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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13900 ***
+
+Processed by Tom Harris. In memory of my mother, Elizabeth Harris,
+who loved poetry, and scanned from her own copy of the book.
+
+
+
+
+
+Collected Poems 1897 - 1907
+by
+Henry Newbolt
+
+To Thomas Hardy
+
+
+
+
+
+Drake's Drum
+
+Drake he's in his hammock an' a thousand miles away,
+ (Capten, art tha sleepin' there below?)
+Slung atween the round shot in Nombre Dios Bay,
+ An' dreamin' arl the time O' Plymouth Hoe.
+Yarnder lumes the Island, yarnder lie the ships,
+ Wi' sailor lads a-dancing' heel-an'-toe,
+An' the shore-lights flashin', an' the night-tide dashin',
+ He sees et arl so plainly as he saw et long ago.
+
+Drake he was a Devon man, an' rüled the Devon seas,
+ (Capten, art tha' sleepin' there below?)
+Roving' tho' his death fell, he went wi' heart at ease,
+ An' dreamin' arl the time o' Plymouth Hoe.
+"Take my drum to England, hang et by the shore,
+ Strike et when your powder's runnin' low;
+If the Dons sight Devon, I'll quit the port o' Heaven,
+ An' drum them up the Channel as we drummed them long ago."
+
+Drake he's in his hammock till the great Armadas come,
+ (Capten, art tha sleepin' there below?)
+Slung atween the round shot, listenin' for the drum,
+ An' dreamin arl the time o' Plymouth Hoe.
+Call him on the deep sea, call him up the Sound,
+ Call him when ye sail to meet the foe;
+Where the old trade's plyin' an' the old flag flyin'
+ They shall find him ware an' wakin', as they found him long ago!
+
+
+
+
+
+The Fighting Téméraire
+
+It was eight bells ringing,
+ For the morning watch was done,
+And the gunner's lads were singing
+ As they polished every gun.
+It was eight bells ringing,
+And the gunner's lads were singing,
+For the ship she rode a-swinging,
+ As they polished every gun.
+
+ Oh! to see the linstock lighting,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+ Oh! to hear the round shot biting,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+
+ Oh! to see the linstock lighting,
+ And to hear the round shot biting,
+ For we're all in love with fighting
+ On the fighting Téméraire.
+
+It was noontide ringing,
+ And the battle just begun,
+When the ship her way was winging,
+ As they loaded every gun.
+It was noontide ringing,
+When the ship her way was winging,
+And the gunner's lads were singing
+ As they loaded every gun.
+
+ There'll be many grim and gory,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+ There'll be few to tell the story,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+
+ There'll be many grim and gory,
+ There'll be few to tell the story,
+ But we'll all be one in glory
+ With the Fighting Téméraire.
+
+There's a far bell ringing
+ At the setting of the sun,
+And a phantom voice is singing
+ Of the great days done.
+There's a far bell ringing,
+And a phantom voice is singing
+Of renown for ever clinging
+ To the great days done.
+
+ Now the sunset breezes shiver,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+ And she's fading down the river,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+
+ Now the sunset's breezes shiver,
+ And she's fading down the river,
+ But in England's song for ever
+ She's the Fighting Téméraire.
+
+
+
+
+
+Admirals All
+
+Effingham, Grenville, Raleigh, Drake,
+ Here's to the bold and free!
+Benbow, Collingwood, Byron, Blake,
+ Hail to the Kings of the Sea!
+Admirals all, for England's sake,
+ Honour be yours and fame!
+And honour, as long as waves shall break,
+ To Nelson's peerless name!
+
+ Admirals all, for England's sake,
+ Honour be yours and fame!
+ And honour, as long as waves shall break,
+ To Nelson's peerless name!
+
+Essex was fretting in Cadiz Bay
+ With the galleons fair in sight;
+Howard at last must give him his way,
+ And the word was passed to fight.
+Never was schoolboy gayer than he,
+ Since holidays first began:
+He tossed his bonnet to wind and sea,
+ And under the guns he ran.
+
+Drake nor devil nor Spaniard feared,
+ Their cities he put to the sack;
+He singed his Catholic Majesty's beard,
+ And harried his ships to wrack.
+He was playing at Plymouth a rubber of bowls
+ When the great Armada came;
+But he said, "They must wait their turn, good souls,"
+ And he stooped and finished the game.
+
+Fifteen sail were the Dutchmen bold,
+ Duncan he had but two;
+But he anchored them fast where the Texel shoaled,
+ And his colours aloft he flew.
+"I've taken the depth to a fathom," he cried,
+ "And I'll sink with a right good will:
+For I know when we're all of us under the tide
+ My flag will be fluttering still."
+
+Splinters were flying above, below,
+ When Nelson sailed the Sound:
+"Mark you, I wouldn't be elsewhere now,"
+ Said he, "for a thousand pound!"
+The Admiral's signal bade him fly
+ But he wickedly wagged his head:
+He clapped the glass to his sightless eye,
+ And "I'm damned if I see it!" he said.
+
+Admirals all, they said their say
+ (The echoes are ringing still).
+Admirals all, they went their way
+ To the haven under the hill.
+But they left us a kingdom none can take,
+ The realm of the circling sea,
+To be ruled by the rightful sons of Blake,
+ And the Rodneys yet to be.
+
+ Admirals all, for England's sake,
+ Honour be yours and fame!
+ And honour, as long as waves shall break,
+ To Nelson's peerless name!
+
+
+
+
+
+San Stefano
+
+(A Ballad of the Bold Menelaus)
+
+It was morning at St. Helen's, in the great and gallant days,
+ And the sea beneath the sun glittered wide,
+When the frigate set her courses, all a-shimmer in the haze
+ And she hauled her cable home and took the tide.
+She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+And they cheered her from the shore for her colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ put to sea.
+
+ She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+ And they cheered her from the shore for her colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ put to sea.
+
+She was clear of Monte Cristo, she was heading for the land,
+ When she spied a pennant red and white and blue;
+They were foemen, and they knew it, and they'd half a league in hand,
+ But she flung aloft her royals, and she flew.
+She was nearer, nearer, nearer, they were caught beyond a doubt,
+ But they slipped her into Orbetello Bay,
+And the lubbers gave a shout as they paid their cables out,
+ With the guns grinning round them where they lay.
