Introduction
by E. B. White
When the publisher asked me to write a few introductory remarks about Don Marquis for this new edition of 
archy and mehitabel, he said in his letter: ‘‘The sales of this particular volume have been really astounding.’’
They  do not astound me. Among books of humor by American authors, there are  only a handful that rest solidly on the shelf. This book about Archy and  Mehitabel, hammered out at such awful cost by the bug hurling himself  at the keys, is one of those books. It is funny, it is wise, it is  tender, and it is tough. The sales do not astound me; only the author  astounds me, for I know (or think I do) at what cost Don Marquis  produced these gaudy and irreverent tales. He was the sort of poet who  does not create easily; he was left unsatisfied and gloomy by what he  produced; day and night he felt the juices squeezed out of him by the  merciless demands of daily newspaper work; he was never quite certified  by intellectuals and serious critics of belles lettres. He ended in an  exhausted condition – his money gone, his strength gone. Describing the  coming of Archy in the Sun Dial column of the New York 
Sun one  afternoon in 1916, he wrote: ‘‘After about an hour of this frightfully  difficult literary labor he fell to the floor exhausted, and we saw him  creep feebly into a nest of the poems which are always there in  profusion.’’ In that sentence Don Marquis was writing his own obituary  notice. After about a lifetime of frightfully difficult literary labor  keeping newspapers supplied with copy, he fell exhausted.
I feel  obliged, before going any further, to dispose of one troublesome matter.  The reader will have perhaps noticed that I am capitalizing the name  Archy and the name Mehitabel. I mention this because the capitalization  of Archy is considered the unforgivable sin by a whole raft of old 
Sun Dial fans who have somehow nursed the illogical idea that because Don  Marquis’s cockroach was incapable of operating the shift key of a  typewriter, nobody else could operate it. This is preposterous. Archy  himself wished to be capitalized – he was no e. e. cummings. In fact he  once flirted with the idea of writing the story of his life all in  capital letters, if he could get somebody to lock the shift key for him.  Furthermore, I capitalize Archy on the highest authority: wherever in  his columns Don Marquis referred to his hero, Archy was capitalized by  the boss himself. What higher authority can you ask?
The device of having a cockroach leave messages in his typewriter in the 
Sun office was a lucky accident and a happy solution for an acute problem.  Marquis did not have the patience to adjust himself easily and  comfortably to the rigors of daily columning, and he did not go about it  in the steady, conscientious way that (for example) his contemporary  Franklin P. Adams did. Consequently Marquis was always hard up for stuff  to fill his space. Adams was a great editor, an insatiable  proof-reader, a good make-up man. Marquis was none of these. Adams,  operating his Conning Tower in the 
World, moved in the commodious  margins of column-and-a-half width and built up a reliable stable of  contributors. Marquis, cramped by single-column width, produced his  column largely without outside assistance. He never assembled a  hard-hitting bunch of contributors and never tried to. He was impatient  of hard work and humdrum restrictions, yet expression was the need of  his soul. (It is significant that the first words Archy left in his  machine were ‘‘expression is the need of my soul’’.)
The creation  of Archy, whose communications were in free verse, was part  inspiration, part desperation. It enabled Marquis to use short  (sometimes very, very short) lines, which fill space rapidly, and at the  same time it allowed his spirit to soar while viewing things from the  under side, insect fashion. Even Archy’s physical limitations (his  inability to operate the shift key) relieved Marquis of the toilsome  business of capital letters, apostrophes, and quotation marks, those  small irritations that slow up all men who are hoping their spirit will  soar in time to catch the edition. Typographically, the 
vers libre did away with the turned or runover line that every single-column practitioner suffers from.
Archy  has endeared himself in a special way to thousands of poets and  creators and newspaper slaves, and there are reasons for this beyond the  sheer merit of his literary output. The details of his creative life  make him blood brother to writing men. He cast himself with all his  force upon a key, head downward. So do we all. And when he was through  his labors, he fell to the floor, spent. He was vain (so are we all),  hungry, saw things from the under side, and was continually bringing up  the matter of whether he should be paid for his work. He was bold,  disrespectful, possessed of the revolutionary spirit (he organized the  Worms Turnverein), was never subservient to the boss yet always trying  to wheedle food out of him, always getting right to the heart of the  matter. And he was contemptuous of those persons who were absorbed in  the mere technical details of his writing. ‘‘The question is whether the  stuff is literature or not.’’ That question dogged his boss, it dogs us  all. This book – and the fact that it sells steadily and keeps going  into new editions – supplies the answer.
