<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h3> TO THE COMMON GOLFER </h3>
<p class="poem">
My dear Common Golfer,—<br/>
The game you affect<br/>
Is a great game<br/>
Played by yourself<br/>
And all the crowned heads of Europe,<br/>
Not to mention all the fat persons who desire to bant,<br/>
All the thin persons who desire to become<br/>
Vigorous and muscular, as it were,<br/>
All the clerks who desire to pass for dukes,<br/>
And all the dukes who relish the society of clerks.<br/>
It is a great game:<br/>
The people who play it are not the fault of the game.<br/>
It is also a good game.<br/>
If I am not mistaken,<br/>
It is a game that originally came out of Scotland;<br/>
Therefore it must be a good game.<br/>
For everything that comes out of Scotland is good,<br/>
Even the Scot.<br/>
And golf being a great and good game<br/>
I do not see any tremendous reason<br/>
Why you, my dear Common Golfer,<br/>
Should not engage in it if you so choose.<br/>
On the other hand, I wish from the bottom of my heart<br/>
That you did not engage in it.<br/>
I know a bank<br/>
Whereon the wild thyme blows<br/>
(Or ought to blow):<br/>
Oft of a pleasant summer morn<br/>
Have I taken a cheap ticket<br/>
To a station which is not far from that bank,<br/>
And there (on the bank, that is to say) reclined me<br/>
What time I looked up into the blue dome,<br/>
And watched the lazy-pacing clouds,<br/>
And flicked away the midges,<br/>
And wished my name was Corydon,<br/>
And remembered bits of Keats<br/>
And bits of Herrick<br/>
And bits of business,<br/>
And so forth.<br/>
Oft, I say, have I done these things;<br/>
But of late I no longer do them,<br/>
Inasmuch as my bank<br/>
Has become (if I may so term it)<br/>
Golf-ridden.<br/>
The other day I repaired to the said bank<br/>
On rural musings bent.<br/>
What did I find?<br/>
Why, my dear old thymy bank<br/>
Was in the possession<br/>
Of half a dozen gross fellows in red coats,<br/>
Thy had pipes in their mouths,<br/>
And a jar of beer in their midst,<br/>
And they were actually talking and laughing<br/>
In the most uproarious fashion.<br/>
I heard one of them say<br/>
"Why did Arthur Bawl-Fore?"<br/>
And the others thought hard,<br/>
And trifled with their brassies and things,<br/>
And could not make answer.<br/>
O, my dear Common Golfer,<br/>
<i>You</i> were of that party;<br/>
You <i>were</i>;<br/>
You are always of such parties,<br/>
You are always sitting<br/>
On other people's thymy banks,<br/>
And saying, "Why did So-and-so so-and-so?"<br/>
And depleting village public-houses of good beer,<br/>
And turning whole village populations into caddies,<br/>
And dotting the landscape with your red coats,<br/>
And generally appropriating the fair face of Nature.<br/>
I cannot stop you, my dear Common Golfer,<br/>
I cannot, O I cannot!<br/>
Would that I could. O would that I could!<br/>
In which case, perhaps, I wouldn't.<br/>
No, my dear boy,<br/>
Rural England is yours,<br/>
Also the sea-side,<br/>
Take them, old man, take them;<br/>
I hand them over to you with the best heart in the world.<br/>
Take them—they are yours—<br/>
And excuse these tears.<br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />