<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>SONGS OF THE ROAD</h1>
<h2 class="no-break">BY ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE</h2>
<hr />
<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
<table summary="" >
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"><big><b>I. — NARRATIVE VERSES AND SONGS</b></big></SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004">SONGS OF THE ROAD</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005">A HYMN OF EMPIRE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006">SIR NIGEL'S SONG</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007">THE ARAB STEED</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008">A POST-IMPRESSIONIST</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009">EMPIRE BUILDERS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010">THE GROOM'S ENCORE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011">THE BAY HORSE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012">THE OUTCASTS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013">THE END</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014">1902-1909</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015">THE WANDERER</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016">BENDY'S SERMON</SPAN><br/><br/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"><big><b>II. — PHILOSOPHIC VERSES</b></big></SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018">COMPENSATION</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019">THE BANNER OF PROGRESS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020">HOPE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021">RELIGIO MEDICI</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022">MAN'S LIMITATION</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023">MIND AND MATTER</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024">DARKNESS</SPAN><br/><br/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"><big><b>III — MISCELLANEOUS VERSES</b></big></SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026">A WOMAN'S LOVE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027">BY THE NORTH SEA</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#linkdecember_snow">DECEMBER'S SNOW</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0028">SHAKESPEARE'S EXPOSTULATION</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0029">THE EMPIRE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0030">A VOYAGE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0031">THE ORPHANAGE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0032">SEXAGENARIUS LOQUITUR</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0033">NIGHT VOICES</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0034">THE MESSAGE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0035">THE ECHO</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0036">ADVICE TO A YOUNG AUTHOR</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0037">A LILT OF THE ROAD</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<hr />
<h2><big><big>SONGS OF THE ROAD</big></big></h2>
<h2>By Arthur Conan Doyle</h2>
<h4>Garden City New York<br/>
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY<br/>
<br/>
1911</h4>
<h3>J. C. D.<br/> <br/> THIS-AND-ALL</h3>
<h4>February, 1911</h4>
<h2>FOREWORD</h2>
<p>If it were not for the hillocks<br/>
You'd think little of the hills;<br/>
The rivers would seem tiny<br/>
If it were not for the rills.<br/>
If you never saw the brushwood<br/>
You would under-rate the trees;<br/>
And so you see the purpose<br/>
Of such little rhymes as these.<br/>
<br/>
Crowborough<br/>
<br/>
1911<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN> I. — NARRATIVE VERSES AND SONGS</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN> SONGS OF THE ROAD</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN> A HYMN OF EMPIRE</h2>
<h3>(Coronation Year, 1911)</h3>
<p>God save England, blessed by Fate,<br/>
So old, yet ever young:<br/>
The acorn isle from which the great<br/>
Imperial oak has sprung!<br/>
And God guard Scotland's kindly soil,<br/>
The land of stream and glen,<br/>
The granite mother that has bred<br/>
A breed of granite men!<br/>
<br/>
God save Wales, from Snowdon's vales<br/>
To Severn's silver strand!<br/>
For all the grace of that old race<br/>
Still haunts the Celtic land.<br/>
And, dear old Ireland, God save you,<br/>
And heal the wounds of old,<br/>
For every grief you ever knew<br/>
May joy come fifty-fold!<br/>
<br/>
Set Thy guard over us,<br/>
May Thy shield cover us,<br/>
Enfold and uphold us<br/>
On land and on sea!<br/>
From the palm to the pine,<br/>
From the snow to the line,<br/>
Brothers together<br/>
And children of Thee.<br/>
<br/>
Thy blessing, Lord, on Canada,<br/>
Young giant of the West,<br/>
Still upward lay her broadening way,<br/>
And may her feet be blessed!<br/>
And Africa, whose hero breeds<br/>
Are blending into one,<br/>
Grant that she tread the path which leads<br/>
To holy unison.<br/>
<br/>
May God protect Australia,<br/>
Set in her Southern Sea!<br/>
Though far thou art, it cannot part<br/>
Thy brother folks from thee.<br/>
And you, the Land of Maori,<br/>
The island-sisters fair,<br/>
Ocean hemmed and lake be-gemmed,<br/>
God hold you in His care!<br/>
<br/>
Set Thy guard over us,<br/>
May Thy shield cover us,<br/>
Enfold and uphold us<br/>
On land and on sea!<br/>
From the palm to the pine,<br/>
From the snow to the line,<br/>
Brothers together<br/>
And children of Thee.<br/>
<br/>
God guard our Indian brothers,<br/>
The Children of the Sun,<br/>
Guide us and walk beside us,<br/>
Until Thy will be done.<br/>
To all be equal measure,<br/>
Whate'er his blood or birth,<br/>
Till we shall build as Thou hast willed<br/>
O'er all Thy fruitful Earth.<br/>
<br/>
May we maintain the story<br/>
Of honest, fearless right!<br/>
Not ours, not ours the Glory!<br/>
What are we in Thy sight?<br/>
Thy servants, and no other,<br/>
Thy servants may we be,<br/>
To help our weaker brother,<br/>
As we crave for help from Thee!<br/>
<br/>
Set Thy guard over us,<br/>
May Thy shield cover us,<br/>
Enfold and uphold us<br/>
On land and on sea!<br/>
From the palm to the pine,<br/>
From the snow to the line,<br/>
Brothers together<br/>
And children of Thee.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN> SIR NIGEL'S SONG</h2>
<p>A sword! A sword! Ah, give me a sword!<br/>
For the world is all to win.<br/>
Though the way be hard and the door be<br/>
barred,<br/>
The strong man enters in.<br/>
If Chance or Fate still hold the gate,<br/>
Give me the iron key,<br/>
And turret high, my plume shall fly,<br/>
Or you may weep for me!<br/>
<br/>
A horse! A horse! Ah, give me a horse,<br/>
To bear me out afar,<br/>
Where blackest need and grimmest deed,<br/>
And sweetest perils are.<br/>
Hold thou my ways from glutted days,<br/>
Where poisoned leisure lies,<br/>
And point the path of tears and wrath<br/>
Which mounts to high emprise.<br/>
<br/>
A heart! A heart! Ah, give me a heart,<br/>
To rise to circumstance!<br/>
Serene and high, and bold to try<br/>
The hazard of a chance.<br/>
With strength to wait, but fixed as fate,<br/>
To plan and dare and do;<br/>
The peer of all — and only thrall,<br/>
Sweet lady mine, to you!<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"></SPAN> THE ARAB STEED</h2>
<p>I gave the 'orse 'is evenin' feed,<br/>
And bedded of 'im down,<br/>
And went to 'ear the sing-song<br/>
In the bar-room of the Crown,<br/>
And one young feller spoke a piece<br/>
As told a kind of tale,<br/>
About an Arab man wot 'ad<br/>
A certain 'orse for sale.<br/>
<br/>
I 'ave no grudge against the man —<br/>
I never 'eard 'is name,<br/>
But if he was my closest pal<br/>
I'd say the very same,<br/>
For wot you do in other things<br/>
Is neither 'ere nor there,<br/>
But w'en it comes to 'orses<br/>
You must keep upon the square.<br/>
<br/>
Now I'm tellin' you the story<br/>
Just as it was told last night,<br/>
And if I wrong this Arab man<br/>
Then 'e can set me right;<br/>
But s'posin' all these fac's <i>are</i> fac's,<br/>
Then I make bold to say<br/>
That I think it was not sportsmanlike<br/>
To act in sich a way.<br/>
<br/>
For, as I understand the thing,<br/>
'E went to sell this steed —<br/>
Which is a name they give a 'orse<br/>
Of some outlandish breed —,<br/>
And soon 'e found a customer,<br/>
A proper sportin' gent,<br/>
Who planked 'is money down at once<br/>
Without no argument.<br/>
<br/>
Now when the deal was finished<br/>
And the money paid, you'd think<br/>
This Arab would 'ave asked the gent<br/>
At once to name 'is drink,<br/>
Or at least 'ave thanked 'im kindly,<br/>
An' wished 'im a good day,<br/>
And own as 'e'd been treated<br/>
In a very 'andsome way.<br/>
<br/>
But instead o' this 'e started<br/>
A-talkin' to the steed,<br/>
And speakin' of its "braided mane"<br/>
An' of its "winged speed,"<br/>
