I Paint What I See

-- by E.B. White

(This poem was first printed in The New Yorker of  May 20, 1933. For an online facsimile of the original go here.)

What do you paint, when you paint on a wall?
Said John D.s grandson Nelson.
Do you paint just anything there at all?
Will there be any doves, or a tree in fall?
Or a hunting scene, like an English hall?

"I paint what I see," said Rivera.

What are the colors you use when you paint?
Said John D.s grandson Nelson.
Do you use any red in the heart of a saint?
If you do, is it terribly red, or faint?
Do you use any blue? Is it Prussian?

"I paint what I paint," said Rivera.

Whose is that head that I see on the wall?
Said John D.s grandson Nelson.
Is it anyones head whom we know, at all?
A Rensselaer, or a Saltonstall?
Is it Franklin D.? Is it Mordaunt Hall?
Or is it the head of a Russian?

"I paint what I think," said Rivera.

I paint what I paint, I paint what I see,
I paint what I think, said Rivera,
And the thing that is dearest in life to me
In a bourgeois hall is Integrity;
However . . .
Ill take out a couple of people drinkin
And put in a picture of Abraham Lincoln;
I could even give you McCormicks reaper
And still not make my art much cheaper.
But the head of Lenin has got to stay
Or my friends will give the bird today,
The bird, the bird, forever.

Its not good taste in a man like me,
Said John D.s grandson Nelson,
To question an artists integrity
Or mention a practical thing like a fee,
But I know what I like to a large degree,
Tho art I hate to hamper;
For twenty-one thousand conservative bucks
You painted a radical. I say shucks,
I never could rent the offices -
The capitalistic offices.
For this, as you know, is a public hall
And people want doves, or a tree in fall
And tho your art I dislike to hamper,
I owe a little to God and Gramper.


And after all,
Its my wall . . .

Well see if it is, said Rivera.