In one sense Archy and  his racy pal Mehitabel are timeless. In another sense, they belong  rather intimately to an era – an era in American letters when this  century was in its teens and its early twenties, an era before the  newspaper column had degenerated. In 1916 to hold a job on a daily  paper, a columnist was expected to be something of a scholar and a poet –  or if not a poet at least to harbor the transmigrated soul of a dead  poet. Nowadays, to get a columning job a man need only have the soul of a  Peep Tom, or of a third-rate prophet. There are plenty of loud clowns  and bad poets at work on papers today, but there are not many columnists  adding to belles lettres, and certainly there is no Don Marquis at work  on any big daily, or if there is, I haven’t encountered his stuff. This  seems to me a serious falling off of the press. Mr. Marquis’s cockroach  was more than the natural issue of a creative and humorous mind. Archy  was the child of compulsion, the stern compulsion of journalism. The  compulsion is as great today as it ever was, but it is met in a  different spirit. Archy used to come back from the golden companionship  of the tavern with a poet’s report of life as seen from the under side.  Today’s columnist returns from the platinum companionship of the night  club with a dozen pieces of watered gossip and a few bottomless  anecdotes. Archy returned carrying a heavy load of wine and dreams.  These later cockroaches come sober from their taverns, carrying a basket  of fluff. I think newspaper publishers in this decade ought to ask  themselves why. What accounts for so great a falling off? 
I  hesitate to say anything about humor, hesitate to attempt an  interpretation of any man’s humor: it is as futile as explaining a  spider’s web in terms of geometry. Marquis was, and is, to me a very  funny man, his product rich and satisfying, full of sad beauty, bawdy  adventure, political wisdom, and wild surmise; full of pain and jollity,  full of exact and inspired writing. The little dedication to this book
. . . to babs
with babs knows what
and babs knows why
is  a characteristic bit of Marquis madness. It has the hasty despair, the  quick anguish, of an author who has just tossed another book to a  publisher. It has the unmistakable whiff of the tavern, and is free of  the pretense and the studied affection that so often pollute a  dedicatory message.
The days of the Sun Dial were, as one gazes  back on them, pleasantly preposterous times and Marquis was made for  them, or they for him. 
Vers libre was in vogue, and tons of  souped-up prose and other dribble poured from young free-verse artists  who were suddenly experiencing a gorgeous release in the disorderly  high-sounding tangle of non-metrical lines. Spiritualism had captured  people’s fancy also. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was in close touch with the  hereafter, and received frequent communications from the other side.  Ectoplasm swirled around all our heads in those days. (It was great  stuff, Archy pointed out, to mend broken furniture with.) Souls, at this  period, were being transmigrated in Pythagorean fashion. It was the  time of ‘‘swat the fly,’’ dancing the shimmy, and speakeasies. Marquis  imbibed freely of this carnival air, and it all turned up, somehow, in  Archy’s report. Thanks to Archy, Marquis was able to write rapidly and  almost (but not quite) carelessly. In the very act of spoofing free  verse, he was enjoying some of its obvious advantages. And he could  always let the chips fall where they might, since the burden of  responsibility for his sentiments, prejudices, and opinions was neatly  shifted to the roach and the cat. It was quite in character for them to  write either beautifully or sourly, and Marquis turned it on and off the  way an orchestra plays first hot, then sweet.