+
+Now, Sir Peter was a captain of a famous fighting race,
+ Son and grandson of an admiral was he;
+And he looked upon the batteries, he looked upon the chase,
+ And he heard the shout that echoed out to sea.
+And he called across the decks, "Ay! the cheering might be late
+ If they kept it till the _Menelaus_ runs;
+Bid the master and his mate heave the lead and lay her straight
+ For the prize lying yonder by the guns!"
+
+When the summer moon was setting, into Orbetello Bay
+ Came the _Menelaus_ gliding like a ghost;
+And her boats were manned in silence, and in silence pulled away,
+ And in silence every gunner took his post.
+With a volley from her broadside the citadel she woke,
+ And they hammered back like heroes all the night;
+But before the morning broke she had vanished through the smoke
+ With her prize upon her quarter grappled tight.
+
+It was evening at St. Helen's in the great and gallant time,
+ And the sky behind the down was flushing far;
+And the flags were all a-flutter, and the bells were all a-chime,
+ When the frigate cast her anchor off the bar.
+She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+And they cheered her from the shore for the colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ came from the sea.
+
+ She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+ And they cheered her from the shore for her colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ came from the sea.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hawke
+
+In seventeen hundred and fifty-nine,
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West,
+The French King's Admiral with twenty of the line,
+ Was sailing forth to sack us, out of Brest.
+The ports of France were crowded, the quays of France a-hum
+With thirty thousand soldiers marching to the drum,
+For bragging time was over and fighting time was come
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West.
+
+'Twas long past noon of a wild November day
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West;
+He heard the breakers thundering in Quiberon Bay,
+ But he flew the flag for battle, line abreast.
+Down upon the quicksands roaring out of sight
+Fiercely beat the storm-wind, darkly fell the night,
+But they took the foe for pilot and the cannon's glare for light
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West.
+
+The Frenchmen turned like a covey down the wind
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West;
+One he sank with all hands, one he caught and pinned,
+ And the shallows and the storm took the rest.
+The guns that should have conquered us they rusted on the shore,
+The men that would have mastered us they drummed and marched no more,
+For England was England, and a mighty brood she bore
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Bright Medusa
+
+(1807)
+
+She's the daughter of the breeze,
+She's the darling of the seas,
+ And we call her, if you please, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+From beneath her bosom bare
+To the snakes among her hair
+ She's a flash o' golden light, the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+When the ensign dips above
+And the guns are all for love,
+ She's as gentle as a dove, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+But when the shot's in rack
+And her forestay flies the Jack,
+ He's a merry man would slight the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+When she got the word to go
+Up to Monte Video,
+ There she found the river low, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+So she tumbled out her guns
+And a hundred of her sons,
+ And she taught the Dons to fight the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+When the foeman can be found
+With the pluck to cross her ground,
+ First she walks him round and round, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+Then she rakes him fore and aft
+Till he's just a jolly raft,
+ And she grabs him like a kite, the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+She's the daughter of the breeze,
+She's the darling of the seas,
+ And you'll call her, if you please, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+For till England's sun be set--
+And it's not for setting yet--
+ She shall bear her name by right, the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Old Superb
+
+The wind was rising easterly, the morning sky was blue,
+ The Straits before us opened wide and free;
+We looked towards the Admiral, where high the Peter flew,
+ And all our hearts were dancing like the sea.
+"The French are gone to Martinique with four and twenty sail!
+ The Old _Superb_ is old and foul and slow,
+But the French are gone to Martinique, and Nelson's on the trail.
+ And where he goes the Old _Superb_ must go!"
+
+ So Westward ho! for Trinidad, and Eastward ho! for Spain,
+ And "Ship ahoy!" a hundred times a day;
+ Round the world if need be, and round the world again,
+ With a lame duck lagging all the way.
+
+The Old _Superb_ was barnacled and green as grass below,
+ Her sticks were only fit for stirring grog;
+The pride of all her midshipmen was silent long ago,
+ And long ago they ceased to heave the log.
+Four year out from home she was, and ne'er a week in port,
+ And nothing save the guns aboard her bright;
+But Captain Keats he knew the game, and swore to share the sport,
+ For he never yet came in too late to fight.
+
+ So Westward ho! for Trinidad, and Eastward ho! for Spain,
+ And "Ship ahoy!" a hundred times a day;
+ Round the world if need be, and round the world again,
+ With a lame duck lagging all the way.
+
+"Now up, my lads," the Captain cried, "for sure the case were hard
+ If longest out were first to fall behind;
+Aloft, aloft with studding sails, and lash them on the yard,
+ For night and day the Trades are driving blind!"
+So all day long and all day long behind the fleet we crept,
+ And how we fretted none but Nelson guessed;
+But every night the Old _Superb_ she sailed when others slept,
+ Till we ran the French to earth with all the rest.
+
+ Oh, 'twas Westward ho! for Trinidad, and Eastward ho! for Spain,
+ And "Ship ahoy!" a hundred times a day;
+ Round the world if need be, and round the world again,
+ With a lame duck lagging all the way.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Quarter-Gunner's Yarn
+
+We lay at St. Helen's, and easy she rode
+With one anchor catted and fresh-water stowed;
+When the barge came alongside like bullocks we roared,
+For we knew what we carried with Nelson aboard.
+
+Our Captain was Hardy, the pride of us all,
+I'll ask for none better when danger shall call;
+He was hardy by nature and Hardy by name,
+And soon by his conduct to honour he came.
+
+The third day the Lizard was under our lee,
+Where the _Ajax_ and _Thunderer_ joined us at sea,
+But what with foul weather and tacking about,
+When we sighted the Fleet we were thirteen days out.
+
+The Captains they all came aboard quick enough,
+But the news that they brought was as heavy as duff;
+So backward an enemy never was seen,
+They were harder to come at than Cheeks the Marine.
+
+The lubbers had hare's lugs where seamen have ears,
+So we stowed all saluting and smothered our cheers,
+And to humour their stomachs and tempt them to dine,
+In the offing we showed them but six of the line.
+
+One morning the topmen reported below
+The old _Agamemnon_ escaped from the foe.
+Says Nelson: "My lads, there'll be honour for some,
+For we're sure of a battle now Berry has come."
+
+"Up hammocks!" at last cried the bo'sun at dawn;
+The guns were cast loose and the tompions drawn;
+The gunner was bustling the shot racks to fill,
+And "All hands to quarters!" was piped with a will.