And other sich expressions<br/>
With which I can't agree,<br/>
For a 'orse with wings an' braids an' things<br/>
Is not the 'orse for me.<br/>
<br/>
The moment that 'e 'ad the cash —<br/>
Or wot '<i>e</i> called the gold,<br/>
'E turned as nasty as could be:<br/>
Says 'e, "You're sold! You're sold!"<br/>
Them was 'is words; it's not for me<br/>
To settle wot he meant;<br/>
It may 'ave been the 'orse was sold,<br/>
It may 'ave been the gent.<br/>
<br/>
I've not a word to say agin<br/>
His fondness for 'is 'orse,<br/>
But why should 'e insinivate<br/>
The gent would treat 'im worse?<br/>
An' why should 'e go talkin'<br/>
In that aggravatin' way,<br/>
As if the gent would gallop 'im<br/>
And wallop 'im all day?<br/>
<br/>
It may 'ave been an' 'arness 'orse,<br/>
It may 'ave been an 'ack,<br/>
But a bargain is a bargain,<br/>
An' there ain't no goin' back;<br/>
For when you've picked the money up,<br/>
That finishes the deal,<br/>
And after that your mouth is shut,<br/>
Wotever you may feel.<br/>
<br/>
Supposin' this 'ere Arab man<br/>
'Ad wanted to be free,<br/>
'E could 'ave done it businesslike,<br/>
The same as you or me;<br/>
A fiver might 'ave squared the gent,<br/>
An' then 'e could 'ave claimed<br/>
As 'e'd cleared 'imself quite 'andsome,<br/>
And no call to be ashamed.<br/>
<br/>
But instead 'o that this Arab man<br/>
Went on from bad to worse,<br/>
An' took an' chucked the money<br/>
At the cove wot bought the 'orse;<br/>
'E'd 'ave learned 'im better manners,<br/>
If 'e'd waited there a bit,<br/>
But 'e scooted on 'is bloomin' steed<br/>
As 'ard as 'e could split.<br/>
<br/>
Per'aps 'e sold 'im after,<br/>
Or per'aps 'e 'ires 'im out,<br/>
But I'd like to warm that Arab man<br/>
Wen next 'e comes about;<br/>
For wot 'e does in other things<br/>
Is neither 'ere nor there,<br/>
But w'en it comes to 'orses<br/>
We must keep 'im on the square.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN> A POST-IMPRESSIONIST</h2>
<p>Peter Wilson, A.R.A.,<br/>
In his small atelier,<br/>
Studied Continental Schools,<br/>
Drew by Academic rules.<br/>
So he made his bid for fame,<br/>
But no golden answer came,<br/>
For the fashion of his day<br/>
Chanced to set the other way,<br/>
And decadent forms of Art<br/>
Drew the patrons of the mart.<br/>
<br/>
Now this poor reward of merit<br/>
Rankled so in Peter's spirit,<br/>
It was more than he could bear;<br/>
So one night in mad despair<br/>
He took his canvas for the year<br/>
("Isle of Wight from Southsea Pier"),<br/>
And he hurled it from his sight,<br/>
Hurled it blindly to the night,<br/>
Saw it fall diminuendo<br/>
From the open lattice window,<br/>
Till it landed with a flop<br/>
On the dust-bin's ashen top,<br/>
Where, 'mid damp and rain and grime,<br/>
It remained till morning time.<br/>
<br/>
Then when morning brought reflection,<br/>
He was shamed at his dejection,<br/>
And he thought with consternation<br/>
Of his poor, ill-used creation;<br/>
Down he rushed, and found it there<br/>
Lying all exposed and bare,<br/>
Mud-bespattered, spoiled, and botched,<br/>
Water sodden, fungus-blotched,<br/>
All the outlines blurred and wavy,<br/>
All the colours turned to gravy,<br/>
Fluids of a dappled hue,<br/>
Blues on red and reds on blue,<br/>
A pea-green mother with her daughter,<br/>
Crazy boats on crazy water<br/>
Steering out to who knows what,<br/>
An island or a lobster-pot?<br/>
<br/>
Oh, the wretched man's despair!<br/>
Was it lost beyond repair?<br/>
Swift he bore it from below,<br/>
Hastened to the studio,<br/>
Where with anxious eyes he studied<br/>
If the ruin, blotched and muddied,<br/>
Could by any human skill<br/>
Be made a normal picture still.<br/>
<br/>
Thus in most repentant mood<br/>
Unhappy Peter Wilson stood,<br/>
When, with pompous face, self-centred,<br/>
Willoughby the critic entered —<br/>
He of whom it has been said<br/>
He lives a century ahead —<br/>
And sees with his prophetic eye<br/>
The forms which Time will justify,<br/>
A fact which surely must abate<br/>
All longing to reincarnate.<br/>
<br/>
"Ah, Wilson," said the famous man,<br/>
Turning himself the walls to scan,<br/>
"The same old style of thing I trace,<br/>
Workmanlike but commonplace.<br/>
Believe me, sir, the work that lives<br/>
Must furnish more than Nature gives.<br/>
'The light that never was,' you know,<br/>
That is your mark — but here, hullo!<br/>
<br/>
What's this? What's this? Magnificent!<br/>
I've wronged you, Wilson! I repent!<br/>
A masterpiece! A perfect thing!<br/>
What atmosphere! What colouring!<br/>
Spanish Armada, is it not?<br/>
A view of Ryde, no matter what,<br/>
I pledge my critical renown<br/>
That this will be the talk of Town.<br/>
Where did you get those daring hues,<br/>
Those blues on reds, those reds on<br/>
blues?<br/>
That pea-green face, that gamboge sky?<br/>
You've far outcried the latest cry—<br/>
Out Monet-ed Monet. I have said<br/>
Our Art was sleeping, but not dead.<br/>
Long have we waited for the Star,<br/>
I watched the skies for it afar,<br/>
The hour has come—and here you are."<br/>
<br/>
And that is how our artist friend<br/>
Found his struggles at an end,<br/>
And from his little Chelsea flat<br/>
Became the Park Lane plutocrat.<br/>
'Neath his sheltered garden wall<br/>
When the rain begins to fall,<br/>
And the stormy winds do blow,<br/>
You may see them in a row,<br/>
Red effects and lake and yellow<br/>
Getting nicely blurred and mellow.<br/>
With the subtle gauzy mist<br/>
Of the great Impressionist.<br/>
Ask him how he chanced to find<br/>
How to leave the French behind,<br/>
And he answers quick and smart,<br/>
"English climate's best for Art."<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"></SPAN> EMPIRE BUILDERS</h2>
<p>Captain Temple, D.S.O.,<br/>
With his banjo and retriever.<br/>
"Rough, I know, on poor old Flo,<br/>
But, by Jove! I couldn't leave her."<br/>
Niger ribbon on his breast,<br/>
In his blood the Niger fever,<br/>
Captain Temple, D.S.O.,<br/>
With his banjo and retriever.<br/>
<br/>
Cox of the Politicals,<br/>
With his cigarette and glasses,<br/>
Skilled in Pushtoo gutturals,<br/>
Odd-job man among the Passes,<br/>
Keeper of the Zakka Khels,<br/>
Tutor of the Khaiber Ghazis,<br/>
Cox of the Politicals,<br/>
With his cigarette and glasses.<br/>
<br/>
Mr. Hawkins, Junior Sub.,<br/>
Late of Woolwich and Thames Ditton,<br/>
Thinks his battery the hub<br/>
Of the whole wide orb of Britain.<br/>
Half a hero, half a cub,<br/>
Lithe and playful as a kitten,<br/>
Mr. Hawkins, Junior Sub.,<br/>
Late of Woolwich and Thames Ditton.<br/>
<br/>
Eighty Tommies, big and small,<br/>
Grumbling hard as is their habit.<br/>
"Say, mate, what's a Bunerwal?"<br/>
"Sometime like a bloomin' rabbit."<br/>
"Got to hoof it to Chitral!"<br/>
"Blarst ye, did ye think to cab it!"<br/>
Eighty Tommies, big and small,<br/>
Grumbling hard as is their habit.<br/>
<br/>
Swarthy Goorkhas, short and stout,<br/>
Merry children, laughing, crowing,<br/>
Don't know what it's all about,<br/>
Don't know any use in knowing;<br/>
Only know they mean to go<br/>
Where the Sirdar thinks of going.<br/>
Little Goorkhas, brown and stout,<br/>
Merry children, laughing, crowing.<br/>
<br/>
Funjaub Rifles, fit and trim,<br/>
Curly whiskered sons of battle,<br/>
Very dignified and prim<br/>
Till they hear the Jezails rattle;<br/>
Cattle thieves of yesterday,<br/>
Now the wardens of the cattle,<br/>
Fighting Brahmins of Lahore,<br/>
Curly whiskered sons of battle.<br/>
<br/>
Up the winding mountain path<br/>
See the long-drawn column go;<br/>
Himalayan aftermath<br/>
Lying rosy on the snow.<br/>
Motley ministers of wrath<br/>
Building better than they know,<br/>
In the rosy aftermath<br/>
Trailing upward to the snow.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"></SPAN> THE GROOM'S ENCORE</h2>
<h5>(Being a Sequel to "The Groom's Story" in "Songs of Action")</h5>
<p>Not tired of 'earin' stories! You're a nailer,<br/>
so you are!<br/>
I thought I should 'ave choked you off with<br/>
that 'ere motor-car.<br/>
Well, mister, 'ere's another; and, mind you,<br/>
it's a fact,<br/>
Though you'll think perhaps I copped it<br/>
out o' some blue ribbon tract.<br/>
<br/>
It was in the days when farmer men were<br/>
jolly-faced and stout,<br/>
For all the cash was comin' in and little<br/>
goin' out,<br/>
But now, you see, the farmer men are<br/>
'ungry-faced and thin,<br/>
For all the cash is goin' out and little<br/>
comin' in.<br/>
<br/>
But in the days I'm speakin' of, before<br/>
the drop in wheat,<br/>
The life them farmers led was such as<br/>
couldn't well be beat;<br/>
They went the pace amazin', they 'unted<br/>
and they shot,<br/>
And this 'ere Jeremiah Brown the liveliest<br/>
of the lot.<br/>
<br/>
'E was a fine young fellar; the best roun'<br/>
'ere by far,<br/>
But just a bit full-blooded, as fine young<br/>
fellars are;<br/>
Which I know they didn't ought to, an' it's<br/>
very wrong of course,<br/>
