Every age and every tongue
Of Mother love has fondly sung
And from my heart I want to add
A glowing tribute just as glad
For never could love more wonderful be
Than you, dear Mother, have given me
If all this bad, tear jerking poetry makes you want to cry and get away from it all, though, your hankies—or handkerchiefs from the first half of the twentieth century, at least—wouldn't necessarily provide you any respite. In fact, as the "Sweetheart" poem printed on the decorated, World War II-era hankie envelope pictured at the top of this posting indicates, they might very well be a source for even more bad poetry:I thought that you would
like to know
That some one's thoughts
go where you go;
That some one never can forget
The hours we spent since first we met
That life is richer, sweeter far
For such a sweetheart as you are
And now my constant
prayer will be
That God may keep you
safe for me.
When war clouds hover o'er the land we read of heroes brave.
Our officers on land and sea, o'er them we fairly rave;
The real defenders are forgot, the men who fire the gun.
'Tis they who'll shield the Stars and Stripes,
God bless them ev'ry mother's son!
He may be wealthy, college bred, perhaps a son of toil,
He volunteers to fight or die, he loves his native soil;
No fame or glory be his, though through him battles are won.
Old Glory will never cease to wave while we have men to fire the gun!
In the illustration to this poem, not only are the two lovers wrapped in each others' arms, but they are then wrapped in the icons of the very history—the Revolutionary War and the Great War—that would have in fact split them up, sending him to war and her, presumably, to the bitter substitute of her hankie poem. Over and over, these poems make the argument that the fulfillment of romantic love is in sacrificing that love to the dogs of war—the occasion when V-Day (Valentine's Day) and V-Day (Victory Day) become expressions of each other, concepts sinisterly wrapped together in the discourse of love like ... well, like a poem inside of a poem.
To be without a handkerchief
You know is quite distressing;
From every State let one be sent,
'Twill surely be a blessing.
If a handkerchief you can make,
That handkerchief we will surely take;
But if you can't, then buy us one.
We'll thank you till your race is run.
If that poetry distresses you this Valentine's Day—maybe it's even bad enough to make you cry?—well, won't you please let P&PC offer you a handkerchief to dry your tears?

1 comment:
Hello Professor Mike,
I understand that you have been gifted with a copy of my book, "Sweetheart & Mother Pillows 1917-1945" which offers many examples of "bad poetry."
Please... tread lightly or I may be requesting that you send me some of the extra "hankies" you mention!
Cheers! Pat :-)
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