+
+We now saw the enemy bearing ahead,
+And to East of them Cape Traflagar it was said,
+'Tis a name we remember from father to son,
+That the days of old England may never be done.
+
+The _Victory_ led, to her flag it was due,
+Tho' the _Téméraires_ thought themselves Admirals too;
+But Lord Nelson he hailed them with masterful grace:
+"Cap'n Harvey, I'll thank you to keep in your place."
+
+To begin with we closed the _Bucentaure_ alone,
+An eighty-gun ship and their Admiral's own;
+We raked her but once, and the rest of the day
+Like a hospital hulk on the water she lay.
+
+To our battering next the _Redoutable_ struck,
+But her sharpshooters gave us the worst of the luck:
+Lord Nelson was wounded, most cruel to tell.
+"They've done for me; Hardy!" he cried as he fell.
+
+To the cockpit in silence they carried him past,
+And sad were the looks that were after him cast;
+His face with a kerchief he tried to conceal,
+But we knew him too well from the truck to the keel.
+
+When the Captain reported a victory won,
+"Thank God!" he kept saying, "my duty I've done."
+At last came the moment to kiss him good-bye,
+And the Captain for once had the salt in his eye.
+
+"Now anchor, dear Hardy," the Admiral cried;
+But before we could make it he fainted and died.
+All night in the trough of the sea we were tossed,
+And for want of ground-tackle good prizes were lost.
+
+Then we hauled down the flag, at the fore it was red,
+And blue at the mizzen was hoisted instead
+By Nelson's famed Captain, the pride of each tar,
+Who fought in the _Victory_ off Cape Traflagar.
+
+
+
+
+
+Northumberland
+
+"The Old and Bold"
+
+When England sets her banner forth
+ And bids her armour shine,
+She'll not forget the famous North,
+ The lads of moor and Tyne;
+And when the loving-cup's in hand,
+ And Honour leads the cry,
+They know not old Northumberland
+ Who'll pass her memory by.
+
+When Nelson sailed for Trafalgar
+ With all his country's best,
+He held them dear as brothers are,
+ But one beyond the rest.
+For when the fleet with heroes manned
+ To clear the decks began,
+The boast of old Northumberland
+ He sent to lead the van.
+
+
+Himself by _Victory's_ bulwarks stood
+ And cheered to see the sight;
+"That noble fellow Collingwood,
+ How bold he goes to fight!"
+Love, that the league of Ocean spanned,
+ Heard him as face to face;
+"What would he give, Northumberland,
+ To share our pride of place?"
+
+The flag that goes the world around
+ And flaps on every breeze
+Has never gladdened fairer ground
+ Or kinder hearts than these.
+So when the loving-cup's in hand
+ And Honour leads the cry,
+They know not old Northumberland
+ Who'll pass her memory by.
+
+
+
+
+
+For A Trafalgar Cenotaph
+
+Lover of England, stand awhile and gaze
+With thankful heart, and lips refrained from praise;
+They rest beyond the speech of human pride
+Who served with Nelson and with Nelson died.
+
+
+
+
+
+Craven
+
+(Mobile Bay, 1864)
+
+Over the turret, shut in his iron-clad tower,
+ Craven was conning his ship through smoke and flame;
+Gun to gun he had battered the fort for an hour,
+ Now was the time for a charge to end the game.
+
+There lay the narrowing channel, smooth and grim,
+ A hundred deaths beneath it, and never a sign;
+There lay the enemy's ships, and sink or swim
+ The flag was flying, and he was head of the line.
+
+The fleet behind was jamming; the monitor hung
+ Beating the stream; the roar for a moment hushed,
+Craven spoke to the pilot; slow she swung;
+ Again he spoke, and right for the foe she rushed.
+
+Into the narrowing channel, between the shore
+ And the sunk torpedoes lying in treacherous rank;
+She turned but a yard too short; a muffled roar,
+ A mountainous wave, and she rolled, righted, and sank.
+
+Over the manhole, up in the iron-clad tower,
+ Pilot and Captain met as they turned to fly:
+The hundredth part of a moment seemed an hour,
+ For one could pass to be saved, and one must die.
+
+They stood like men in a dream: Craven spoke,
+ Spoke as he lived and fought, with a Captain's pride,
+"After you, Pilot." The pilot woke,
+ Down the ladder he went, and Craven died.
+
+ All men praise the deed and the manner, but we---
+ We set it apart from the pride that stoops to the proud,
+ The strength that is supple to serve the strong and free,
+ The grace of the empty hands and promises loud:
+
+ Sidney thirsting, a humbler need to slake,
+ Nelson waiting his turn for the surgeon's hand,
+ Lucas crushed with chains for a comrade's sake,
+ Outram coveting right before command:
+
+ These were paladins, these were Craven's peers,
+ These with him shall be crowned in story and song,
+ Crowned with the glitter of steel and the glimmer of tears,
+ Princes of courtesy, merciful, proud, and strong.
+
+
+
+
+
+Messmates
+
+He gave us all a good-bye cheerily
+ At the first dawn of day;
+We dropped him down the side full drearily
+ When the light died away.
+It's a dead dark watch that he's a-keeping there,
+And a long, long night that lags a-creeping there,
+Where the Trades and the tides roll over him
+ And the great ships go by.
+
+He's there alone with green seas rocking him
+ For a thousand miles round;
+He's there alone with dumb things mocking him,
+ And we're homeward bound.
+It's a long, lone watch that he's a-keeping there,
+And a dead cold night that lags a-creeping there,
+While the months and the years roll over him
+ And the great ships go by.
+
+I wonder if the tramps come near enough
+ As they thrash to and fro,
+And the battle-ships' bells ring clear enough
+ To be heard down below;
+If through all the lone watch that he's a-keeping there,
+And the long, cold night that lags a-creeping there,
+The voices of the sailor-men shall comfort him
+ When the great ships go by.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Death Of Admiral Blake
+
+(August 7th, 1657)
+
+Laden with spoil of the South, fulfilled with the glory of achievement,
+ And freshly crowned with never-dying fame,
+Sweeping by shores where the names are the names of the victories of England,
+ Across the Bay the squadron homeward came.
+
+Proudly they came, but their pride was the pomp of a funeral at midnight,
+ When dreader yet the lonely morrow looms;
+Few are the words that are spoken, and faces are gaunt beneath the torchlight
+ That does but darken more the nodding plumes.