But the colt wot never capers makes a<br/>
mighty useless 'orse.<br/>
<br/>
The lad was never vicious, but 'e made the<br/>
money go,<br/>
For 'e was ready with 'is "yes," and back-<br/>
ward with 'is "no."<br/>
And so 'e turned to drink which is the<br/>
avenoo to 'ell,<br/>
An' 'ow 'e came to stop 'imself is wot' I<br/>
'ave to tell.<br/>
<br/>
Four days on end 'e never knew 'ow 'e 'ad<br/>
got to bed,<br/>
Until one mornin' fifty clocks was tickin'<br/>
in 'is 'ead,<br/>
And on the same the doctor came, "You're<br/>
very near D.T.,<br/>
If you don't stop yourself, young chap,<br/>
you'll pay the price," said 'e.<br/>
<br/>
"It takes the form of visions, as I fear<br/>
you'll quickly know;<br/>
Perhaps a string o' monkeys, all a-sittin' in<br/>
a row,<br/>
Perhaps it's frogs or beetles, perhaps it's<br/>
rats or mice,<br/>
There are many sorts of visions and<br/>
there's none of 'em is nice."<br/>
<br/>
But Brown 'e started laughin': "No<br/>
doctor's muck," says 'e,<br/>
"A take-'em-break-'em gallop is the only<br/>
cure for me!<br/>
They 'unt to-day down 'Orsham way.<br/>
Bring round the sorrel mare,<br/>
If them monkeys come inquirin' you can<br/>
send 'em on down there."<br/>
<br/>
Well, Jeremiah rode to 'ounds, exactly as<br/>
'e said.<br/>
But all the time the doctor's words were<br/>
ringin' in 'is 'ead —<br/>
"If you don't stop yourself, young chap,<br/>
you've got to pay the price,<br/>
There are many sorts of visions, but none<br/>
of 'em is nice."<br/>
<br/>
They found that day at Leonards Lee and<br/>
ran to Shipley Wood,<br/>
'Ell-for-leather all the way, with scent<br/>
and weather good.<br/>
Never a check to 'Orton Beck and on<br/>
across the Weald,<br/>
And all the way the Sussex clay was weed-<br/>
in' out the field.<br/>
<br/>
There's not a man among them could<br/>
remember such a run,<br/>
Straight as a rule to Bramber Pool and on<br/>
by Annington,<br/>
They followed still past Breeding 'ill<br/>
and on by Steyning Town,<br/>
Until they'd cleared the 'edges and were<br/>
out upon the Down.<br/>
<br/>
Full thirty mile from Plimmers Style,<br/>
without a check or fault,<br/>
Full thirty mile the 'ounds 'ad run and<br/>
never called a 'alt.<br/>
One by one the Field was done until at<br/>
Finden Down,<br/>
There was no one with the 'untsman save<br/>
young Jeremiah Brown.<br/>
<br/>
And then the 'untsman '<i>e</i> was beat. 'Is<br/>
'orse 'ad tripped and fell.<br/>
"By George," said Brown, "I'll go alone,<br/>
and follow it to — well,<br/>
The place that it belongs to." And as 'e<br/>
made the vow,<br/>
There broke from right in front of 'im<br/>
the queerest kind of row.<br/>
<br/>
There lay a copse of 'azels on the border<br/>
of the track,<br/>
And into this two 'ounds 'ad run — them<br/>
two was all the pack —<br/>
And now from these 'ere 'azels there came<br/>
a fearsome 'owl,<br/>
With a yappin' and a snappin' and a<br/>
wicked snarlin' growl.<br/>
<br/>
Jeremiah's blood ran cold — a frightened<br/>
man was 'e,<br/>
But he butted through the bushes just<br/>
to see what 'e could see,<br/>
And there beneath their shadow, blood<br/>
drippin' from his jaws,<br/>
Was an awful creature standin' with a<br/>
'ound beneath its paws.<br/>
<br/>
A fox? Five foxes rolled in one — a<br/>
pony's weight and size,<br/>
A rampin', ragin' devil, all fangs and<br/>
'air and eyes;<br/>
Too scared to speak, with shriek on shriek,<br/>
Brown galloped from the sight<br/>
With just one thought within 'is mind —<br/>
"The doctor told me right."<br/>
<br/>
That evenin' late the minister was seated<br/>
in his study,<br/>
When in there rushed a 'untin' man, all<br/>
travel-stained and muddy,<br/>
"Give me the Testament!" he cried, "And<br/>
'ear my sacred vow,<br/>
That not one drop of drink shall ever pass<br/>
my lips from now."<br/>
<br/>
'E swore it and 'e kept it and 'e keeps it to<br/>
this day,<br/>
'E 'as turned from gin to ginger and says 'e<br/>
finds it pay,<br/>
You can search the whole o' Sussex from<br/>
'ere to Brighton Town,<br/>
And you wouldn't find a better man than<br/>
Jeremiah Brown.<br/>
<br/>
And the vision — it was just a wolf, a big<br/>
Siberian,<br/>
A great, fierce, 'ungry devil from a show-<br/>
man's caravan,<br/>
But it saved 'im from perdition — and I<br/>
don't mind if I do,<br/>
I 'aven't seen no wolf myself — so 'ere's<br/>
my best to you!<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN> THE BAY HORSE</h2>
<p>Squire wants the bay horse,<br/>
For it is the best.<br/>
Squire holds the mortgage;<br/>
Where's the interest?<br/>
Haven't got the interest,<br/>
Can't raise a sou;<br/>
Shan't sell the bay horse,<br/>
Whatever he may do.<br/>
<br/>
Did you see the bay horse?<br/>
Such a one to go!<br/>
He took a bit of ridin',<br/>
When I showed him at the Show.<br/>
First prize the broad jump,<br/>
First prize the high;<br/>
Gold medal, Class A,<br/>
You'll see it by-and-by.<br/>
<br/>
I bred the bay horse<br/>
On the Withy Farm.<br/>
I broke the bay horse,<br/>
<i>He</i> broke my arm.<br/>
Don't blame the bay horse,<br/>
Blame the brittle bone,<br/>
I bred him and I've fed him,<br/>
And he's all my very own.<br/>
<br/>
Just watch the bay horse<br/>
Chock full of sense!<br/>
Ain't he just beautiful,<br/>
Risin' to a fence!<br/>
Just hear the bay horse<br/>
Whinin' in his stall,<br/>
Purrin' like a pussy cat<br/>
When he hears me call.<br/>
<br/>
But if Squire's lawyer<br/>
Serves me with his writ,<br/>
I'll take the bay horse<br/>
To Marley gravel pit.<br/>
Over the quarry edge,<br/>
I'll sit him tight,<br/>
If he wants the brown hide,<br/>
He's welcome to the white!<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN> THE OUTCASTS</h2>
<p>Three women stood by the river's flood<br/>
In the gas-lamp's murky light,<br/>
A devil watched them on the left,<br/>
And an angel on the right.<br/>
<br/>
The clouds of lead flowed overhead;<br/>
The leaden stream below;<br/>
They marvelled much, that outcast three,<br/>
Why Fate should use them so.<br/>
<br/>
Said one: "I have a mother dear,<br/>
Who lieth ill abed,<br/>
And by my sin the wage I win<br/>
From which she hath her bread."<br/>
<br/>
Said one: "I am an outcast's child,<br/>
And such I came on earth.<br/>
If me ye blame, for this my shame,<br/>
Whom blame ye for my birth?"<br/>
<br/>
The third she sank a sin-blotched face,<br/>
And prayed that she might rest,<br/>
In the weary flow of the stream below,<br/>
As on her mother's breast.<br/>
<br/>
Now past there came a godly man,<br/>
Of goodly stock and blood,<br/>
And as he passed one frown he cast<br/>
At that sad sisterhood.<br/>
<br/>
Sorely it grieved that godly man,<br/>
To see so foul a sight,<br/>
He turned his face, and strode apace,<br/>
And left them to the night.<br/>
<br/>
But the angel drew her sisters three,<br/>
Within her pinions' span,<br/>
And the crouching devil slunk away<br/>
To join the godly man.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN> THE END</h2>
<p>"Tell me what to get and I will get<br/>
it."<br/>
"Then get that picture — that — the<br/>
girl in white."<br/>
"Now tell me where you wish that I should<br/>
set it."<br/>
"Lean it where I can see it — in the<br/>
light."<br/>
<br/>
"If there is more, sir, you have but to say<br/>
it."<br/>
"Then bring those letters — those<br/>
which lie apart."<br/>
"Here is the packet! Tell me where to<br/>
lay it."<br/>
"Stoop over, nurse, and lay it on<br/>
my heart."<br/>
<br/>
"Thanks for your silence, nurse! You<br/>
understand me!<br/>
And now I'll try to manage for<br/>
myself.<br/>
But, as you go, I'll trouble you to hand<br/>
me<br/>
The small blue bottle there upon the<br/>
shelf.<br/>
<br/>
"And so farewell! I feel that I am<br/>
keeping<br/>
The sunlight from you; may your<br/>
walk be bright!<br/>
When you return I may perchance be<br/>
sleeping,<br/>
So, ere you go, one hand-clasp<br/>
and good night!"<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN> 1902-1909</h2>
<p>They recruited William Evans<br/>
From the ploughtail and the spade;<br/>
Ten years' service in the Devons<br/>
Left him smart as they are made.<br/>
<br/>
Thirty or a trifle older,<br/>
Rather over six foot high,<br/>
Trim of waist and broad of shoulder,<br/>
Yellow-haired and blue of eye;<br/>
<br/>
Short of speech and very solid,<br/>
Fixed in purpose as a rock,<br/>
Slow, deliberate, and stolid,<br/>
Of the real West-country stock.<br/>
<br/>
He had never been to college,<br/>
Got his teaching in the corps,<br/>
You can pick up useful knowledge<br/>
'Twixt Saltash and Singapore.<br/>
<br/>
Old Field-Cornet Piet van Celling<br/>
Lived just northward of the Vaal,<br/>
And he called his white-washed dwelling,<br/>
Blesbock Farm, Rhenoster Kraal.<br/>
<br/>
In his politics unbending,<br/>
Stern of speech and grim of face,<br/>
He pursued the never-ending<br/>
Quarrel with the English race.<br/>
<br/>
Grizzled hair and face of copper,<br/>
Hard as nails from work and sport,<br/>
