HumanitiesWeb.org - Editor's Selection of Poems (Ballad of the Scholar's Lament) by ee cummings
HumanitiesWeb HumanitiesWeb
WelcomeHistoryLiteratureArtMusicPhilosophyResourcesHelp
Periods Alphabetically Nationality Topics Themes Genres Glossary
pixel

cummings
Index
Biography
Selected Works
Quotations
Suggested Reading
Other Resources
Chronology
Related Materials

Search

Get Your Degree!

Find schools and get information on the program that’s right for you.

Powered by Campus Explorer

& etc
FEEDBACK

(C)1998-2012
All Rights Reserved.

Site last updated
28 October, 2012
Real Time Analytics

Editor's Selection of Poems
Ballad of the Scholar's Lament

by ee cummings

When I have struggled through three hundred years
  of Roman history, and hastened o'er
Some French play-(though I have my private fears
  Of flunking sorely when I take the floor
In class),-when I have steeped my soul in gore
  And Greek, and figured over half a ream
With Algebra, which I do (not) adore,
  How shall I manage to compose a theme?  

It's well enough to talk of poor and peers,
  And munch the golden apples' shiny core,
And lay a lot of heroes on their biers;-
  While the great Alec, knocking down a score,
Takes out his handkerchief, boohoo-ing, "More!"-
  But harshly I awaken from my dream,
To find a new,-er,-privilege,-in store:
  How shall I manage to compose a theme? 
 
After I've swallowed prophecies of seers,
  And trailed Aeneas from the Trojan shore,
Learned how Achilles, after many jeers,
  On piggy Agamemnon got to sore,
And heard how Hercules, Esq., tore
  Around, and swept and dusted with a stream,
There's one last duty,-let's not call it bore,-
  How shall I manage to compose a theme?

  Envoi

Of what avail is all my mighty lore?
  I beat my breast, I tear my hair, I scream:
"Behold, I have a Herculean chore.
  How shall I manage to compose a theme?"
Previous Next
Personae

Terms Defined

Referenced Works