Richard Willard Armour (1906–1989) was an American poet and author who wrote over sixty books.
Armour was born in San Pedro, Los Angeles, California. His father
was a druggist, and Armour's autobiographical Drug Store Days recalls his childhood in both San Pedro and Pomona. He
attended Pomona College and Harvard University, where he studied with the eminent
Shakespearean scholar George Lyman Kittredge and obtained a Ph.D. in English
philology. He eventually became Professor of English at Scripps College and the
Claremont Graduate School in Claremont, California.
Armour wrote funny poems in a style reminiscent of Ogden Nash. These poems were often
featured in newspaper Sunday supplements, a feature called Armour's Armory. Many of Armour's poems have been repeatedly
and incorrectly attributed to Nash. Probably Armour's most-quoted poem (usually quoted by people who credit it to Nash) is this
quatrain: "Shake and shake / the catsup bottle / first none'll come / and then a lot'll." Another popular quatrain of his,
also usually attributed erroneously to Nash, is: "Nothing attracts / the mustard from wieners / as much as the slacks / just
back from the cleaners."
Armour also wrote satirical books, such as Twisted Tales from Shakespeare, and his ersatz history of the United States,
It All Started With Columbus. These books were typically filled with puns and plays on words, and gave the impression of
someone who had not quite been paying attention in class, thus also getting basic facts not quite right, to humorous effect.
Example: "In an attempt to take Baltimore, the British attacked Fort McHenry, which protected the
harbor. Bombs were soon bursting in air, rockets were glaring, and all in all it was a moment of great historical interest.
During the bombardment, a young lawyer named Francis "Off" Key wrote
The Star-Spangled Banner, and when, by the dawn's early light, the
British heard it sung, they fled in terror!"
It All Started with Europa begins in the wilderness full of "fierce animals ready to spring and fierce birds ready to
chirp."
It All Started with Marx includes the rabble-rousing Lenin declaring in public
"Two pants with every suit!," "Two suits with every pants!" and "The Tsar is a tsap!"
It All started with Eve quotes Napoleon as writing in a letter "Do you [
Joséphine ] miss me? I hope the enemy artillery does."
Armour's books are typically written in a style parodying dull academic tomes, with many footnotes (funny in themselves), fake
bibliographies, quiz sections and glossaries. This style was pioneered by the British humorists W.C Sellar and R.J Yateman with
their parody of British history '1066 and All That' in the 1930s.
Bibliography
- It all Started with Columbus (American history parodied)
- It all Started with Eve 1956 (a humorous history of women)
- It all Started with Europa August 1955 (European history parodied)
- It all Started with Marx (a humorous history of communism)
- The Classics Reclassified
- Twisted Tales from Shakespeare
- English Lit Relit
- American Lit Relit
- Nights with Armour
- Punctured Poems
- Our Presidents, Woodbridge Press, California, 1983 ISBN 0-88007-134-6
- It All Started with Hippocrates, 1966 (a humorous history of medicine)
- The Medical Muse, 1963 (humorous medical poetry)
- Going Like Sixty, 1974 (humorous look at aging), ISBN 0-07-002295-5, McGraw-Hill
- The Academic Bestiary, 1974 (humorous look at higher learning), ISBN 0-688-02884-5, William Morrow and Company,
Inc.
- To These Dark Steps (play)
- An Armoury of Light Verse
- For Partly Proud Parents (light verse)
- Golf Bawls (light verse)
- Leading with My Left (light verse)
- Private Lives (light verse)
- The Spouse in the House (light verse)
- Yours for the Asking (light verse)
- Armour's Almanac
- A Diabolical Dictionary of Education
- Drug Store Days
- Going Around in Academic Circles
- Golf is a Four-Letter Word
- The Happy Bookers
- It All Started with Freshman English
- It All Started with Stones and Clubs
- My Life with Women
- Out of My Mind
- A Safari into Satire
- A Short History of Sex
- Through Darkest Adolescence
- Writing Light Verse
- Writing Light Verse and Prose Humour
- All in Sport
- The Strange Dreams of Rover Jones
- The Adventures of Egbert the Easter Egg (children's book)
- All Sizes and Shapes of Monkeys and Apes (children's book)
- Animals on the Ceiling (children's book)
- A Dozen Dinosaurs (children's book)
- Odd Old Mammals (children's book)
- On Your Marks: A Package of Punctuation (children's book)
- Sea Full of Whales(children's book)
- Who's in Holes? (children's book)
- The Year Santa Went Modern (children's book)
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)