+
+Low on the field of his fame, past hope lay the Admiral triumphant,
+ And fain to rest him after all his pain;
+Yet for the love that he bore to his own land, ever unforgotten,
+ He prayed to see the western hills again.
+
+Fainter than stars in a sky long gray with the coming of the daybreak,
+ Or sounds of night that fade when night is done,
+So in the death-dawn faded the splendour and loud renown of warfare,
+ And life of all its longings kept but one.
+
+"Oh! to be there for an hour when the shade draws in beside the hedgerows,
+ And falling apples wake the drowsy noon:
+Oh! for the hour when the elms grow sombre and human in the twilight,
+ And gardens dream beneath the rising moon.
+
+"Only to look once more on the land of the memories of childhood,
+ Forgetting weary winds and barren foam:
+Only to bid farewell to the combe and the orchard and the moorland,
+ And sleep at last among the fields of home!"
+
+So he was silently praying, till now, when his strength was ebbing faster,
+ The Lizard lay before them faintly blue;
+Now on the gleaming horizon the white cliffs laughed along the coast-line,
+ And now the forelands took the shapes they knew.
+
+There lay the Sound and the Island with green leaves down beside the water,
+ The town, the Hoe, the masts with sunset fired----
+Dreams! ay, dreams of the dead! for the great heart faltered on the threshold,
+ And darkness took the land his soul desired.
+
+
+
+
+
+Væ Victis
+
+Beside the placid sea that mirrored her
+ With the old glory of dawn that cannot die,
+The sleeping city began to moan and stir,
+ As one that fain from an ill dream would fly;
+ Yet more she feared the daylight bringing nigh
+Such dreams as know not sunrise, soon or late,---
+ Visions of honour lost and power gone by,
+ Of loyal valour betrayed by factious hate,
+And craven sloth that shrank from the labour of forging fate.
+
+They knew and knew not, this bewildered crowd,
+ That up her streets in silence hurrying passed,
+What manner of death should make their anguish loud,
+ What corpse across the funeral pyre be cast,
+ For none had spoken it; only, gathering fast
+As darkness gathers at noon in the sun's eclipse,
+ A shadow of doom enfolded them, vague and vast,
+ And a cry was heard, unfathered of earthly lips,
+"What of the ships, O Carthage? Carthage, what of the ships?"
+
+They reached the wall, and nowise strange it seemed
+ To find the gates unguarded and open wide;
+They climbed the shoulder, and meet enough they deemed
+ The black that shrouded the seaward rampart's side
+ And veiled in drooping gloom the turrets' pride;
+But this was nought, for suddenly down the slope
+ They saw the harbour, and sense within them died;
+ Keel nor mast was there, rudder nor rope;
+It lay like a sea-hawk's eyry spoiled of life and hope.
+
+Beyond, where dawn was a glittering carpet, rolled
+ From sky to shore on level and endless seas,
+Hardly their eyes discerned in a dazzle of gold
+ That here in fifties, yonder in twos and threes,
+ The ships they sought, like a swarm of drowning bees
+By a wanton gust on the pool of a mill-dam hurled,
+ Floated forsaken of life-giving tide and breeze,
+ Their oars broken, their sails for ever furled,
+For ever deserted the bulwarks that guarded the wealth of the world.
+
+A moment yet, with breathing quickly drawn
+ And hands agrip, the Carthaginian folk
+Stared in the bright untroubled face of dawn,
+ And strove with vehement heaped denial to choke
+ Their sure surmise of fate's impending stroke;
+Vainly--for even now beneath their gaze
+ A thousand delicate spires of distant smoke
+ Reddened the disc of the sun with a stealthy haze,
+And the smouldering grief of a nation burst with the kindling blaze.
+
+"O dying Carthage!" so their passion raved,
+ "Would nought but these the conqueror's hate assuage?
+If these be taken, how may the land be saved
+ Whose meat and drink was empire, age by age?"
+ And bitter memory cursed with idle rage
+The greed that coveted gold beyond renown,
+ The feeble hearts that feared their heritage,
+ The hands that cast the sea-kings' sceptre down
+And left to alien brows their famed ancestral crown.
+
+The endless noon, the endless evening through,
+ All other needs forgetting, great or small,
+They drank despair with thirst whose torment grew
+ As the hours died beneath that stifling pall.
+ At last they saw the fires to blackness fall
+One after one, and slowly turned them home,
+ A little longer yet their own to call
+ A city enslaved, and wear the bonds of Rome,
+With weary hearts foreboding all the woe to come.
+
+
+
+
+
+Minora Sidera
+
+(The Dictionary Of National Biography)
+
+Sitting at times over a hearth that burns
+ With dull domestic glow,
+My thought, leaving the book, gratefully turns
+ To you who planned it so.
+
+Not of the great only you deigned to tell---
+ The stars by which we steer---
+But lights out of the night that flashed, and fell
+ Tonight again, are here.
+
+Such as were those, dogs of an elder day,
+ Who sacked the golden ports,
+And those later who dared grapple their prey
+ Beneath the harbour forts:
+
+Some with flag at the fore, sweeping the world
+ To find an equal fight,
+And some who joined war to their trade, and hurled
+ Ships of the line in flight.
+
+Whether their fame centuries long should ring
+ They cared not over-much,
+But cared greatly to serve God and the king,
+ And keep the Nelson touch;
+
+And fought to build Britain above the tide
+ Of wars and windy fate;
+And passed content, leaving to us the pride
+ Of lives obscurely great.
+
+
+
+
+
+Laudabunt Alii
+
+(After Horace)
+
+Let others praise, as fancy wills,
+ Berlin beneath her trees,
+Or Rome upon her seven hills,
+ Or Venice by her seas;
+Stamboul by double tides embraced,
+Or green Damascus in the waste.
+
+For me there's nought I would not leave
+ For the good Devon land,
+Whose orchards down the echoing cleeve
+ Bedewed with spray-drift stand,
+And hardly bear the red fruit up
+That shall be next year's cider-cup.
+
+You too, my friend, may wisely mark
+ How clear skies follow rain,
+And, lingering in your own green park
+ Or drilled on Laffan's Plain,
+Forget not with the festal bowl
+To soothe at times your weary soul.
+
+When Drake must bid to Plymouth Hoe
+ Good-bye for many a day,
+And some were sad and feared to go,
+ And some that dared not stay,
+Be sure he bade them broach the best,
+And raised his tankard with the rest.
