Tuesday, June 15, 2010

faith poem by thomas hood (chevar cummings)

Faithless Nelly Gray


A Pathetic Ballad



Ben Battle was a soldier bold,

And used to war's alarms;

But a cannon-ball took off his legs,

So he laid down his arms.



Now as they bore him off the field,

Said he, 'Let others shoot;

For here I leave my second leg,

And the Forty-second Foot.'



The army-surgeons made him limbs:

Said he, 'They're only pegs;

But there's as wooden members quite,

As represent my legs.'



Now Ben he loved a pretty maid, --

Her name was Nelly Gray;

So he went to pay her his devours,

When he devoured his pay.



But when he called on Nelly Gray,

She made him quite a scoff;

And when she saw his wooden legs,

Began to take them off.



'O Nelly Gray! O Nelly Gray!'

Is this your love so warm?

The love that loves a scarlet coat

Should be a little more uniform.



Said she, ' I loved a soldier once,

For he was blithe and brave;

But I will never have a man

With both legs in the grave



'Before you had those timber toes

Your love I did allow;

But then, you know, you stand upon

Another footing now.'



'O Nelly Gray! O Nelly Gray!

For all your jeering speeches,

At duty's call I left my legs

In Badajos's breaches.'



'Why, then,' said she, 'you've lost the feet

Of legs in war's alarms,

And now you cannot wear your shoes

Upon your feats of arms!'



'O false and fickle Nelly Gray!

I know why you refuse:

Though I've no feet, some other man

Is standing in my shoes.



'I wish I ne'er had seen your face;

But, now, a long farewell!

For you will be my death' -- alas!

You will not be my Nell!'



Now when he went from Nelly Gray

His heart so heavy got,

And life was such a burden grown,

It made him take a knot.



So round his melancholy neck

A rope he did intwine,

And, for his second time in life,

Enlisted in the Line.



One end he tied around a beam,

And then removed his pegs;

And, as his legs were off -- of course

He soon was off his legs.



And there he hung till he was dead

As any nail in town;

For, though distress had cut him up,

It could not cut him down.



A dozen men sat on his corpse,

To find out why he died, --

And they buried Ben in four cross-roads

With a stake in his inside.

3 comments:

  1. The play on words adds a little kick to this ballad. "But a cannon-ball took off his legs, / So he laid down his arms.", " rope he did intwine, / And, for his second time in life, / Enlisted in the Line."
    To me, I see that the man is trying to put his faith in the girl, but she becomes unfaithful, and he loses his legs and now his faith! It just shows that it's natural to have faith because without it, it's hard to find the meaning or purpose of life. I'm proud of Chevar for choosing a lengthier poem because this one was full of storyline!

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  2. Like Christina pointed out, the play on words added meaning to this poem. I think when it comes to faith and this poem, this poem shows how Nelly is as unfaithful. Not only did she cheat but she failed to stick with him until the end of troubles or even through them. She was the perfect example of what kind of partner NOT to be.

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  3. To me, this poem is about faith being synonymous with hope and goodwill. The poem is also about loss of faith. The man lost his faith in his wife therefore losing faith in his life. Whereas, his wife lost faith in the realtionship and committed adultery by being "unfaithful"

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