Please Don't Call Me Robert By Rob S. Rice My parents "Rob-ed" me at my birth, And, in its cardboard frame, My birth certificate makes clear That "Rob" is my first name. And only that is why I scream Until it starts to hurt, That, nickname though just "Rob" might seem, MY NAME IS NOT ROB-ERT! I've no aversion to that name, In fact, I think it fine. It's nothing to dislike or blame, It's just that it's not mine. I've known Robert's throughout my life, In fact there's one I Love, But still it cuts me like a knife And hits me like a shove. That name, from Latin noun robur Means "heart of oak," and "strong." Robustus, "fit," comes from the same, And "mighty"'d not be wrong. The name I bear, because my folks Saw fit that name to give, Means merely "Rob" because, no jokes, It's the diminuitive. The U.S. Navy (which I love) Gives me the higher title. It should not hit me like a glove, I really shouldn't bridle. It's just, although I asked and balked, "Robert" Rice, just last year, Received all credit when I talked, And will again, I fear. I'm not the only one I know Who's had such grounds to rant This problem once, some years ago, Vexed Cadet Hiram Grant. West Point inscribed his name all wrong, It stuck to him like gravy, But still I raise my plaintive song, And hope more of the Navy. And so, upon two bended knees, Too mournful for a caper, I beg you now, I ask you--PLEASE! If you should print this paper: Don't let "Robert" steal all my praise, But leave my name as natal. The way the job market's these days, The error could prove fatal! (And for this verse, apology-- The light above me dims, But I might claim analogy And cite William S. Sims!)