Dickinson He Wasnt There Again Today

"Antigonish" is an 1899 poem by the American educator and poet, William Hughes Mearns. It is likewise known as "The Little Man Who Wasn't At that place" and was adapted every bit a striking vocal under the latter title.

Verse form [edit]

Inspired by reports of a ghost of a man roaming the stairs of a haunted business firm, in Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Canada,[one] the poem was originally part of a play called The Psyco-ed, which Mearns had written for an English class at Harvard University, circa 1899.[2] In 1910, Mearns staged the play with the Plays and Players, an amateur theatrical group, and on March 27, 1922, the newspaper columnist FPA printed the verse form in "The Conning Tower", his column in the New York World.[two] [3] Mearns subsequently wrote many parodies of this poem, giving them the general title of Later Antigonishes.[iv]

Yesterday, upon the stair,
I met a human being who wasn't there!
He wasn't at that place again today,
Oh how I wish he'd go away![five]

When I came domicile last night at three
The man was waiting there for me
But when I looked around the hall,
I couldn't run across him there at all!
Go abroad, get away, don't you come dorsum any more!
Get abroad, go away, and please don't slam the door...

Last night I saw upon the stair,
A trivial man who wasn't there,
He wasn't there again today
Oh, how I wish he'd go away....

Use in media [edit]

  • Father Brown, Season 9, Episode 9, "The Enigma of Antigonish", the villain uses the verse form as the idea backside a plot mechanism whereby a, doubtable being already dead, wouldn't be sought for the murders of several witnesses that had given evidence that resulted in the villain's by incarceration for another crime.
  • Horror fiction podcast The Magnus Athenaeum focuses its 85th episode "Upon the Stair" on a paranormal entity inspired by the poem. The poem is mentioned and read aloud in the episode.
  • In the miniseries Gallipoli, Flavour ane, Episode i, General, Sir Ian Hamilton recites the poem.
  • In the Television receiver show Death in Paradise, Season 4, Episode 1 "Stab In The Dark", Detective Inspector Humphrey Goodman references the poem while solving the murder of a distiller.
  • In the Television set show Fear the Walking Dead, Season 3, Episode 6 "Burning in H2o, Drowning in Flame (Fearfulness the Walking Expressionless)", Madison Clark and other Broke Jaw Ranch dwellers observe a witting man with his brain exposed, reciting the poem out loud.
  • In the Boob tube show Midsomer Murders, Season 5, Episode five "Worm in the Bud", Master Detective Inspector Barnaby quotes the first stanza of the verse form when mentioning the instance he was working on made no sense.
  • In the Tv set prove Sapphire & Steel, Season two, Episode x The offset stanza of the poem is heard iii times in a ghost story about children trapped in photographs by a man (spirit) with no face up.
  • In the TV show McDonald and Dodds, Season 2, Episode 1 The start stanza of the verse form is spoken by two members of the Bath police force force during the investigation of a man who plainly plummeted to his death, falling from a hot-air balloon.
  • In The Trial of Christine Keeler, based on the concatenation of events surrounding the Profumo affair in the 1960s, Dr. Stephen Ward - played by James Norton - recites the poem several times.
  • The picture Identity opens with convict Malcom Rivers reciting the poem, claiming to accept made it up when he was a child. It'southward also the closing phrase in the film.
  • In the moving-picture show "The Haunting in Connecticut", Matt Campbell recites the poem to his cousin.
  • The poem is used in Stan Dane's book Prayer Human being: The Exoneration of Lee Harvey Oswald to allude to research that appears to points to suspected assassin Lee Harvey Oswald equally being the "prayer man", a figure standing on the front steps of the Texas School Book Depository during the bump-off of Usa President John F. Kennedy.[vi]

Vocal [edit]

  • In 1939, "Antigonish" was adjusted as a popular vocal titled "The Little Man Who Wasn't At that place", by Harold Adamson with music by Bernie Hanighen, both of whom received the songwriting credits.[iii]
  • A July 12, 1939 recording of the song by the Glenn Miller Orchestra, with vocals by Tex Beneke, became an 11-week hit on Your Hit Parade and reached #7.

Other versions were recorded by:

  • Mildred Bailey & Her Orchestra
  • Larry Clinton & His Orchestra with vocals past Ford Leary
  • Bob Crosby & His Orchestra with vocals by Teddy Grace
  • Jack Teagarden & His Orchestra with vocals past Teagarden
  • In 2016 The Odd Chap released an Electro Swing version using soundtrack from the Glenn Miller Band recording.
  • In 2018, the experimental industrial group The Reptile Skins released an EP entitled Antigonish with the two pb singers having a unlike interpretation of the verse form.
  • The opening verse is featured on the opening track "Ytterligare ett steg närmare total jävla utfrysning" off the anthology Halmstad past Swedish band Shining
  • In 2019, the YouTube channel Estela Naïad released a song adapted from the poem, with the composition of the main theme and the voice of Estela Naïad, the harmonies and choirs of Priscilla Hernández and the musical production of Naliam Cantero.

Run into likewise [edit]

  • Extensional and intensional definitions
  • Plato's beard
  • The Man Who Sold the World (song), a song by David Bowie

References [edit]

  1. ^ Colombo, John Robert (1984). Canadian Literary Landmarks. Dundurn Press. ISBN978-0-88882-073-0.
  2. ^ a b McCord, David Thompson Watson (1955). What Cheer: An Anthology of American and British Humorous and Witty Verse. New York: The Modern Library. p. 429.
  3. ^ a b Kahn, Due east. J. (September 30, 1939). "Creative Mearns". The New Yorker. p. 11.
  4. ^ Colombo (2000), p.47.
  5. ^ Mearns, quoted by Hayakawa, Samuel Ichiyé & Hayakawa, Alan R. (1990). Language in Thought and Action. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 96. ISBN9780156482400. {{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
    - Mearns, quoted by Colombo, John Robert (2000). Ghost Stories of Canada. Dundurn. p. 46. ISBN9781550029758. . Italics and assertion points.
    - Mearns, quoted by Gardner, Martin (2012). Best Remembered Poems. Courier. p. 107. ISBN9780486116402.
  6. ^ Dane, Stan. Prayer Man: The Exoneration of Lee Harvey Oswald (Martian Publishing, 2015), p. 190. ISBN 1944205012

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antigonish_%28poem%29

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