PHILIP LARKIN

Toads

Why should I let the toad work
     Squat on my life?
Can’t I use my wit as a pitchfork
     And drive the brute off?

Six days of the week it soils
     With its sickening poison –
Just for paying a few bills!
     That’s out of proportion.

Lots of folk live on their wits:
     Lecturers, lispers,
Losels, loblolly-men, louts –
     They don’t end as paupers;

Lots of folk live up lanes
     With fires in a bucket,
Eat windfalls and tinned sardines –
     They seem to like it.

Their nippers have got bare feet,
     Their unspeakable wives
Are skinny as whippets – and yet
     No one actually starves.

Ah, were I courageous enough
     To shout Stuff your pension!
But I know, all too well, that’s the stuff
     That dreams are made on:

For something sufficiently toad-like
     Squats in me, too;
Its hunkers are heavy as hard luck,
     And cold as snow,

And will never allow me to blarney
     My way to getting
The fame and the girl and the money
     All at one sitting.

I don’t say, one bodies the other
     One’s spiritual truth;
But I do say it’s hard to lose either,
     When you have both.