Other Poems
Nash was a baseball fan, and he wrote a poem titled "Line-Up for Yesterday", an alphabetical poem listing baseball immortals. Published in Sport magazine in January 1949, the poem pays tribute to the baseball greats and to his own fanaticism, in alphabetical order. Here is a sampling from his A to Z list:
- C is for Cobb, Who grew spikes and not corn, And made all the basemen Wish they weren't born.
- D is for Dean, The grammatical Diz, When they asked, Who's the tops? Said correctly, I is.
- E is for Evers, His jaw in advance; Never afraid To Tinker with Chance.
- F is for Fordham And Frankie and Frisch; I wish he were back With the Giants, I wish.
He also wrote a poem called "all about people "which criticises the humanity that is employers who illtreat others. Nash particularly loved Baltimore sports teams.
Nash wrote humorous poems for each movement of the Camille Saint-Saëns orchestral suite The Carnival of the Animals, which are sometimes recited when the work is performed. The original recording of this version was made by Columbia Records in the 1940s, with Noël Coward reciting the poems and Andre Kostelanetz conducting the orchestra.
Read more about this topic: Ogden Nash
Famous quotes containing the word poems:
“Our poems will have failed if our readers are not brought by them beyond the poems.”
—Muriel Rukeyser (19131980)
“I know an Englishman,
Being flattered, is a lamb; threatened, a lion.”
—George Chapman c. 15591634, British dramatist, poet, translator. repr. In Plays and Poems of George Chapman: The Tragedies, ed. Thomas Marc Parrott (1910)