+
+"Drake's luck to all that sail with Drake
+ For promised lands of gold!
+Brave lads, whatever storms may break,
+ We've weathered worse of old!
+To-night the loving-cup we'll drain,
+To-morrow for the Spanish Main!"
+
+
+
+
+
+Admiral Death
+
+Boys, are ye calling a toast to-night?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+Fill for a bumper strong and bright,
+ And here's to Admiral Death!
+He's sailed in a hundred builds o' boat,
+He's fought in a thousand kinds o' coat,
+He's the senior flag of all that float,
+ And his name's Admiral Death!
+
+Which of you looks for a service free?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+The rules o' the service are but three
+ When ye sail with Admiral Death.
+Steady your hand in time o' squalls,
+Stand to the last by him that falls,
+And answer clear to the voice that calls,
+ "Ay, Ay! Admiral Death!"
+
+How will ye know him among the rest?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+By the glint o' the stars that cover his breast
+ Ye may find Admiral Death.
+By the forehead grim with an ancient scar,
+By the voice that rolls like thunder far,
+By the tenderest eyes of all that are,
+ Ye may know Admiral Death.
+
+Where are the lads that sailed before?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+Their bones are white by many a shore,
+ They sleep with Admiral Death.
+Oh! but they loved him, young and old,
+For he left the laggard, and took the bold,
+And the fight was fought, and the story's told,
+ And they sleep with Admiral Death.
+
+
+
+
+
+Homeward Bound
+
+After long labouring in the windy ways,
+ On smooth and shining tides
+ Swiftly the great ship glides,
+ Her storms forgot, her weary watches past;
+Northward she glides, and through the enchanted haze
+ Faint on the verge her far hope dawns at last.
+
+The phantom sky-line of a shadowy down,
+ Whose pale white cliffs below
+ Through sunny mist aglow,
+ Like noon-day ghosts of summer moonshine gleam---
+Soft as old sorrow, bright as old renown,
+ There lies the home, of all our mortal dream.
+
+
+
+
+
+Gillespie.
+
+Riding at dawn, riding alone,
+ Gillespie left the town behind;
+Before he turned by the Westward road
+ A horseman crossed him, staggering blind.
+
+"The Devil's abroad in false Vellore,
+ The Devil that stabs by night," he said,
+"Women and children, rank and file,
+ Dying and dead, dying and dead."
+
+Without a word, without a groan,
+ Sudden and swift Gillespie turned,
+The blood roared in his ears like fire,
+ Like fire the road beneath him burned.
+
+He thundered back to Arcot gate,
+ He thundered up through Arcot town,
+Before he thought a second thought
+ In the barrack yard he lighted down.
+
+"Trumpeter, sound for the Light Dragoons,
+ Sound to saddle and spur," he said;
+"He that is ready may ride with me,
+ And he that can may ride ahead."
+
+Fierce and fain, fierce and fain,
+ Behind him went the troopers grim,
+They rode as ride the Light Dragoons
+ But never a man could ride with him.
+
+Their rowels ripped their horses' sides,
+ Their hearts were red with a deeper goad,
+But ever alone before them all
+ Gillespie rode, Gillespie rode.
+
+Alone he came to false Vellore,
+ The walls were lined, the gates were barred;
+Alone he walked where the bullets bit,
+ And called above to the Sergeant's Guard.
+
+"Sergeant, Sergeant, over the gate,
+ Where are your officers all?" he said;
+Heavily came the Sergeant's voice,
+ "There are two living and forty dead."
+
+"A rope, a rope," Gillespie cried :
+ They bound their belts to serve his need.
+There was not a rebel behind the wall
+ But laid his barrel and drew his bead.
+
+There was not a rebel among them all
+ But pulled his trigger and cursed his aim,
+For lightly swung and rightly swung
+ Over the gate Gillespie came.
+
+He dressed the line, he led the charge,
+ They swept the wall like a stream in spate,
+And roaring over the roar they heard
+ The galloper guns that burst the gate.
+
+Fierce and fain, fierce and fain,
+ The troopers rode the reeking flight:
+The very stones remember still
+ The end of them that stab by night.
+
+They've kept the tale a hundred years,
+ They'll keep the tale a hundred more:
+Riding at dawn, riding alone,
+ Gillespie came to false Vellore.
+
+
+
+
+
+Seringapatam
+
+"The sleep that Tippoo Sahib sleeps
+ Heeds not the cry of man;
+The faith that Tippoo Sahib keeps
+ No judge on earth may scan;
+He is the lord of whom ye hold
+ Spirit and sense and limb,
+Fetter and chain are all ye gain
+ Who dared to plead with him."
+
+Baird was bonny and Baird was young,
+ His heart was strong as steel,
+But life and death in the balance hung,
+ For his wounds were ill to heal.
+"Of fifty chains the Sultan gave
+ We have filled but forty-nine:
+We dare not fail of the perfect tale
+ For all Golconda's mine."
+
+That was the hour when Lucas first
+ Leapt to his long renown;
+Like summer rains his anger burst,
+ And swept their scruples down.
+"Tell ye the lord to whom ye crouch,
+ His fetters bite their fill:
+To save your oath I'll wear them both,
+ And step the lighter still."
+
+The seasons came, the seasons passed,
+ They watched their fellows die;
+But still their thought was forward cast,
+ Their courage still was high.
+Through tortured days and fevered nights
+ Their limbs alone were weak,
+And year by year they kept their cheer,
+ And spoke as freemen speak.
+
+But once a year, on the fourth of June,
+ Their speech to silence died,
+And the silence beat to a soundless tune
+ And sang with a wordless pride;
+Till when the Indian stars were bright,
+ And bells at home would ring,
+To the fetters' clank they rose and drank
+ "England! God save the King!"
+
+The years came, and the years went,
+ The wheel full-circle rolled;
+The tyrant's neck must yet be bent,
+ The price of blood be told:
+The city yet must hear the roar
+ Of Baird's avenging guns,
+And see him stand with lifted hand
+ By Tippoo Sahib's sons.
+
+The lads were bonny, the lads were young,
+ But he claimed a pitiless debt;
+Life and death in the balance hung,
+ They watched it swing and set.
+They saw him search with sombre eyes,
+ They knew the place he sought;
+They saw him feel for the hilted steel,
+ They bowed before his thought.
