The Old Soak, and Hail And Farewell

"Hail and Farewell" is a collection of poems in honour of alcohol, drunkenness, and all things related.

In "The Old Soak", an old codger grumbles and connives to get alcohol in the age of Prohibition. Part is narrative, and part is installments from The Old Soak's papers.


By : Don Marquis (1878 - 1937)

01 - Introducing the Old Soak



02 - Beginning the Old Soak's History of the Rum Demon



03 - Liquor and Hennery Simms



04 - The Old Soak's History—The Barroom as an Educative Influence



05 - Look Out For Crime Waves!



06 - Continuing the Old Soak's History—The Barroom and the Arts



07 - An Argument With the Old Woman



08 - The Old Soak's History—More Evils of Prohibition



09 - Preparing for Christmas



10 - Continuing the History—the Old Soak Fears for the Growing Children



11 - Jabe Potter's Optimism



12 - More of the History—As It Used to Be of a Morning



13 - Peace and Contentment



14 - Continuing the History of the Rum Demon—Unfermented Grape Juice



15 - Political Talk



16 - The History Continued—Prohibition and Winter Weather



17 - The Old Soak Finds a Way



18 - The History Continued—the Barroom's Good Influence



19 - A House Divided



20 - Continuing the History of the Rum Demon—the Barroom and Manners



21 - Sympathy Wanted



22 - The History of the Rum Demon Concluded—Prohibition Is Making a Free Thinker of the Old Soak



23 - Hail and Farewell—A Last Drink



24 - Hail and Farewell—In the Old Days



25 - Hail and Farewell—A Dipsey Chantey



26 - Hail and Farewell—A Certain Club



27 - Hail and Farewell—A Temperance Tract



28 - Hail and Farewell—A Vision in the Night



29 - Hail and Farewell—The Last Case of Gin



30 - Hail and Farewell—Crowned Singers



31 - Hail and Farewell—Down in a Wine Vault



32 - Hail and Farewell—Anacreon



33 - Hail and Farewell—There Were Giants in the Old Days



34 - Hail and Farewell—In an Old-Time Tavern Booth



35 - Hail and Farewell—The Old Brass Railing



36 - Hail and Farewell—Once Youth Was Mine



37 - Hail and Farewell—In a Tavern Booth



38 - Hail and Farewell—An Engagement



39 - Hail and Farewell—The Battle of the Keyholes



40 - Hail and Farewell—In a Tavern Booth



41 - Hail and Farewell—Yearnings and Memories



42 - Hail and Farewell—Do You Remember?



43 - Hail and Farewell—And You may Kecall This



44 - Hail and Farewell—True, but What of It?



45 - Hail and Farewell—A Summer Day Dream



46 - Hail and Farewell—On Swearing Off Again



47 - Hail and Farewell—After Several Highballs



48 - Hail and Farewell—Chant Royal of the Dejected Dipsomaniac



49 - Hail and Farewell—Proverbs XXIII, 29



50 - Hail and Farewell—An Object Lesson



51 - Hail and Farewell—A Kansas Tragedy


OUR friend, the Old Soak, came in from his home in Flatbush to see us not long ago, in anything but a jovial mood.

“I see that some persons think there is still hope for a liberal interpretation of the law so that beer and light wines may be sold,” said we.

“Hope,” said he, moodily, “is a fine thing, but it don't gurgle none when you pour it out of a bottle. Hope is all right, and so is Faith... but what I would like to see is a little Charity.

“As far as Hope is concerned, I'd rather have Despair combined with a case of Bourbon liquor than all the Hope in the world by itself.

“Hope is what these here fellows has got that is tryin' to make their own with a tea-kettle and a piece of hose. That's awful stuff, that is. There's a friend of mine made some of that stuff and he was scared of it, and he thinks before he drinks any he will try some of it onto a dumb beast.

“But there ain't no dumb beast anywheres handy, so he feeds some of it to his wife's parrot. That there parrot was the only parrot I ever knowed of that wasn't named Polly. It was named Peter, and was supposed to be a gentleman parrot for the last eight or ten years. But whether it was or not, after it drank some of that there home-made hootch Peter went and laid an egg.

“That there home-made stuff ain't anything to trifle with.

“It's like amateur theatricals. Amateur theatricals is all right for an occupation for them that hasn't got anything to do nor nowhere to go, but they cause useless agony to an audience. Home-made booze may be all right to take the grease spots out of the rugs with, but it ain't for the human stomach to drink. Home-made booze is either a farce with no serious kick to it, or else a tragedy with an unhappy ending. No, sir, as soon as what is left has been drank I will kiss good-bye to the shores of this land of holiness and suffering and go to some country where the vegetation just naturally works itself up into liquor in a professional manner, and end my days in contentment and iniquity.

“Unless,” he continued, with a faint gleam of hope, “the smuggling business develops into what it ought to. And it may. There's some friends of mine already picked out a likely spot on the shores of Long Island and dug a hole in the sand that kegs might wash into if they was throwed from passing vessels. They've hoisted friendly signals, but so far nothing has been throwed overboard.”

He had a little of the right sort on his hip, and after refreshing himself, he announced:

“I'm writing a diary. A diary of the past. A kind of gol-dinged autobiography of what me and Old King Booze done before he went into the grave and took one of my feet with him.

“In just a little while now there won't be any one in this here broad land of ours, speaking of it geographically, that knows what an old-fashioned barroom was like. They'll meet up with the word, future generations of posterity will, and wonder and wonder and wonder just what a saloon could have resembled, and they will cudgel their brains in vain, as the poet says.

“Often in my own perusal of reading matter I run onto institutions that I would like to know more of. But no one ever set down and described 'em because everyone knowed all about them in the time when the writing was done. Often I thought I would 'a' liked to knowed all about them Hanging Gardens of Babylon, for instance, and who was hanged in 'em and what for; but nobody ever described 'em, as fur as I know.”

“Have you got any of it written?” we asked him. “Here's the start of it,” said he.

We present it just as the Old Soak penned it.

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