Just the model of a Dopper<br/>
Of the fierce old fighting sort.<br/>
<br/>
With a shaggy bearded quota<br/>
On commando at his order,<br/>
He went off with Louis Botha<br/>
Trekking for the British border.<br/>
<br/>
When Natal was first invaded<br/>
He was fighting night and day,<br/>
Then he scouted and he raided,<br/>
With De Wet and Delaney.<br/>
<br/>
Till he had a brush with Plumer,<br/>
Got a bullet in his arm,<br/>
And returned in sullen humour<br/>
To the shelter of his farm.<br/>
<br/>
Now it happened that the Devons,<br/>
Moving up in that direction,<br/>
Sent their Colour-Sergeant Evans<br/>
Foraging with half a section.<br/>
<br/>
By a friendly Dutchman guided,<br/>
A Van Eloff or De Vilier,<br/>
They were promptly trapped and hided,<br/>
In a manner too familiar.<br/>
<br/>
When the sudden scrap was ended,<br/>
And they sorted out the bag,<br/>
Sergeant Evans lay extended<br/>
Mauseritis in his leg.<br/>
<br/>
So the Kaffirs bore him, cursing,<br/>
From the scene of his disaster,<br/>
And they left him to the nursing<br/>
Of the daughters of their master.<br/>
<br/>
Now the second daughter, Sadie —<br/>
But the subject why pursue?<br/>
Wounded youth and tender lady,<br/>
Ancient tale but ever new.<br/>
<br/>
On the stoep they spent the gloaming,<br/>
Watched the shadows on the veldt,<br/>
Or she led her cripple roaming<br/>
To the eucalyptus belt.<br/>
<br/>
He would lie and play with Jacko,<br/>
The baboon from Bushman's Kraal,<br/>
Smoked Magaliesberg tobacco<br/>
While she lisped to him in Taal.<br/>
<br/>
Till he felt that he had rather<br/>
He had died amid the slaughter,<br/>
If the harshness of the father<br/>
Were not softened in the daughter.<br/>
<br/>
So he asked an English question,<br/>
And she answered him in Dutch,<br/>
But her smile was a suggestion,<br/>
And he treated it as such.<br/>
<br/>
Now among Rhenoster kopjes<br/>
Somewhat northward of the Vaal,<br/>
You may see four little chappies,<br/>
Three can walk and one can crawl.<br/>
<br/>
And the blue of Transvaal heavens<br/>
Is reflected in their eyes,<br/>
Each a little William Evans,<br/>
Smaller model — pocket size.<br/>
<br/>
Each a little Burgher Piet<br/>
Of the hardy Boer race,<br/>
Two great peoples seem to meet<br/>
In the tiny sunburned face.<br/>
<br/>
And they often greatly wonder<br/>
Why old granddad and Papa,<br/>
Should have been so far asunder,<br/>
Till united by mamma.<br/>
<br/>
And when asked, "Are you a Boer.<br/>
Or a little Englishman?"<br/>
Each will answer, short and sure,<br/>
"I am a South African."<br/>
<br/>
But the father answers, chaffing,<br/>
"Africans but British too."<br/>
And the children echo, laughing,<br/>
"Half of mother — half of you."<br/>
<br/>
It may seem a crude example,<br/>
In an isolated case,<br/>
But the story is a sample<br/>
Of the welding of the race.<br/>
<br/>
So from bloodshed and from sorrow,<br/>
From the pains of yesterday,<br/>
Comes the nation of to-morrow<br/>
Broadly based and built to stay.<br/>
<br/>
Loyal spirits strong in union,<br/>
Joined by kindred faith and blood;<br/>
Brothers in the wide communion<br/>
Of our sea-girt brotherhood.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN> THE WANDERER {1}</h2>
<h5>1 With acknowledgment to my friend Sir A. Quiller-Couch.</h5>
<p>'Twas in the shadowy gloaming<br/>
Of a cold and wet March day,<br/>
That a wanderer came roaming<br/>
From countries far away.<br/>
<br/>
Scant raiment had he round him,<br/>
Nor purse, nor worldly gear,<br/>
Hungry and faint we found him,<br/>
And bade him welcome here.<br/>
<br/>
His weary frame bent double,<br/>
His eyes were old and dim,<br/>
His face was writhed with trouble<br/>
Which none might share with him.<br/>
<br/>
His speech was strange and broken,<br/>
And none could understand,<br/>
Such words as might be spoken<br/>
In some far distant land.<br/>
<br/>
We guessed not whence he hailed from,<br/>
Nor knew what far-off quay<br/>
His roving bark had sailed from<br/>
Before he came to me.<br/>
<br/>
But there he was, so slender,<br/>
So helpless and so pale,<br/>
That my wife's heart grew tender<br/>
For one who seemed so frail.<br/>
<br/>
She cried, "But you must bide here!<br/>
You shall no further roam.<br/>
Grow stronger by our side here,<br/>
Within our moorland home!"<br/>
<br/>
She laid her best before him,<br/>
Homely and simple fare,<br/>
And to his couch she bore him<br/>
The raiment he should wear.<br/>
<br/>
To mine he had been welcome,<br/>
My suit of russet brown,<br/>
But she had dressed our weary guest<br/>
In a loose and easy gown.<br/>
<br/>
And long in peace he lay there,<br/>
Brooding and still and weak,<br/>
Smiling from day to day there<br/>
At thoughts he would not speak.<br/>
<br/>
The months flowed on, but ever<br/>
Our guest would still remain,<br/>
Nor made the least endeavour<br/>
To leave our home again.<br/>
<br/>
He heeded not for grammar,<br/>
Nor did we care to teach,<br/>
But soon he learned to stammer<br/>
Some words of English speech.<br/>
<br/>
With these our guest would tell us<br/>
The things that he liked best,<br/>
And order and compel us<br/>
To follow his behest.<br/>
<br/>
He ruled us without malice,<br/>
But as if he owned us all,<br/>
A sultan in his palace<br/>
With his servants at his call.<br/>
<br/>
Those calls came fast and faster,<br/>
Our service still we gave,<br/>
Till I who had been master<br/>
Had grown to be his slave.<br/>
<br/>
He claimed with grasping gestures<br/>
Each thing of price he saw,<br/>
Watches and rings and vestures,<br/>
His will the only law.<br/>
<br/>
In vain had I commanded,<br/>
In vain I struggled still,<br/>
Servants and wife were banded<br/>
To do the stranger's will.<br/>
<br/>
And then in deep dejection<br/>
It came to me one day,<br/>
That my own wife's affection<br/>
Had been beguiled away.<br/>
<br/>
Our love had known no danger,<br/>
So certain had it been!<br/>
And now to think a stranger<br/>
Should dare to step between.<br/>
<br/>
I saw him lie and harken<br/>
To the little songs she sung,<br/>
And when the shadows darken<br/>
I could hear his lisping tongue.<br/>
<br/>
They would sit in chambers shady,<br/>
When the light was growing dim,<br/>
Ah, my fickle-hearted lady!<br/>
With your arm embracing him.<br/>
<br/>
So, at last, lest he divide us,<br/>
I would put them to the test.<br/>
There was no one there beside us,<br/>
Save this interloping guest.<br/>
<br/>
So I took my stand before them,<br/>
Very silent and erect,<br/>
My accusing glance passed o'er them,<br/>
Though with no observed effect.<br/>
<br/>
But the lamp light shone upon her,<br/>
And I saw each tell-tale feature,<br/>
As I cried, "Now, on your honour,<br/>
Do or don't you love the creature?"<br/>
<br/>
But her answer seemed evasive,<br/>
It was "Ducky-doodle-doo!<br/>
If his mummy loves um babby,<br/>
Doesn't daddums love um too?"<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"></SPAN> BENDY'S SERMON</h2>
<p>[Bendigo, the well-known Nottingham prize fighter, became converted to
religion, and preached at revival meetings throughout the country.]</p>
<p>You didn't know of Bendigo! Well, that<br/>
knocks me out!<br/>
Who's your board school teacher? What's<br/>
he been about?<br/>
<br/>
Chock-a-block with fairy-tales — full of<br/>
useless cram,<br/>
And never heard o' Bendigo, the pride of<br/>
Nottingham!<br/>
<br/>
Bendy's short for Bendigo. You should<br/>
see him peel!<br/>
Half of him was whalebone, half of him<br/>
was steel,<br/>
<br/>
Fightin' weight eleven ten, five foot nine<br/>
in height,<br/>
Always ready to oblige if you want a<br/>
fight.<br/>
<br/>
I could talk of Bendigo from here to king-<br/>
dom come,<br/>
I guess before I ended you would wish your<br/>
dad was dumb.<br/>
<br/>
I'd tell you how he fought Ben Caunt, and<br/>
how the deaf 'un fell,<br/>
But the game is done, and the men are<br/>
gone — and maybe it's as well.<br/>
<br/>
Bendy he turned Methodist—he said he<br/>
felt a call,<br/>
He stumped the country preachin' and you<br/>
bet he filled the hall,<br/>
<br/>
If you seed him in the pulpit, a-bleatin'<br/>
like a lamb,<br/>
You'd never know bold Bendigo, the<br/>
pride of Nottingham.<br/>
<br/>
His hat was like a funeral, he'd got a<br/>
waiter's coat,<br/>
With a hallelujah collar and a choker round<br/>
his throat,<br/>
<br/>
His pals would laugh and say in chaff that<br/>
Bendigo was right,<br/>
In takin' on the devil, since he'd no one<br/>
else to fight.<br/>
<br/>
But he was very earnest, improvin' day by<br/>
day,<br/>
A-workin' and a-preachin' just as his duty<br/>
lay,<br/>
<br/>
But the devil he was waitin', and in the<br/>
final bout,<br/>
He hit him hard below his guard and<br/>
knocked poor Bendy out.<br/>
<br/>
Now I'll tell you how it happened. He<br/>
was preachin' down at Brum,<br/>
He was billed just like a circus, you should<br/>
see the people come,<br/>
<br/>
The chapel it was crowded, and in the fore-<br/>
most row,<br/>
