Gobbled Up
On the day when all this was happening, no factories opened anywhere in the
world. All offices and schools were closed. Nobody moved away from the
television screens, not even for a couple of minutes to get a Coke or to feed the
baby. The tension was unbearable. Everybody heard the American President's
invitation to the men from Mars to visit him in the White House. And they heard
the weird rhyming reply, which sounded rather threatening. They also heard a
piercing scream (Grandma Josephine), and a little later on, they heard someone
shouting, 'Scram! Scram! Scram!' (Mr Wonka). Nobody could make head or tail
of the shouting. They took it to be some kind of Martian language. But when the
eight mysterious astronauts suddenly rushed back into their glass capsule and
broke away from the Space Hotel, you could almost hear the great sigh of relief
that rose up from the peoples of the earth. Telegrams and messages poured into
the White House congratulating the President upon his brilliant handling of a
frightening situation.
The President himself remained calm and thoughtful. He sat at his desk rolling a
small piece of wet chewing-gum between his finger and thumb. He was waiting
for the moment when he could flick it at Miss Tibbs without her seeing him. He
flicked it and missed Miss Tibbs but hit the Chief of the Air Force on the tip of
his nose.
'Do you think the men from Mars have accepted my invitation to the White
House?' the President asked.
'Of course they have,' said the Foreign Secretary. 'It was a brilliant speech, sir.'
'They're probably on their way down here right now,' said Miss Tibbs. 'Go and
wash that nasty sticky chewing-gum off your fingers quickly. They could be here
any minute.'
'Let's have a song first,' said the President. 'Sing another one about me, Nanny . .
. please.'
THE NURSE'S SONG
This mighty man of whom I sing,
The greatest of them all,
Was once a teeny little thing,
Just eighteen inches tall.
I knew him as a tiny tot.
I nursed him on my knee.
I used to sit him on the pot
And wait for him to wee.
I always washed between his toes,
And cut his little nails.
I brushed his hair and wiped his nose
And weighed him on the scales.
Through happy childhood days he strayed,
As all nice children should.
I smacked him when he disobeyed,
And stopped when he was good.
It soon began to dawn on me
He wasn't very bright,
Because when he was twenty-three
He couldn't read or write.
'What shall we do?' his parents sobbed.
'The boy has got the vapours!
He couldn't even get a job
Delivering the papers!'
'Ah-ha,' I said. 'This little clot
Could be a politician.'
'Nanny,' he cried. 'Oh Nanny, what
A super proposition!'
'Okay,' I said. 'Let's learn and note
The art of politics.
Let's teach you how to miss the boat
And how to drop some bricks,
And how to win the people's vote
And lots of other tricks.
Let's learn to make a speech a day
Upon the TV screen,
In which you never never say
Exactly what you mean.
And most important, by the way,
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