Who's dat raise h'all de row 'e can,When 'e's small boy, h'also beeg man,An' gets dere firs' mos' h'every tam?Dat's Laurier.Who's dat, when 'e's young lad at school,Was at de top 'es class, no fool.Can fight lak' mischief an' keep cool ?Dat's Laurier.Who's dat when partee LiberalWas all bus' up on N.P. wall'E save dat ship safe trou' it all?Dat's Laurier.When partee Conservateur was run,An' on 'es side got all de fun,Who's dat was firin' off 'es gun?Dat's Laurier.Who's dat, when Boer in h'Africa,Raise beeg hurrah about some law,'E feex 'im wid sodger from Canada?Dat's Laurier.Who's dat, when our good Queen she die,Advise dem people fer to try,Dat young fella—de Prince, so shy?Dat's Laurier.Who's dat, when in politique dey fight.An' knock h'each oder out of sight,Was settle h'everything all right ?Dat's Laurier.Who's dat, when 'e's gone far away,De people's lonesome every day,De crop 's bad, and dere's no hay?Dat's Laurier.Who's dat dey blame for h'everyting.When dere's damp wedder and cole spring,But 'e jus' smiles an' says, "By jing!"—Dat's Laurier.
19 April 2022
Ten Poems for National Poetry Month, Number 7: 'Dat's Laurier' by William Wilber MacCuaig
16 April 2022
Ten Poems for National Poetry Month, Number 6: 'Easter, 1942' by H.C. Mason
For Christ is risen, is risen indeed!
Proclaim to priest and people from every chiming steeple
That Christ is risen, is risen indeed!
For Christ is risen, is risen indeed!
For Christ is risen, is risen indeed!
13 April 2022
Ten Poems for National Poetry Month, Number 5: 'Sad End of a Noted Politician' by James MacRae
To think I once worked to celebrate this horrible man.
I first learned of John J. MacDonald – "James MacRae" – a few months after moving to St Marys, the small Ontario town he adopted as his home. That introduction came through The Four James, William Arthur Deacon's 1927 study of MacRae and fellow poets James McIntyre, James Gay and James D. Gillis.
The four are forever united by that book. Indeed, their very legacies are crafted by that book and its subsequent reissues, the last of which was published forty-eight years ago by Macmillan.
"Canada's Four Worst- And Funniest-Poets."
They're not the four worst, nor are they the four funniest.
It's all too easy to see the Four Jameses as being similar (Paper Lace), when in fact they were actually very different from one another (The Beatles). McIntyre, the most prolific, was the most grounded. Like so much of his verse, 'Ode on the Mammoth Cheese,' his greatest hit, was intended to raise a smile at country fairs. Deacon encourages us to laugh at it, when we should be laughing with it. Gay, a loving and loveable loon who thought himself Tennyson's rival, is the most fun to read. Gillis wasn't so much a poet as a prose writer. He's included for no other reason than to make for a great title.
The differences between these four men is most evident in their respective reactions to the 1880 murder of politician and Globe publisher George Brown.
Unsurprisingly, the tragedy inspired no verse from prose-writer James Gillis. James McIntyre writes of his sorrow in a poem titled 'Departed Statesman.' James Gay expresses great affection for the fallen man with 'The Honourable G. Brown.' James MacRae's 'Sad End of a Noted Politician' is something else entirely.
A different kind of loon than Gay, much of MacRae's poetry is taken up by hate thrown on women, strangers, Protestants, and Liberals.
'Sad End of a Noted Politician' comes from The Poems and Essays of John J. MacDonald, (Ottawa: Ru-Mi-Lou, 1928), the poet's third and final book.
SAD END OF A NOTED POLITICIAN
Deprives Mr. Brown of his senses;