There was half a dozen bruisers who'd a<br/>
grudge at Bendigo.<br/>
<br/>
There was Tommy Piatt of Bradford,<br/>
Solly Jones of Perry Bar,<br/>
Long Connor from the Bull Ring, the<br/>
same wot drew with Carr,<br/>
<br/>
Jack Ball the fightin gunsmith, Joe Mur-<br/>
phy from the Mews,<br/>
And Iky Moss, the bettin' boss, the<br/>
Champion of the Jews.<br/>
<br/>
A very pretty handful a-sittin' in a<br/>
string,<br/>
Full of beer and impudence, ripe for any-<br/>
thing,<br/>
<br/>
Sittin' in a string there, right under<br/>
Bendy's nose,<br/>
If his message was for sinners, he could<br/>
make a start on those.<br/>
<br/>
Soon he heard them chaflin'; "Hi, Bendy!<br/>
Here's a go!"<br/>
"How much are you coppin' by this Jump<br/>
to Glory show?"<br/>
<br/>
"Stow it, Bendy! Left the ring! Mighty<br/>
spry of you!<br/>
Didn't everybody know the ring was<br/>
leavin' you."<br/>
<br/>
Bendy fairly sweated as he stood above<br/>
and prayed,<br/>
"Look down, O Lord, and grip me with<br/>
a strangle hold!" he said.<br/>
<br/>
"Fix me with a strangle hold! Put a stop<br/>
on me!<br/>
I'm slippin', Lord, I'm slippin' and I'm<br/>
clingin' hard to Thee!"<br/>
<br/>
But the roughs they kept on chaffin' and<br/>
the uproar it was such<br/>
That the preacher in the pulpit might be<br/>
talkin' double Dutch,<br/>
<br/>
Till a workin' man he shouted out, a-<br/>
jumpin' to his feet,<br/>
"Give us a lead, your reverence, and heave<br/>
'em in the street."<br/>
<br/>
Then Bendy said, "Good Lord, since<br/>
first I left my sinful ways,<br/>
Thou knowest that to Thee alone I've<br/>
given up my days,<br/>
<br/>
But now, dear Lord"—and here he laid his<br/>
Bible on the shelf—<br/>
"I'll take, with your permission, just five<br/>
minutes for myself."<br/>
<br/>
He vaulted from the pulpit like a tiger<br/>
from a den,<br/>
They say it was a lovely sight to see him<br/>
floor his men;<br/>
<br/>
Right and left, and left and right, straight<br/>
and true and hard,<br/>
Till the Ebenezer Chapel looked more like<br/>
a knacker's yard.<br/>
<br/>
Platt was standin' on his back and lookup<br/>
at his toes,<br/>
Solly Jones of Perry Bar was feelin' for<br/>
his nose,<br/>
<br/>
Connor of the Bull Ring had all that he<br/>
could do<br/>
Rakin' for his ivories that lay about the<br/>
pew.<br/>
<br/>
Jack Ball the fightin' gunsmith was in a<br/>
peaceful sleep,<br/>
Joe Murphy lay across him, all tied up<br/>
in a heap,<br/>
<br/>
Five of them was twisted in a tangle on<br/>
the floor,<br/>
And Iky Moss, the bettin' boss, had<br/>
sprinted for the door.<br/>
<br/>
Five repentant fightin' men, sitting in a<br/>
row,<br/>
Listenin' to words of grace from Mister<br/>
Bendigo,<br/>
<br/>
Listenin' to his reverence — all as good<br/>
as gold,<br/>
Pretty little baa-lambs, gathered to the<br/>
fold.<br/>
<br/>
So that's the way that Bendy ran his<br/>
mission in the slum,<br/>
And preached the Holy Gospel to the<br/>
fightin' men of Brum,<br/>
<br/>
"The Lord," said he, "has given me His<br/>
message from on high,<br/>
And if you interrupt Him, I will know<br/>
the reason why."<br/>
<br/>
But to think of all your schooling clean<br/>
wasted, thrown away,<br/>
Darned if I can make out what you're<br/>
learnin' all the day,<br/>
<br/>
Grubbin' up old fairy-tales, fillin' up with<br/>
cram,<br/>
And didn't know of Bendigo, the pride<br/>
of Nottingham.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN> II. — PHILOSOPHIC VERSES</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"></SPAN> COMPENSATION</h2>
<p>The grime is on the window pane,<br/>
Pale the London sunbeams fall,<br/>
And show the smudge of mildew stain,<br/>
Which lies on the distempered wall.<br/>
<br/>
I am a cripple, as you see,<br/>
And here I lie, a broken thing,<br/>
But God has given flight to me,<br/>
That mocks the swiftest eagle wing.<br/>
<br/>
For if I will to see or hear,<br/>
Quick as the thought my spirit flies,<br/>
And lo! the picture flashes clear,<br/>
Through all the mist of centuries.<br/>
<br/>
I can recall the Tigris' strand,<br/>
Where once the Turk and Tartar met,<br/>
When the great Lord of Samarcand<br/>
Struck down the Sultan Bajazet.<br/>
<br/>
Under a ten-league swirl of dust<br/>
The roaring battle swings and sways,<br/>
Now reeling down, now upward thrust,<br/>
The crescent sparkles through the<br/>
haze.<br/>
<br/>
I see the Janissaries fly,<br/>
I see the chain-mailed leader fall,<br/>
I hear the Tekbar clear and high,<br/>
The true believer's battle-call.<br/>
<br/>
And tossing o'er the press I mark<br/>
The horse-tail banner over all,<br/>
Shaped like the smudge of mildew dark<br/>
That lies on the distempered wall.<br/>
<br/>
And thus the meanest thing I see<br/>
Will set a scene within my brain,<br/>
And every sound that comes to me,<br/>
Will bring strange echoes back again.<br/>
<br/>
Hark now! In rhythmic monotone,<br/>
You hear the murmur of the mart,<br/>
The low, deep, unremitting moan,<br/>
That comes from weary London's<br/>
heart.<br/>
<br/>
But I can change it to the hum<br/>
Of multitudinous acclaim,<br/>
When triple-walled Byzantium,<br/>
Re-echoes the Imperial name.<br/>
<br/>
I hear the beat of armed feet,<br/>
The legions clanking on their way,<br/>
The long shout rims from street to street,<br/>
With rolling drum and trumpet bray.<br/>
<br/>
So I hear it rising, falling,<br/>
Till it dies away once more,<br/>
And I hear the costers calling<br/>
Mid the weary London roar.<br/>
<br/>
Who shall pity then the lameness,<br/>
Which still holds me from the ground?<br/>
Who commiserate the sameness<br/>
Of the scene that girds me round?<br/>
<br/>
Though I lie a broken wreck,<br/>
Though I seem to want for all,<br/>
Still the world is at my beck<br/>
And the ages at my call.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"></SPAN> THE BANNER OF PROGRESS</h2>
<p>There's a banner in our van,<br/>
And we follow as we can,<br/>
For at times we scarce can see it,<br/>
And at times it flutters high.<br/>
But however it be flown,<br/>
Still we know it as our own,<br/>
And we follow, ever follow,<br/>
Where we see the banner fly.<br/>
<br/>
In the struggle and the strife,<br/>
In the weariness of life,<br/>
The banner-man may stumble,<br/>
He may falter in the fight.<br/>
But if one should fail or slip,<br/>
There are other hands to grip,<br/>
And it's forward, ever forward,<br/>
From the darkness to the light.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"></SPAN> HOPE</h2>
<p>Faith may break on reason,<br/>
Faith may prove a treason<br/>
To that highest gift<br/>
That is granted by Thy grace;<br/>
But Hope! Ah, let us cherish<br/>
Some spark that may not perish,<br/>
Some tiny spark to cheer us,<br/>
As we wander through the waste!<br/>
<br/>
A little lamp beside us,<br/>
A little lamp to guide us,<br/>
Where the path is rocky,<br/>
Where the road is steep.<br/>
That when the light falls dimmer,<br/>
Still some God-sent glimmer<br/>
May hold us steadfast ever,<br/>
To the track that we should keep.<br/>
<br/>
Hope for the trending of it,<br/>
Hope for the ending of it,<br/>
Hope for all around us,<br/>
That it ripens in the sun.<br/>
<br/>
Hope for what is waning,<br/>
Hope for what is gaining,<br/>
Hope for what is waiting<br/>
When the long day is done.<br/>
<br/>
Hope that He, the nameless,<br/>
May still be best and blameless,<br/>
Nor ever end His highest<br/>
With the earthworm and the slime.<br/>
Hope that o'er the border,<br/>
There lies a land of order,<br/>
With higher law to reconcile<br/>
The lower laws of Time.<br/>
<br/>
Hope that every vexed life,<br/>
Finds within that next life,<br/>
Something that may recompense,<br/>
Something that may cheer.<br/>
And that perchance the lowest one<br/>
Is truly but the slowest one,<br/>
Quickened by the sorrow<br/>
Which is waiting for him here.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"></SPAN> RELIGIO MEDICI</h2>
<p>1<br/>
God's own best will bide the test,<br/>
And God's own worst will fall;<br/>
But, best or worst or last or first,<br/>
He ordereth it all.<br/>
<br/>
2<br/>
For <i>all</i> is good, if understood,<br/>
(Ah, could we understand!)<br/>
And right and ill are tools of skill<br/>
Held in His either hand.<br/>
<br/>
3<br/>
The harlot and the anchorite,<br/>
The martyr and the rake,<br/>
Deftly He fashions each aright,<br/>
Its vital part to take.<br/>
<br/>
4<br/>
Wisdom He makes to form the fruit<br/>
Where the high blossoms be;<br/>
And Lust to kill the weaker shoot,<br/>
And Drink to trim the tree.<br/>
<br/>
5<br/>
And Holiness that so the bole<br/>
Be solid at the core;<br/>
And Plague and Fever, that the whole<br/>
Be changing evermore.<br/>
<br/>
6<br/>
He strews the microbes in the lung,<br/>
The blood-clot in the brain;<br/>
With test and test He picks the best,<br/>
Then tests them once again.<br/>
<br/>
7<br/>
He tests the body and the mind,<br/>
He rings them o'er and o'er;<br/>
