Toward the end of World War I, it seemed that every dark beauty in the movies was a spy for the Kaiser. Delight Evans, who was seventeen years old when she wrote this piece, runs through the dreary catalogue of clichés in a bit of free verse that’s anything but dreary.
These Lady-Spies!
      Have you Seen them?
      You Know—
      These Curious Creatures
      Who Go About
      Making the World Unsafe
      For Anything but Democracy.
      They Act
      As if they Started the War,
      And their Own Particular Spying
      Was Going to End it.
      The War
      Couldn’t Go On for the Minute
      It it weren't for them.
      In fact,
      Just about the Whole Responsibility
      For this Great Struggle
      Seems to Rest on their Shoulders;
      And goodness knows,
      Some of these Brunnette Brunnhildes
      Look Strong Enough to Bear it.
      They’re Never Blonde—
      Every Director Knows
      They have to be Kept Dark.
      Usually
      The Lady-Spy
      Has a Difficult French Name—
      The Scenario-Writers see to it—
      Prefaced always by “Madame”—
      They Think it’s Safer.
      Have They Ever Really Lived?
      I don’t Know.
      Their Press-Agents,
      The Caption Writers,
      Credit them with a Past.
      One has Been
      A Favorite in the Sultan’s Harem;
      And we Understand Also
      That Crown Prince Wilhelm
      Thought a Whole Lot of her.
      They are Always
      Stepping In and Out of Motors,
      And Meeting Bearded Men
      In the Park.
      They Lower Window Shades
      All the Time—
      Signalling
      To the Spies Across the Street.
      They Put the Papers
      In a Safe Place—
      For Instance, In Their Pockets,
      Or Fastened in the Window Shade—
      (No Wonder Wilhelm Sent ’Em!)
      There are No Lengths
      To Which they Won't Go.
      Why, one Even
      Laid her Hand on the Hero's Coat-sleeve—
      (She Just had to Have those Papers.)
      Usually
      The Hero
      Is an Intelligence Officer—
      (He doesn't Look Intelligent.)
      The Lady-Spy
      Figures Largely
      In Scenes showing
      A Jeweled Hand
      Pouring a Sleeping-Potion
      Into a Wine Glass.
      (On the Wilhelmstrasse
      They Do It.)
      She Lets him Come To
      In her Own Boudoir; and
      Lets Everybody in the Audience
      Think There’s Going to Be
      Something to Censor.
      There Never Is.
      She Can’t Spy
      In Anything but a Spangled Gown.
      For the Close-ups,
      She Registers Cunning—
      A Curious Kind of Cunning—
      It’s Gotta be Different.
      The Lady=Spy always
      Has an Accomplice, who,
      The Sub-titles Insinuate,
      Is Part of her Past
      Back in Berlin—
      (But he Looks to Us
      An Awful Lot like
      Heinrich Lutz,
      The Butcher Around the Corner.)
      Spies have Pasts,
      But Seldom Futures.
      The Lady-Spy
      Is Always Led Away
      In the Last Scene—
      (After the Detectives have Come
      And Found the Papers,
      And the Girl-who-Loved-the-Hero-All-the-Time
      Twines her Arms
      Around his Neck, and calls him
      “My Hero”—
      She Can Have him—)
      Why, then the Lady-Spy
      Passes Out,
      And Throws Back her Head,
      And Laughs at them in Passing.
      I Don’t Blame her.
      And so
      She Sweeps out the Door, and
      Off the Screen,
      And Out of the Picture—
      As you Knew all Along she Would—
      And you Get Up
      And Wander Out,
      And thank heaven
      We’re Winning this War.
      And the Next Night,
      You Forget,
      And Go to Another Picture-Show,
      And there’s the Same Spy,
      And the Same Papers—
      Just the Same Old Stuff—
      And you Think
      “To Hell with the Kaiser!”
——From Photoplay, January, 1919