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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Ezra Pound

Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.

Abu Salammamm—A Song of Empire

Ezra Pound

Being the sort of poem I would write if King George V should have me chained to the fountain before Buckingham Palace, and should give me all the food and women I wanted.
To my brother in chains Bonga-Bonga.

Great is King George the Fifth,

for he has chained me to this fountain;

He feeds me with beef-bones and wine.

Great is King George the Fifth—

His palace is white like marble,

His palace has ninety-eight windows,

His palace is like a cube cut in thirds,

It is he who has slain the Dragon

and released the maiden Andromeda.

Great is King George the Fifth;

For his army is legion,

His army is a thousand and forty-eight soldiers

with red cloths about their buttocks,

And they have red faces like bricks.

Great is the King of England and greatly to be feared,

For he has chained me to this fountain;

He provides me with women and drinks.

Great is King George the Fifth

and very resplendent is this fountain.

It is adorned with young gods riding upon dolphins

And its waters are white like silk.

Great and Lofty is this fountain;

And seated upon it is the late Queen, Victoria,

The Mother of the great king, in a hoop-skirt,

Like a woman heavy with child.

Oh may the king live forever!

Oh may the king live for a thousand years!

For the young prince is foolish and headstrong;

He plagues me with jibes and sticks,

And when he comes into power

He will undoubtedly chain someone else to this fountain,

And my glory will

Be at an end.