And if they crack, He throws them back,<br/>
And fashions them once more.<br/>
<br/>
8<br/>
He chokes the infant throat with slime,<br/>
He sets the ferment free;<br/>
He builds the tiny tube of lime<br/>
That blocks the artery.<br/>
<br/>
9<br/>
He lets the youthful dreamer store<br/>
Great projects in his brain,<br/>
Until He drops the fungus spore<br/>
That smears them out again.<br/>
<br/>
10<br/>
He stores the milk that feeds the babe,<br/>
He dulls the tortured nerve;<br/>
He gives a hundred joys of sense<br/>
Where few or none might serve.<br/>
<br/>
11<br/>
And still He trains the branch of good<br/>
Where the high blossoms be,<br/>
And wieldeth still the shears of ill<br/>
To prune and prime His tree.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"></SPAN> MAN'S LIMITATION</h2>
<p>Man says that He is jealous,<br/>
Man says that He is wise,<br/>
Man says that He is watching<br/>
From His throne beyond the skies.<br/>
<br/>
But perchance the arch above us<br/>
Is one great mirror's span,<br/>
And the Figure seen so dimly<br/>
Is a vast reflected man.<br/>
<br/>
If it is love that gave us<br/>
A thousand blossoms bright,<br/>
Why should that love not save us<br/>
From poisoned aconite?<br/>
<br/>
If this man blesses sunshine<br/>
Which sets his fields aglow,<br/>
Shall that man curse the tempest<br/>
That lays his harvest low?<br/>
<br/>
If you may sing His praises<br/>
For health He gave to you,<br/>
What of this spine-curved cripple,<br/>
Shall he sing praises too?<br/>
<br/>
If you may justly thank Him<br/>
For strength in mind and limb,<br/>
Then what of yonder weakling —<br/>
Must he give thanks to Him?<br/>
<br/>
Ah dark, too dark, the riddle!<br/>
The tiny brain too small!<br/>
We call, and fondly listen,<br/>
For answer to that call.<br/>
<br/>
There comes no word to tell us<br/>
Why this and that should be,<br/>
Why you should live with sorrow,<br/>
And joy should live with me.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"></SPAN> MIND AND MATTER</h2>
<p>Great was his soul and high his aim,<br/>
He viewed the world, and he could trace<br/>
A lofty plan to leave his name<br/>
Immortal 'mid the human race.<br/>
But as he planned, and as he worked,<br/>
The fungus spore within him lurked.<br/>
<br/>
Though dark the present and the past,<br/>
The future seemed a sunlit thing.<br/>
Still ever deeper and more vast,<br/>
The changes that he hoped to bring.<br/>
His was the will to dare and do;<br/>
But still the stealthy fungus grew.<br/>
<br/>
Alas the plans that came to nought!<br/>
Alas the soul that thrilled in vain!<br/>
The sunlit future that he sought<br/>
Was but a mirage of the brain.<br/>
Where now the wit? Where now the will?<br/>
The fungus is the master still.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"></SPAN> DARKNESS</h2>
<p>A gentleman of wit and charm,<br/>
A kindly heart, a cleanly mind,<br/>
One who was quick with hand or purse,<br/>
To lift the burden of his kind.<br/>
A brain well balanced and mature,<br/>
A soul that shrank from all things<br/>
base,<br/>
So rode he forth that winter day,<br/>
Complete in every mortal grace.<br/>
<br/>
And then — the blunder of a horse,<br/>
The crash upon the frozen clods,<br/>
And — Death? Ah! no such dignity,<br/>
But Life, all twisted and at odds!<br/>
At odds in body and in soul,<br/>
Degraded to some brutish state,<br/>
A being loathsome and malign,<br/>
Debased, obscene, degenerate.<br/>
<br/>
Pathology? The case is clear,<br/>
The diagnosis is exact;<br/>
A bone depressed, a haemorrhage,<br/>
The pressure on a nervous tract.<br/>
Theology? Ah, there's the rub!<br/>
Since brain and soul together fade,<br/>
Then when the brain is dead — enough!<br/>
Lord help us, for we need Thine aid!<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN> III — MISCELLANEOUS VERSES</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"></SPAN> A WOMAN'S LOVE</h2>
<p>I am not blind — I understand;<br/>
I see him loyal, good, and wise,<br/>
I feel decision in his hand,<br/>
I read his honour in his eyes.<br/>
Manliest among men is he<br/>
With every gift and grace to clothe<br/>
him;<br/>
He never loved a girl but me —<br/>
And I — I loathe him! — loathe him!<br/>
<br/>
The other! Ah! I value him<br/>
Precisely at his proper rate,<br/>
A creature of caprice and whim,<br/>
Unstable, weak, importunate.<br/>
His thoughts are set on paltry gain —<br/>
You only tell me what I see —<br/>
I know him selfish, cold and vain;<br/>
But, oh! he's all the world to me!<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"></SPAN> BY THE NORTH SEA</h2>
<p>Her cheek was wet with North Sea spray,<br/>
We walked where tide and shingle<br/>
meet;<br/>
The long waves rolled from far away<br/>
To purr in ripples at our feet.<br/>
And as we walked it seemed to me<br/>
That three old friends had met that<br/>
day,<br/>
The old, old sky, the old, old sea,<br/>
And love, which is as old as they.<br/>
<br/>
Out seaward hung the brooding mist<br/>
We saw it rolling, fold on fold,<br/>
And marked the great Sun alchemist<br/>
Turn all its leaden edge to gold,<br/>
Look well, look well, oh lady mine,<br/>
The gray below, the gold above,<br/>
For so the grayest life may shine<br/>
All golden in the light of love.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="linkdecember_snow" id="linkdecember_snow"></SPAN> DECEMBER'S SNOW</h2>
<p>The bloom is on the May once more,<br/>
The chestnut buds have burst anew;<br/>
But, darling, all our springs are o'er,<br/>
'Tis winter still for me and you.<br/>
We plucked Life's blossoms long ago<br/>
What's left is but December's snow.<br/>
<br/>
But winter has its joys as fair,<br/>
The gentler joys, aloof, apart;<br/>
The snow may lie upon our hair<br/>
But never, darling, in our heart.<br/>
Sweet were the springs of long ago<br/>
But sweeter still December's snow.<br/>
<br/>
Yes, long ago, and yet to me<br/>
It seems a thing of yesterday;<br/>
The shade beneath the willow tree,<br/>
The word you looked but feared to say.<br/>
Ah! when I learned to love you so<br/>
What recked we of December's snow?<br/>
<br/>
But swift the ruthless seasons sped<br/>
And swifter still they speed away.<br/>
What though they bow the dainty head<br/>
And fleck the raven hair with gray?<br/>
The boy and girl of long ago<br/>
Are laughing through the veil of snow.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"></SPAN> SHAKESPEARE'S EXPOSTULATION</h2>
<p>Masters, I sleep not quiet in my grave,<br/>
There where they laid me, by the Avon<br/>
shore,<br/>
In that some crazy wights have set it forth<br/>
By arguments most false and fanciful,<br/>
Analogy and far-drawn inference,<br/>
That Francis Bacon, Earl of Verulam<br/>
(A man whom I remember in old days,<br/>
A learned judge with sly adhesive palms,<br/>
To which the suitor's gold was wont to<br/>
stick) —<br/>
That this same Verulam had writ the plays<br/>
Which were the fancies of my frolic brain.<br/>
What can they urge to dispossess the crown<br/>
Which all my comrades and the whole loud<br/>
world<br/>
Did in my lifetime lay upon my brow?<br/>
Look straitly at these arguments and see<br/>
How witless and how fondly slight they be.<br/>
<i>Imprimis</i>, they have urged that, being<br/>
born<br/>
In the mean compass of a paltry town,<br/>
I could not in my youth have trimmed<br/>
my mind<br/>
To such an eagle pitch, but must be found,<br/>
Like the hedge sparrow, somewhere near<br/>
the ground.<br/>
Bethink you, sirs, that though I was<br/>
denied<br/>
The learning which in colleges is found,<br/>
Yet may a hungry brain still find its fo<br/>
Wherever books may lie or men may be;<br/>
And though perchance by Isis or by Cam<br/>
The meditative, philosophic plant<br/>
May best luxuriate; yet some would say<br/>
That in the task of limning mortal life<br/>
A fitter preparation might be made<br/>
Beside the banks of Thames. And then<br/>
again,<br/>
If I be suspect, in that I was not<br/>
A fellow of a college, how, I pray,<br/>
Will Jonson pass, or Marlowe, or the rest,<br/>
Whose measured verse treads with as<br/>
proud a gait<br/>
As that which was my own? Whence did<br/>
they suck<br/>
This honey that they stored? Can you<br/>
recite<br/>
The vantages which each of these has had<br/>
And I had not? Or is the argument<br/>
That my Lord Verulam hath written all,<br/>
And covers in his wide-embracing self<br/>
The stolen fame of twenty smaller men?<br/>
You prate about my learning. I<br/>
would urge<br/>
My want of learning rather as a proof<br/>
That I am still myself. Have I not traced<br/>
A seaboard to Bohemia, and made<br/>
The cannons roar a whole wide century<br/>
Before the first was forged? Think you,<br/>
then,<br/>
That he, the ever-learned Verulam,<br/>
Would have erred thus? So may my very<br/>
faults<br/>
In their gross falseness prove that I am true,<br/>
And by that falseness gender truth in you.<br/>
And what is left? They say that they<br/>