+
+But he--he saw the prison there
+ In the old quivering heat,
+Where merry hearts had met despair
+ And died without defeat;
+Where feeble hands had raised the cup
+ For feebler lips to drain,
+And one had worn with smiling scorn
+ His double load of pain.
+
+"The sleep that Tippoo Sahib sleeps
+ Hears not the voice of man;
+The faith that Tippoo Sahib keeps
+ No earthly judge may scan;
+For all the wrong your father wrought
+ Your father's sons are free;
+Where Lucas lay no tongue shall say
+ That Mercy bound not me."
+
+
+
+
+
+A Ballad of John Nicholson
+
+It fell in the year of Mutiny,
+ At darkest of the night,
+John Nicholson by Jalándhar came,
+ On his way to Delhi fight.
+
+And as he by Jalándhar came,
+ He thought what he must do,
+And he sent to the Rajah fair greeting,
+ To try if he were true.
+
+"God grant your Highness length of days,
+ And friends when need shall be;
+And I pray you send your Captains hither,
+ That they may speak with me."
+
+On the morrow through Jalándhar town
+ The Captains rode in state;
+They came to the house of John Nicholson,
+ And stood before the gate.
+
+The chief of them was Mehtab Singh,
+ He was both proud and sly;
+His turban gleamed with rubies red,
+ He held his chin full high.
+
+He marked his fellows how they put
+ Their shoes from off their feet;
+"Now wherefore make ye such ado
+ These fallen lords to greet?
+
+"They have ruled us for a hundred years,
+ In truth I know not how,
+But though they be fain of mastery
+ They dare not claim it now."
+
+Right haughtily before them all
+ The durbar hall he trod,
+With rubies red his turban gleamed,
+ His feet with pride were shod.
+
+They had not been an hour together,
+ A scanty hour or so,
+When Mehtab Singh rose in his place
+ And turned about to go.
+
+Then swiftly came John Nicholson
+ Between the door and him,
+With anger smouldering in his eyes,
+ That made the rubies dim.
+
+"You are over-hasty, Mehtab Singh,"---
+ Oh, but his voice was low!
+He held his wrath with a curb of iron
+ That furrowed cheek and brow.
+
+"You are overhasty, Mehtab Singh,
+ When that the rest are gone,
+I have a word that may not wait
+ To speak with you alone."
+
+The Captains passed in silence forth
+ And stood the door behind;
+To go before the game was played
+ Be sure they had no mind.
+
+But there within John Nicholson
+ Turned him on Mehtab Singh,
+"So long as the soul is in my body
+ You shall not do this thing.
+
+"Have ye served us for a hundred years
+ And yet ye know not why?
+We brook no doubt of our mastery,
+ We rule until we die.
+
+"Were I the one last Englishman
+ Drawing the breath of life,
+And you the master-rebel of all
+ That stir this land to strife---
+
+"Were I," he said, "but a Corporal,
+ And you a Rajput King,
+So long as the soul was in my body
+ You should not do this thing.
+
+"Take off, take off, those shoes of pride,
+ Carry them whence they came;
+Your Captains saw your insolence,
+ And they shall see your shame."
+
+When Mehtab Singh came to the door
+ His shoes they burned his hand,
+For there in long and silent lines
+ He saw the Captains stand.
+
+When Mehtab Singh rode from the gate
+ His chin was on his breast:
+The Captains said, "When the strong command
+ Obedience is best."
+
+
+
+
+
+The Guides at Cabul
+
+(1879)
+
+Sons of the Island race, wherever ye dwell,
+ Who speak of your fathers' battles with lips that burn,
+The deed of an alien legion hear me tell,
+ And think not shame from the hearts ye tamed to learn,
+ When succour shall fail and the tide for a season turn,
+To fight with joyful courage, a passionate pride,
+To die at last as the Guides of Cabul died.
+
+For a handful of seventy men in a barrack of mud,
+ Foodless, waterless, dwindling one by one,
+Answered a thousand yelling for English blood
+ With stormy volleys that swept them gunner from gun,
+ And charge on charge in the glare of the Afghan sun,
+Till the walls were shattered wherein they couched at bay,
+And dead or dying half of the seventy lay.
+
+Twice they had taken the cannon that wrecked their hold,
+ Twice toiled in vain to drag it back,
+Thrice they toiled, and alone, wary and bold,
+ Whirling a hurricane sword to scatter the rack,
+ Hamilton, last of the English, covered their track.
+"Never give in!" he cried, and he heard them shout,
+And grappled with death as a man that knows not doubt.
+
+And the Guides looked down from their smouldering barrack again,
+ And behold, a banner of truce, and a voice that spoke:
+"Come, for we know that the English all are slain,
+ We keep no feud with men of a kindred folk;
+ Rejoice with us to be free of the conqueror's yolk."
+Silence fell for a moment, then was heard
+A sound of laughter and scorn, and an answering word.
+
+"Is it we or the lords we serve who have earned this wrong,
+ That ye call us to flinch from the battle they bade us fight?
+We that live--do ye doubt that our hands are strong?
+ They that are fallen--ye know that their blood was bright!
+ Think ye the Guides will barter for lust of the light
+The pride of an ancient people in warfare bred,
+Honour of comrades living, and faith to the dead?"
+
+Then the joy that spurs the warrior's heart
+ To the last thundering gallop and sheer leap
+Came on the men of the Guides: they flung apart
+ The doors not all their valour could longer keep;
+ They dressed their slender line; they breathed deep,
+And with never a foot lagging or head bent
+To the clash and clamour and dust of death they went.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Gay Gordons
+
+(Dargai, October 20, 1897)
+
+Whos for the Gathering, who's for the Fair?
+ (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
+The bravest of the brave are at deadlock there,
+ (Highlanders! march! by the right!)
+There are bullets by the hundred buzzing in the air,
+There are bonny lads lying on the hillside bare;
+But the Gordons know what the Gordons dare
+ When they hear the pipers playing!
+
+The happiest English heart today
+ (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
+Is the heart of the Colonel, hide it as he may;
+ (Steady there! steady on the right!)
+He sees his work and he sees his way,
+He knows his time and the word to say,
+And he's thinking of the tune that the Gordons play
+ When he sets the pipers playing.
+
+Rising, roaring, rushing like the tide,
+ (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
+They're up through the fire-zone, not be be denied;
+ (Bayonets! and charge! by the right!)
