus taught,
  Explained the social Danger hid
  In each superfluous extra Kid.
  Each Decade as it moved along
  Rehearsed the wearisome Sing Song.
  "When Numbers on Subsistence press then Wages cannot rise,
  Humanity is in Distress because it multiplies.
  No hope of social Betterment can ever be made good
  Because the Wicked Working Class will eat up all the Food.
  So if the Poor are here to stay
  We need not worry anyway,
  And Patati et Patata
  And Quack, quack, quack, and there you are!"

  With every Decade more and more two Giant Forms were seen
  To stride across the Universe as Power and as Machine,
  And little Man beside them ran, knee-high he ran between,
  All ignorant he was of why,
  Or what these Things might mean.
  Their Eyes of Brass, their Arms of Steel,
  That Grip and Drive the Plunging Wheel,
  That tear the Forest, burst the Soil,
  And make the cloven Ocean boil,
  Turn the white torrent's foaming Might
  To strike with Death or blaze with Light.
  - What is the meaning, Little Man,
  And have you got your little Plan?
  "Ask teacher?" My dear sir, alack!
  Your Teacher only says, "Quack, quack."

  Thus forward drove the World, divorced from any one Control,
  Each Man might grasp a little Part, no man could view the Whole.
  The Giants drove it like the Wind
  And Little Man clung on behind,
  Picture of Terror and Despair
  His Coat Tails flying in the Air.
  Faster and faster, on they sped,
  Machine and Power went mad, saw red,
  On Little Man fell their Attack
  And smashed his World to Bric-a-brac, -
  Broke it with War and at its Cease,
  They turned and broke it worse with Peace,
  Broke it with overwork, and then, with myriads of Workless Men;
  Starved it with Want, then changed their Clutch and choked the World with Overmuch.
  And when their Rage had spent its Shocks,
  Left little Man upon the Rocks
  Of Economic Paradox.

  His mournful Face and weeping Eyes
  Look on his World in mild Surprise,
  See Milk on the Potomac roll
  And milkless Children on the Dole,
  A crazy World it seems, grotesque,
  Where all his Theory is Burlesque,
  All jig-saw Bits,
  Where nothing Fits
  So there he sits
  Bereft of Wits, -
  And murmurs through his little Hat,
  "Will someone tell me where I'm at?"

  Start once again, O Little Man!
  Remember, when you first began,
  What a determined Cuss you were
  And how your Efforts made a Stir;
  Recall again through Time's dim haze
  The dear old Neolithic Days!
  With bed-room Exercise your Shape
  You raised above the Common Ape.
  You muttered to yourself, "They'll see!
  There's no Ourang-Outang in me."
  You practised every manual Trick, -
  Like how to use a pointed Stick,
  Bent down a Bough and let it go
  And grasped the notion of a Bow.
  Deep-seated in a Cocoa-tree,
  You learned to count as far as three;
  Moved into Theory, went higher,
  And saw that Heat was got from Fire.
  You did not know it, but you were
  The first Research Professor, sir,
  Contained, within your hairy Body,
  A noble Rutherford or Soddy.
  Nay, - what is more, - your Lot was rude
  But showed the College attitude,
  You made it an unswerving Rule
  To disregard the Common Fool,
  You overlooked the silly chaff
  Of Laughing Jackass, gay Giraffe,
  You heeded not the caustic Smile
  Of Dinosaur or Crocodile,
  Passed undisturbed the Ridicule
  Of comic Crow or haw-haw Mule, -
  In short, in Culture's earliest Span
  You acted like an Oxford Man.
  Their Idleness soon proved their Loss;
  You made yourself Creation's Boss
  Do it again, - see what I mean? -
  Come Little Man! Beat the Machine.
  You that the Pterodactyl slew, -
  Show this new Demon who is who!

  And first you have to throw away
  The stuff that led you all astray.
  Numbers are not the Bane of Man
  And numbers never yet outran, -
 … Go think it out; I'm sure you can.
  For want and Poverty may come to empty Prairie, crowded Slum, -
  Enough, enough - it's quite enough,
  Get rid of all the Malthus Stuff. -

  Let's seek the Shade of Malthus out from where he walks at Night,
  And bring him up for Punishment, - It certainly seems right;
  He that misled a hundred Years Man's Footsteps from his Path, -
  That turned our Household Joy to Tears, - how shall he feel our Wrath?
  Shall boiling Oil reduce his Flesh to Chicken à la King,
  Would molten Lead upon his Head be pretty much the Thing?
  Ah, no! not bye-gone Cruelty his erring Soul shall harry,
  We'll fit the Punishment to Crime, make Mr. Malthus marry.
  Ho! Reverend Robert, come and doff
  That cleric suit; yes, take it off, -
  Nay, never mind the leather Face
  The faded parchment skin,
  Come, stand up, Robert, chuck a Brace,
  Another life begin!

  We'll dress him all in Love's Attire our great grandfathers knew
  As one who led a Bride to wed the Year of Waterloo.
  Behold the Sandy Beaver Hat, the Sandy-coloured Suit
  The gorgeous Vest, the high Cravat, the glowing Hessian Boot!
  Enormous Buttons, made of Horn,
  Our Wedding Bridegroom shall adorn.
  O! Hear the Bells - that ring Ding, Dong,
  For Malthus Euthalameon,
  Pop-u-la-tion for the Na-tion
  Spells and tells its long sal-va-tion.

  Now hold the Chime a little Time,
  Malthus, the ringers stand beside
  And let us go and bring the Bride.
  She stands upon the Garden Path where she was wont to tread,
  Eternal flowers, that know not Death, still nod beside her head.
  In rustled Silk and Lavender, a hundred Years alone,
  Is it in Truth a Maiden's Form, or withered Frame of Bone?
  Seek not the hooded Face to scan where hides the drooping Head
  Perchance the Curls lie damp upon the Features of the Dead;
  Perchance in place of glowing Life, now desiccated, null,
  Earth's final Parody of Love, the Simpering of a Skull.

  Or Maid, or Ghost, or Pictured Fate
  Let her be what she may,
  We bring her forth to join her Mate
  This Golden Wedding Day.

  Moving before us,
  Singing in Chorus,
  Golden and Glorious,
  Time honoured Lay,
  Of wearing a Bonnet,
  A blue ribbon on it,
  On a Golden Wedding Day.

 Bring on the same old Thesis
  Of how Man Increases
  As the Clover Blossoms blow.
  And we'll sing such Pieces
  Till we get Paresis
  And we go where Ratios go.

  For if Man increases
 If he never, never ceases
  If he never, never says, "Go Slow!"
  If he will not let the Pop-stop
  Why then, ergo, there's a drop-stop
  But it's all right - Let er - go.

© Stephen Leacock