The poet, W.H. Auden, matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in 1925 with a scholarship to study Biology. This poem should interest physicians, especially dermatologists. Had Auden become a biologist, think what the world might have lost! Osler quotes Lowell: “We reward the discoverer of an anaesthetic for the body and make him a member of all the societies, but him who finds a nepenthe for the soul we elect into the small Academy of the Immortals.'” (from John Keats: The Apothecary Poet, in The Alabama Student.) This poem was published in Scientific American in 1969
 On this day tradition allots
         to taking stock of our lives,
     my greetings to all of you, Yeasts,
         Bacteria, Viruses,
     Aerobics and Anaerobics:
         A Very Happy New Year
     to all for whom my ectoderm
         is as Middle-Earth to me.
 
     For creatures your size I offer
         a free choice of habitat,
     so settle yourselves in the zone
         that suits you best, in the pools
     of my pores or the tropical
         forests of arm-pit and crotch,
     in the deserts of my fore-arms,
         or the cool woods of my scalp.
 
     Build colonies: I will supply
         adequate warmth and moisture,
     the sebum and lipids you need,
         on condition you never
     do me annoy with your presence,
         but behave as good guests should,
     not rioting into acne
         or athlete’s-foot or a boil.
 
     Does my inner weather affect
         the surfaces where you live?
     Do unpredictable changes
         record my rocketing plunge
     from fairs when the mind is in tift
         and relevant thoughts occur
     to fouls when nothing will happen
         and no one calls and it rains.
 
     I should like to think that I make
         a not impossible world,
     but an Eden it cannot be:
         my games, my purposive acts,
     may turn to catastrophes there.
         If you were religious folk,
     how would your dramas justify
         unmerited suffering?
 
     By what myths would your priests account
         for the hurricanes that come
     twice every twenty-four hours,
         each time I dress or undress,
     when, clinging to keratin rafts,
         whole cities are swept away
     to perish in space, or the Flood
         that scalds to death when I bathe?
 
     Then, sooner or later, will dawn
         a Day of Apocalypse,
     when my mantle suddenly turns
         too cold, too rancid, for you,
     appetising to predators
         of a fiercer sort, and I
     am stripped of excuse and nimbus,
         a Past, subject to Judgement.
This poem appeared after an article by Mary J. Marples in Scientific American, January, 1969 © by owner. Provided at no charge for educational purposes
 
			 
							