+Thirty bullets straight where the rest went wide,
+And thirty lads are lying on the bare hillside;
+But they passed in the hour of the Gordons' pride,
+ To the skirl of the pipers' playing.
+
+
+
+
+
+He Fell Among Thieves
+
+"Ye have robbed," said he, "ye have slaughtered and made an end,
+ Take your ill-got plunder, and bury the dead:
+What will ye more of your guest and sometime friend?"
+ "Blood for our blood," they said.
+
+He laughed: "If one may settle the score for five,
+ I am ready; but let the reckoning stand til day:
+I have loved the sunlight as dearly as any alive."
+ "You shall die at dawn," said they.
+
+He flung his empty revolver down the slope,
+ He climbed alone to the Eastward edge of the trees;
+All night long in a dream untroubled of hope
+ He brooded, clasping his knees.
+
+He did not hear the monotonous roar that fills
+ The ravine where the Yassin river sullenly flows;
+He did not see the starlight on the Laspur hills,
+ Or the far Afghan snows.
+
+He saw the April noon on his books aglow,
+ The wistaria trailing in at the window wide;
+He heard his father's voice from the terrace below
+ Calling him down to ride.
+
+He saw the gray little church across the park,
+ The mounds that hid the loved and honoured dead;
+The Norman arch, the chancel softly dark,
+ The brasses black and red.
+
+He saw the School Close, sunny and green,
+ The runner beside him, the stand by the parapet wall,
+The distant tape, and the crowd roaring between,
+ His own name over all.
+
+He saw the dark wainscot and timbered roof,
+ The long tables, and the faces merry and keen;
+The College Eight and their trainer dining aloof,
+ The Dons on the daïs serene.
+
+He watched the liner's stem ploughing the foam,
+ He felt her trembling speed and the thrash of her screw;
+He heard the passengers' voices talking of home,
+ He saw the flag she flew.
+
+And now it was dawn. He rose strong on his feet,
+ And strode to his ruined camp below the wood;
+He drank the breath of the morning cool and sweet:
+ His murderers round him stood.
+
+Light on the Laspur hills was broadening fast,
+ The blood-red snow-peaks chilled to dazzling white:
+He turned, and saw the golden circle at last,
+ Cut by the Eastern height.
+
+"O glorious Life, Who dwellest in earth and sun,
+ I have lived, I praise and adore Thee."
+ A sword swept.
+Over the pass the voices one by one
+ Faded, and the hill slept.
+
+
+
+
+
+Ionicus
+
+With failing feet and shoulders bowed
+ Beneath the weight of happier days,
+He lagged among the heedless crowd,
+ Or crept along suburban ways.
+But still through all his heart was young,
+ His mood a joy that nought could mar,
+A courage, a pride, a rapture, sprung
+ Of the strength and splendour of England's war.
+
+From ill-requited toil he turned
+ To ride with Picton and with Pack,
+Among his grammars inly burned
+ To storm the Afghan mountain-track.
+When midnight chimed, before Quebec
+ He watched with Wolfe till the morning star;
+At noon he saw from _Victory's_ deck
+ The sweep and splendour of England's war.
+
+Beyond the book his teaching sped,
+ He left on whom he taught the trace
+Of kinship with the deathless dead,
+ And faith in all the Island Race.
+He passed: his life a tangle seemed,
+ His age from fame and power was far;
+But his heart was night to the end, and dreamed
+ Of the sound and splendour of England's war.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Non-Combatant
+
+Among a race high-handed, strong of heart,
+Sea-rovers, conquerors, builders in the waste,
+He had his birth; a nature too complete,
+Eager and doubtful, no man's soldier sworn
+And no man's chosen captain; born to fail,
+A name without an echo: yet he too
+Within the cloister of his narrow days
+Fulfilled the ancestral rites, and kept alive
+The eternal fire; it may be, not in vain;
+For out of those who dropped a downward glance
+Upon the weakling huddled at his prayers,
+Perchance some looked beyond him, and then first
+Beheld the glory, and what shrine it filled,
+And to what Spirit sacred: or perchance
+Some heard him chanting, though but to himself,
+The old heroic names: and went their way:
+And hummed his music on the march to death.
+
+
+
+
+
+Clifton Chapel
+
+This is the Chapel: here, my son,
+ Your father thought the thoughts of youth,
+And heard the words that one by one
+ The touch of Life has turned to truth.
+Here in a day that is not far,
+ You too may speak with noble ghosts
+Of manhood and the vows of war
+ You made before the Lord of Hosts.
+
+To set the cause above renown,
+ To love the game beyond the prize,
+To honour, while you strike him down,
+ The foe that comes with fearless eyes;
+To count the life of battle good,
+ And dear the land that gave you birth,
+And dearer yet the brotherhood
+ That binds the brave of all the earth---
+
+My son, the oath is yours: the end
+ Is His, Who built the world of strife,
+Who gave His children Pain for friend,
+ And Death for surest hope of life.
+To-day and here the fight's begun,
+ Of the great fellowship you're free;
+Henceforth the School and you are one,
+ And what You are, the race shall be.
+
+God send you fortune: yet be sure,
+ Among the lights that gleam and pass,
+You'll live to follow none more pure
+ Than that which glows on yonder brass:
+"Qui procul hinc," the legend's writ,---
+ The frontier-grave is far away---
+"Qui ante diem periit:
+ Sed miles, sed pro patriâ."
+
+
+
+
+
+Vitaï Lampada
+
+There's a breathless hush in the Close to-night---
+ Ten to make and the match to win---
+A bumping pitch and a blinding light,
+ An hour to play and the last man in.
+And it's not for the sake of a ribboned coat,
+ Or the selfish hope of a season's fame,
+But his Captain's hand on his shoulder smote---
+ "Play up! play up! and play the game!"
+
+The sand of the desert is sodden red,---
+ Red with the wreck of a square that broke;---
+The Gatling's jammed and the colonel dead,
+ And the regiment blind with dust and smoke.
+The river of death has brimmed his banks,
+ And England's far, and Honour a name,
+But the voice of schoolboy rallies the ranks,
+ "Play up! play up! and play the game!"
+
+This is the word that year by year,
+ While in her place the School is set,
+Every one of her sons must hear,
+ And none that hears it dare forget.