have found<br/>
A script, wherein the writer tells my Lord<br/>
He is a secret poet. True enough!<br/>
But surely now that secret is o'er past.<br/>
Have you not read his poems? Know<br/>
you not<br/>
That in our day a learned chancellor<br/>
Might better far dispense unjustest law<br/>
Than be suspect of such frivolity<br/>
As lies in verse? Therefore his poetry<br/>
Was secret. Now that he is gone<br/>
'Tis so no longer. You may read his verse,<br/>
And judge if mine be better or be worse:<br/>
Read and pronounce! The meed of<br/>
praise is thine;<br/>
But still let his be his and mine be mine.<br/>
I say no more; but how can you for-<br/>
swear<br/>
Outspoken Jonson, he who knew me well;<br/>
So, too, the epitaph which still you read?<br/>
Think you they faced my sepulchre with<br/>
lies —<br/>
Gross lies, so evident and palpable<br/>
That every townsman must have wot of it,<br/>
And not a worshipper within the church<br/>
But must have smiled to see the marbled<br/>
fraud?<br/>
Surely this touches you? But if by chance<br/>
My reasoning still leaves you obdurate,<br/>
I'll lay one final plea. I pray you look<br/>
On my presentment, as it reaches you.<br/>
My features shall be sponsors for my fame;<br/>
My brow shall speak when Shakespeare's<br/>
voice is dumb,<br/>
And be his warrant in an age to come.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"></SPAN> THE EMPIRE</h2>
<h3>1902</h3>
<p>They said that it had feet of clay,<br/>
That its fall was sure and quick.<br/>
In the flames of yesterday<br/>
All the clay was burned to brick.<br/>
<br/>
When they carved our epitaph<br/>
And marked us doomed beyond recall,<br/>
"We are," we answered, with a laugh,<br/>
"The Empire that declines to fall."<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"></SPAN> A VOYAGE</h2>
<h3>1909</h3>
<p>Breathing the stale and stuffy air<br/>
Of office or consulting room,<br/>
Our thoughts will wander back to where<br/>
We heard the low Atlantic boom,<br/>
<br/>
And, creaming underneath our screw,<br/>
We watched the swirling waters break,<br/>
Silver filagrees on blue<br/>
Spreading fan-wise in our wake.<br/>
<br/>
Cribbed within the city's fold,<br/>
Fettered to our daily round,<br/>
We'll conjure up the haze of gold<br/>
Which ringed the wide horizon round.<br/>
<br/>
And still we'll break the sordid day<br/>
By fleeting visions far and fair,<br/>
The silver shield of Vigo Bay,<br/>
The long brown cliff of Finisterre.<br/>
<br/>
Where once the Roman galley sped,<br/>
Or Moorish corsair spread his sail,<br/>
By wooded shore, or sunlit head,<br/>
By barren hill or sea-washed vale<br/>
<br/>
We took our way. But we can swear,<br/>
That many countries we have scanned,<br/>
But never one that could compare<br/>
With our own island mother-land.<br/>
<br/>
The dream is o'er. No more we view<br/>
The shores of Christian or of Turk,<br/>
But turning to our tasks anew,<br/>
We bend us to our wonted work.<br/>
<br/>
But there will come to you and me<br/>
Some glimpse of spacious days gone<br/>
by,<br/>
The wide, wide stretches of the sea,<br/>
The mighty curtain of the sky,<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"></SPAN> THE ORPHANAGE</h2>
<p>When, ere the tangled web is reft,<br/>
The kid-gloved villain scowls and<br/>
sneers,<br/>
And hapless innocence is left<br/>
With no assets save sighs and tears,<br/>
<br/>
'Tis then, just then, that in there stalks<br/>
The hero, watchful of her needs;<br/>
He talks, Great heavens how he talks!<br/>
But we forgive him, for his deeds.<br/>
<br/>
Life is the drama here to-day<br/>
And Death the villain of the plot.<br/>
It is a realistic play.<br/>
Shall it end well or shall it not?<br/>
<br/>
The hero? Oh, the hero's part<br/>
Is vacant — to be played by you.<br/>
Then act it well! An orphan's heart<br/>
May beat the lighter if you do.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"></SPAN> SEXAGENARIUS LOQUITUR</h2>
<p>From our youth to our age<br/>
We have passed each stage<br/>
In old immemorial order,<br/>
From primitive days<br/>
Through flowery ways<br/>
With love like a hedge as their border.<br/>
Ah, youth was a kingdom of joy,<br/>
And we were the king and the queen,<br/>
When I was a year<br/>
Short of thirty, my dear,<br/>
And you were just nearing nineteen.<br/>
But dark follows light<br/>
And day follows night<br/>
As the old planet circles the sun;<br/>
And nature still traces<br/>
Her score on our faces<br/>
And tallies the years as they run.<br/>
Have they chilled the old warmth in your<br/>
heart?<br/>
I swear that they have not in mine,<br/>
Though I am a year<br/>
Short of sixty, my dear,<br/>
And you are — well, say thirty-nine.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033"></SPAN> NIGHT VOICES</h2>
<p>Father, father, who is that a-whispering?<br/>
Who is it who whispers in the wood?<br/>
You say it is the breeze<br/>
As it sighs among the trees,<br/>
But there's some one who whispers in the<br/>
wood.<br/>
<br/>
Father, father, who is that a-murmuring?<br/>
Who is it who murmurs in the night?<br/>
You say it is the roar<br/>
Of the wave upon the shore,<br/>
But there's some one who murmurs in the<br/>
night.<br/>
<br/>
Father, father, who is that who laughs<br/>
at us?<br/>
Who is it who chuckles in the glen?<br/>
Oh, father, let us go,<br/>
For the light is burning low,<br/>
And there's somebody laughing in the<br/>
glen.<br/>
<br/>
Father, father, tell me what you're waiting<br/>
for,<br/>
Tell me why your eyes are on the<br/>
door.<br/>
It is dark and it is late,<br/>
But you sit so still and straight,<br/>
Ever staring, ever smiling, at the door.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034"></SPAN> THE MESSAGE</h2>
<p>(From Heine)</p>
<p>Up, dear laddie, saddle quick,<br/>
And spring upon the leather!<br/>
Away post haste o'er fell and waste<br/>
With whip and spur together!<br/>
<br/>
And when you win to Duncan's kin<br/>
Draw one of them aside<br/>
And shortly say, "Which daughter may<br/>
We welcome as the bride?"<br/>
<br/>
And if he says, "It is the dark,"<br/>
Then quickly bring the mare,<br/>
But if he says, "It is the blonde,"<br/>
Then you have time to spare;<br/>
<br/>
But buy from off the saddler man<br/>
The stoutest cord you see,<br/>
Ride at your ease and say no word,<br/>
But bring it back to me.<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035"></SPAN> THE ECHO</h2>
<p>(After Heine)</p>
<p>Through the lonely mountain land<br/>
There rode a cavalier.<br/>
"Oh ride I to my darling's arms,<br/>
Or to the grave so drear?"<br/>
The Echo answered clear,<br/>
"The grave so drear."<br/>
<br/>
So onward rode the cavalier<br/>
And clouded was his brow.<br/>
"If now my hour be truly come,<br/>
Ah well, it must be now!"<br/>
The Echo answered low,<br/>
"It must be now."<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036"></SPAN> ADVICE TO A YOUNG AUTHOR</h2>
<p>First begin<br/>
Taking in.<br/>
Cargo stored,<br/>
All aboard,<br/>
Think about<br/>
Giving out.<br/>
Empty ship,<br/>
Useless trip!<br/>
<br/>
Never strain<br/>
Weary brain,<br/>
Hardly fit,<br/>
Wait a bit!<br/>
After rest<br/>
Comes the best.<br/>
<br/>
Sitting still,<br/>
Let it fill;<br/>
Never press;<br/>
Nerve stress<br/>
Always shows.<br/>
Nature knows.<br/>
<br/>
Critics kind,<br/>
Never mind!<br/>
Critics flatter,<br/>
No matter!<br/>
Critics curse,<br/>
None the worse.<br/>
Critics blame,<br/>
All the same!<br/>
<i>Do your best</i>.<br/>
Hang the rest!<br/></p>
<h2><SPAN name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"></SPAN> A LILT OF THE ROAD</h2>
<h5><i>Being the doggerel Itinerary of a Holiday in September</i>, 1908</h5>
<p>To St. Albans' town we came;<br/>
Roman Albanus — hence the name.<br/>
Whose shrine commemorates the faith<br/>
Which led him to a martyr's death.<br/>
A high cathedral marks his grave,<br/>
With noble screen and sculptured nave.<br/>
From thence to Hatfield lay our way,<br/>
Where the proud Cecils held their sway,<br/>
And ruled the country, more or less,<br/>
Since the days of Good Queen Bess.<br/>
Next through Hitchin's Quaker hold<br/>
To Bedford, where in days of old<br/>
John Bunyan, the unorthodox,<br/>
Did a deal in local stocks.<br/>
Then from Bedford's peaceful nook<br/>
Our pilgrim's progress still we took<br/>
Until we slackened up our pace<br/>
In Saint Neots' market-place.<br/>
<br/>
Next day, the motor flying fast,<br/>
Through Newark, Tuxford, Retford<br/>
passed,<br/>
Until at Doncaster we found<br/>
That we had crossed broad Yorkshire's<br/>
bound.<br/>
Northward and ever North we pressed,<br/>
The Brontë Country to our West.<br/>
Still on we flew without a wait,<br/>
Skirting the edge of Harrowgate,<br/>
And through a wild and dark ravine,<br/>
As bleak a pass as we have seen,<br/>
Until we slowly circled down<br/>
And settled into Settle town.<br/>
<br/>
On Sunday, in the pouring rain,<br/>
We started on our way again.<br/>