Archy and  Mehitabel, between the two of them, performed the inestimable service of  enabling their boss to be profound without sounding self-important, or  even self-conscious. Between them, they were capable of taking any theme  the boss threw them, and handling it. The piece called ‘‘the old  trouper’’ is a good example of how smoothly the combination worked.  Marquis, a devoted member of The Players, had undoubtedly had a bellyful  of the lamentations of aging actors who mourned the passing of the  great days of the theater. It is not hard to imagine him hastening from  his club on Gramercy Park to his desk in the 
Sun office and  finding, on examining Archy’s report, that Mehitabel was inhabiting an  old theater trunk with a tom who had given his life to the theater and  who felt that actors today don’t have it any more – ‘‘they don’t have it  here.’’ (Paw on breast.) The conversation in the trunk is Marquis in  full cry, ribbing his nostalgic old actors all in the most wildly  fantastic terms, with the tomcat’s grandfather (who trooped with  Forrest) dropping from the fly gallery to play the beard. This is  double-barreled writing, for the scene is funny in itself, with the  disreputable cat and her platonic relationship with an old ham, and the  implications are funny, with the author successfully winging a familiar  type of bore. Double-barreled writing and, on George Herriman’s part,  double-barreled illustration. It seems to me Herriman deserves much  credit for giving the right form and mien to these willful animals. They  possess (as he drew them) the great soul. It would be hard to take  Mehitabel if she were either more catlike, or less. She is cat, yet not  cat; and Archy’s lineaments are unmistakably those of poet and pest.
Marquis moved easily from one form of composition to another. In this book you will find prose in the guise of bad 
vers libre,  poetry that is truly free verse, and rhymed verse. Whatever fiddle he  plucked, he always produced a song. I think he was at his best in a  piece like ‘‘warty bliggens,’’ which has the jewel-like perfection of  poetry and contains cosmic reverberations along with high comedy.  Beautiful to read, beautiful to think about. But I am making Archy sound  awfully dull, I guess. (Why is it that when you praise a poet, or a  roach, he begins to sound well worth shunning?)
When I was  helping edit an anthology of American humor some years ago, I recall  that although we had no trouble deciding whether to include Don Marquis,  we did have quite a time deciding where to work him in. The book had  about a dozen sections; something by Marquis seemed to fit almost every  one of them. He was parodist, historian, poet, clown, fable writer,  satirist, reporter, and teller of tales. He had everything it takes, and  more.We could have shut our eyes and dropped him in anywhere.
At  bottom Don Marquis was a poet, and his life followed the precarious  pattern of a poet’s existence. He danced on bitter nights with Boreas,  he ground out copy on drowsy afternoons when he felt no urge to write  and in newspaper offices where he didn’t want to be. After he had  exhausted himself columning, he tried playwriting and made a pot of  money (on 
The Old Soak) and then lost it all on another play  (about the Crucifixion). He tried Hollywood and was utterly miserable  and angry, and came away with a violent, unprintable poem in his pocket  describing the place. In his domestic life he suffered one tragedy after  another – the death of a young son, the death of his first wife, the  death of his daughter, finally the death of his second wife. Then  sickness and poverty. All these things happened in the space of a few  years. He was never a robust man – usually had a puffy, overweight look  and a gray complexion. He loved to drink, and was told by doctors that  he mustn’t. Some of the old tomcats at The Players remember the day when  he came downstairs after a month on the wagon, ambled over to the bar,  and announced: ‘‘I’ve conquered that god-damn will power of mine. Gimme a  double scotch.’’
I think the new generation of newspaper readers  is missing a lot that we used to have, and I am deeply sensible of what  it meant to be a young man when Archy was at the top of his form and  when Marquis was discussing the Almost Perfect State in the daily paper.  Buying a paper then was quietly exciting, in a way that it has ceased  to be.
Marquis was by temperament a city dweller, and both his  little friends were of the city: the cockroach, most common of city  bugs; the cat, most indigenous of city mammals. Both, too, were tavern  habitués, as was their boss. Here were perfect transmigrations of an  American soul, this dissolute feline who was a dancer and always the  lady, 
toujours gai, and this troubled insect who was a  poet – both seeking expression, both vainly trying to reconcile art and  life, both finding always that one gets in the way of the other. Their  employer, in one of his more sober moods, once put the whole matter in a  couple of lines.
My heart has followed all my days
Something I cannot name . . .Such  is the lot of poets. Such was Marquis’s lot. Such, probably, is the lot  even of bad poets. But bad poets can’t phrase it so simply.
E. B.White
1950								
									 Copyright © 2011 by Don Marquis. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.