Page:Backblock Ballads and Later Verses (C.J. Dennis, 1918).djvu/148

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140
VULGAR FRACTIONS

Thus we have a simple problem in subtraction, you will note:
    1 must 'tis plain.
But half his time to noble aims could Trimmer still devote,
    And so, we have small reason to complain.

But, what with Party meetings and no-confidence debates,
    He depleted this small by just ;
Which was occupied in fanning Party jealousies and hates
    With redundant and unprofitable words.
Thus the first + must give in answer; so,
    When is given to the Party cause,
Of the whole there must remain, as any simpleton should know,
    Just to spend in framing splendid laws.

But of any busy politician's working day
    Is as much as any country should expect;
Yet Thomas found that, as the Party game he had to play,
    There were other matters he could not neglect.
Organizing, engineering, and a dozen other things,
    Of the remaining, claimed at least ,
And a simple calculation to the answer brings—
    Which, to quote the famous Euclid, is absurd.

Yet, one whole ninth of Trimmer's time the grateful country gained,
    Till he chanced to get unhappily involved