Through Kirkby Lonsdale on we drove,<br/>
The weary rain-clouds still above,<br/>
Until at last at Windermere<br/>
We felt our final port was near,<br/>
Thence the lake with wooded beach<br/>
Stretches far as eye can reach.<br/>
There above its shining breast<br/>
We enjoyed our welcome rest.<br/>
Tuesday saw us — still in rain —<br/>
Buzzing on our road again.<br/>
<br/>
Rydal first, the smallest lake,<br/>
Famous for great Wordsworth's sake;<br/>
Grasmere next appeared in sight,<br/>
Grim Helvellyn on the right,<br/>
Till we made our downward way<br/>
To the streets of Keswick gray.<br/>
Then amid a weary waste<br/>
On to Penrith Town we raced,<br/>
And for many a flying mile,<br/>
Past the ramparts of Carlisle,<br/>
Till we crossed the border line<br/>
Of the land of Auld lang syne.<br/>
Here we paused at Gretna Green,<br/>
Where many curious things were seen<br/>
At the grimy blacksmith's shop,<br/>
Where flying couples used to stop<br/>
And forge within the smithy door<br/>
The chain which lasts for evermore.<br/>
<br/>
They'd soon be back again, I think,<br/>
If blacksmith's skill could break the link.<br/>
Ecclefechan held us next,<br/>
Where old Tom Carlyle was vexed<br/>
By the clamour and the strife<br/>
Of this strange and varied life.<br/>
We saw his pipe, we saw his hat,<br/>
We saw the stone on which he sat.<br/>
The solid stone is resting there,<br/>
But where the sitter? Where, oh! where?<br/>
<br/>
Over a dreary wilderness<br/>
We had to take our path by guess,<br/>
For Scotland's glories don't include<br/>
The use of signs to mark the road.<br/>
For forty miles the way ran steep<br/>
Over bleak hills with scattered sheep,<br/>
Until at last, 'neath gloomy skies,<br/>
We saw the stately towers rise<br/>
Where noble Edinburgh lies —<br/>
No city fairer or more grand<br/>
Has ever sprung from human hand.<br/>
But I must add (the more's the pity)<br/>
That though in fair Dunedin's city<br/>
Scotland's taste is quite delightful,<br/>
The smaller Scottish towns are frightful.<br/>
<br/>
When in other lands I roam<br/>
And sing "There is no place like home."<br/>
In this respect I must confess<br/>
That no place has its ugliness.<br/>
Here on my mother's granite breast<br/>
We settled down and took our rest.<br/>
On Saturday we ventured forth<br/>
To push our journey to the North.<br/>
<br/>
Past Linlithgow first we sped,<br/>
Where the Palace rears its head,<br/>
Then on by Falkirk, till we pass<br/>
The famous valley and morass<br/>
Known as Bannockburn in story,<br/>
Brightest scene of Scottish glory.<br/>
On pleasure and instruction bent<br/>
We made the Stirling hill ascent,<br/>
And saw the wondrous vale beneath,<br/>
The lovely valley of Monteith,<br/>
Stretching under sunlit skies<br/>
To where the Trossach hills arise.<br/>
Thence we turned our willing car<br/>
Westward ho! to Callander,<br/>
Where childish memories awoke<br/>
In the wood of ash and oak,<br/>
Where in days so long gone by<br/>
I heard the woodland pigeons cry,<br/>
And, consternation in my face,<br/>
Legged it to some safer place.<br/>
<br/>
Next morning first we viewed a mound,<br/>
Memorial of some saint renowned,<br/>
And then the mouldered ditch and ramp<br/>
Which marked an ancient Roman camp.<br/>
Then past Lubnaig on we went,<br/>
Gazed on Ben Ledi's steep ascent,<br/>
And passed by lovely stream and valley<br/>
Through Dochart Glen to reach Dalmally,<br/>
Where on a rough and winding track<br/>
We wished ourselves in safety back;<br/>
Till on our left we gladly saw<br/>
The spreading waters of Loch Awe,<br/>
And still more gladly — truth to tell —<br/>
A very up-to-date hotel,<br/>
With Conan's church within its ground,<br/>
Which gave it quite a homely sound.<br/>
Thither we came upon the Sunday,<br/>
Viewed Kilchurn Castle on the Monday,<br/>
And Tuesday saw us sally forth<br/>
Bound for Oban and the North.<br/>
<br/>
We came to Oban in the rain,<br/>
I need not mention it again,<br/>
For you may take it as a fact<br/>
That in that Western Highland tract<br/>
It sometimes spouts and sometimes drops,<br/>
But never, never, never stops.<br/>
From Oban on we thought it well<br/>
To take the steamer for a spell.<br/>
But ere the motor went aboard<br/>
The Pass of Melfort we explored.<br/>
A lovelier vale, more full of peace,<br/>
Was never seen in classic Greece;<br/>
A wondrous gateway, reft and torn,<br/>
To open out the land of Lome.<br/>
Leading on for many a mile<br/>
To the kingdom of Argyle.<br/>
<br/>
Wednesday saw us on our way<br/>
Steaming out from Oban Bay,<br/>
(Lord, it was a fearsome day!)<br/>
To right and left we looked upon<br/>
All the lands of Stevenson —<br/>
Moidart, Morven, and Ardgour,<br/>
Ardshiel, Appin, and Mamore —<br/>
If their tale you wish to learn<br/>
Then to "Kidnapped" you must turn.<br/>
Strange that one man's eager brain<br/>
Can make those dead lands live again!<br/>
From the deck we saw Glencoe,<br/>
Where upon that night of woe<br/>
William's men did such a deed<br/>
As even now we blush to read.<br/>
Ben Nevis towered on our right,<br/>
The clouds concealed it from our sight,<br/>
But it was comforting to say<br/>
That over there Ben Nevis lay'.<br/>
Finally we made the land<br/>
At Fort William's sloping strand,<br/>
And in our car away we went<br/>
Along that lasting monument,<br/>
The good broad causeway which was made<br/>
By King George's General Wade.<br/>
He built a splendid road, no doubt,<br/>
Alas! he left the sign-posts out.<br/>
And so we wandered, sad to say,<br/>
Far from our appointed way,<br/>
Till twenty mile of rugged track<br/>
In a circle brought us back.<br/>
But the incident we viwed<br/>
In a philosophic mood.<br/>
Tired and hungry but serene<br/>
We settled at the Bridge of Spean.<br/>
<br/>
Our journey now we onward press<br/>
Toward the town of Inverness,<br/>
Through a country all alive<br/>
With memories of "forty-five."<br/>
The noble clans once gathered here,<br/>
Where now are only grouse and deer.<br/>
Alas, that men and crops and herds<br/>
Should ever yield their place to birds!<br/>
And that the splendid Highland race<br/>
Be swept aside to give more space<br/>
For forests where the deer may stray<br/>
For some rich owner far away,<br/>
Whose keeper guards the lonely glen<br/>
Which once sent out a hundred men!<br/>
When from Inverness we turned,<br/>
Feeling that a rest was earned.<br/>
We stopped at Nairn, for golf links famed,<br/>
"Scotland's Brighton" it is named,<br/>
Though really, when the phrase we heard,<br/>
It seemed a little bit absurd,<br/>
For Brighton's size compared to Nairn<br/>
Is just a mother to her bairn.<br/>
We halted for a day of rest,<br/>
But took one journey to the West<br/>
To view old Cawdor's tower and moat<br/>
Of which unrivalled Shakespeare wrote,<br/>
Where once Macbeth, the schemer deep,<br/>
Slew royal Duncan in his sleep,<br/>
But actors since avenged his death<br/>
By often murdering Macbeth.<br/>
Hard by we saw the circles gray<br/>
Where Druid priests were wont to pray.<br/>
<br/>
Three crumbling monuments we found,<br/>
With Stonehenge monoliths around,<br/>
But who had built and who had planned<br/>
We tried in vain to understand,<br/>
As future learned men may search<br/>
The reasons for our village church.<br/>
This was our limit, for next day<br/>
We turned upon, our homeward way,<br/>
Passing first Culloden's plain<br/>
Where the tombstones of the slain<br/>
Loom above the purple heather.<br/>
There the clansmen lie together —<br/>
Men from many an outland skerry,<br/>
Men from Athol and Glengarry,<br/>
Camerons from wild Mamore,<br/>
MacDonalds from the Irish Shore,<br/>
Red MacGregors and McLeods<br/>
With their tartans for their shrouds,<br/>
Menzies, Malcolms from the islands,<br/>
Frasers from the upper Highlands —<br/>
Callous is the passer by<br/>
Who can turn without a sigh<br/>
From the tufts of heather deep<br/>
Where the noble clansmen sleep.<br/>
Now we swiftly made our way<br/>
To Kingussie in Strathspey,<br/>
Skirting many a nameless loch<br/>
As we flew through Badenoch,<br/>
Till at Killiecrankie's Pass,<br/>
Heather changing into grass<br/>
We descended once again<br/>
To the fertile lowland plain,<br/>
And by Perth and old Dunblane<br/>
Reached the banks of Allan Water,<br/>
Famous for the miller's daughter,<br/>
Whence at last we circled back<br/>
Till we crossed our Stirling track.<br/>
So our little journey ended,<br/>
Gladness and instruction blended —<br/>
Not a care to spoil our pleasure,<br/>
Not a thought to break our leisure,<br/>
Drifting on from Sussex hedges<br/>
Up through Yorkshire's fells and ledges<br/>
Past the deserts and morasses<br/>
Of the dreary Border passes,<br/>
Through the scenes of Scottish story<br/>
Past the fields of battles gory.<br/>
<br/>
In the future it will seem<br/>
To have been a happy dream,<br/>
But unless my hopes are vain<br/>
We may dream it soon again.<br/></p>
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