+This they all with a joyful mind
+ Bear through life like a torch in flame,
+And falling fling to the host behind---
+ "Play up! play up! and play the game!"
+
+
+
+
+
+The Vigil
+
+England! where the sacred flame
+ Burns before the inmost shrine,
+Where the lips that love thy name
+ Consecrate their hopes and thine,
+Where the banners of thy dead
+Weave their shadows overhead,
+Watch beside thine arms to-night,
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+Think that when to-morrow comes
+ War shall claim command of all,
+Thou must hear the roll of drums,
+ Thou must hear the trumpet's call.
+Now, before they silence ruth,
+Commune with the voice of truth;
+England! on thy knees to-night
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+Hast thou counted up the cost,
+ What to foeman, what to friend?
+Glory sought is Honour lost,
+ How should this be knighthood's end?
+Know'st thou what is Hatred's meed?
+What the surest gain of greed?
+England! wilt thou dare to-night
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+Single-hearted, unafraid,
+ Hither all thy heroes came,
+On this altar's steps were laid
+ Gordon's life and Outram's fame.
+England! if thy will be yet
+By their great example set,
+Here beside thine arms to-night
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+So shalt thou when morning comes
+ Rise to conquer or to fall,
+Joyful hear the rolling drums,
+ Joyful hear the trumpets call,
+Then let Memory tell thy heart:
+"England! what thou wert, thou art!"
+Gird thee with thine ancient might,
+Forth! and God defend the Right!
+
+
+
+
+
+The Sailing Of The Long-Ships
+
+(October, 1899)
+
+They saw the cables loosened, they saw the gangways cleared,
+They heard the women weeping, they heard the men that cheered;
+Far off, far off, the tumult faded and died away,
+And all alone the sea-wind came singing up the Bay.
+
+"I came by Cape St. Vincent, I came by Trafalgar,
+I swept from Torres Vedras to golden Vigo Bar,
+I saw the beacons blazing that fired the world with light
+When down their ancient highway your fathers passed to fight.
+
+"O race of tireless fighters, flushed with a youth renewed,
+Right well the wars of Freedom befit the Sea-kings' brood;
+Yet as ye go forget not the fame of yonder shore,
+The fame ye owe your fathers and the old time before.
+
+"Long-suffering were the Sea-kings, they were not swift to kill,
+But when the sands had fallen they waited no man's will;
+Though all the world forbade them, they counted not nor cared,
+They weighed not help or hindrance, they did the thing they dared.
+
+"The Sea-kings loved not boasting, they cursed not him that cursed,
+They honoured all men duly, and him that faced them, first;
+They strove and knew not hatred, they smote and toiled to save,
+They tended whom they vanquished, they praised the fallen brave.
+
+"Their fame's on Torres Vedras, their fame's on Vigo Bar,
+Far-flashed to Cape St. Vincent it burns from Trafalgar;
+Mark as ye go the beacons that woke the world with light
+When down their ancient highway your fathers passed to fight."
+
+
+
+
+
+Waggon Hill
+
+Drake in the North Sea grimly prowling,
+ Treading his dear _Revenge's_ deck,
+Watched, with the sea-dogs round him growling,
+ Galleons drifting wreck by wreck.
+ "Fetter and Faith for England's neck,
+ Faggot and Father, Saint and chain,---
+Yonder the Devil and all go howling,
+ Devon, O Devon, in wind and rain!
+
+Drake at the last off Nombre lying,
+ Knowing the night that toward him crept,
+Gave to the sea-dogs round him crying,
+ This for a sign before he slept:---
+ "Pride of the West! What Devon hath kept
+ Devon shall keep on tide or main;
+Call to the storm and drive them flying,
+ Devon, O Devon, in wind and rain!"
+
+Valour of England gaunt and whitening,
+ Far in a South land brought to bay,
+Locked in a death-grip all day tightening,
+ Waited the end in twilight gray.
+ Battle and storm and the sea-dog's way!
+ Drake from his long rest turned again,
+Victory lit thy steel with lightning,
+ Devon, o Devon, in wind and rain!
+
+
+
+
+
+The Volunteer
+
+"He leapt to arms unbidden,
+ Unneeded, over-bold;
+His face by earth is hidden,
+ His heart in earth is cold.
+
+"Curse on the reckless daring
+ That could not wait the call,
+The proud fantastic bearing
+ That would be first to fall!"
+
+O tears of human passion,
+ Blur not the image true;
+This was not folly's fashion,
+ This was the man we knew.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Only Son
+
+O Bitter wind toward the sunset blowing,
+ What of the dales to-night?
+In yonder gray old hall what fires are glowing,
+ What ring of festal light?
+
+ "In the great window as the day was dwindling
+ I saw an old man stand;
+ His head was proudly held and his eyes kindling,
+ But the list shook in his hand."
+
+O wind of twilight, was there no word uttered,
+ No sound of joy or wail?
+"'A great fight and a good death,' he muttered;
+ 'Trust him, he would not fail.'"
+
+What of the chamber dark where she was lying;
+ For whom all life is done?
+"Within her heart she rocks a dead child, crying
+ 'My son, my ltttle son.'"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Grenadier's Good-Bye
+
+"When Lieutenant Murray fell, the only words he spoke were,
+'Forward, Grenadiers!'"---Press Telegram.
+
+Here they halted, here once more
+ Hand from hand was rent;
+Here his voice above the roar
+ Rang, and on they went.
+Yonder out of sight they crossed,
+ Yonder died the cheers;
+One word lives where all is lost---
+ "Forward, Grenadiers!"
+
+This alone he asked of fame,
+ This alone of pride;
+Still with this he faced the flame,
+ Answered Death, and died.
+Crest of battle sunward tossed,
+ Song of the marching years,
+This shall live though all be lost---
+ "Forward, Grenadiers!"
+
+
+
+
+
+The Schoolfellow
+
+Our game was his but yesteryear;
+ We wished him back; we could not know
+The self-same hour we missed him here
+ He led the line that broke the foe.
+
+Blood-red behind our guarded posts
+ Sank as of old and dying day;
+The battle ceased; the mingled hosts
+ Weary and cheery went their way:
+
+"To-morrow well may bring," we said,
+ "As fair a fight, as clear a sun."
+Dear lad, before the world was sped,
+ For evermore thy goal was won.
+
+
+
+
+
+On Spion Kop
+
+Foremost of all on battle's fiery steep
+ Here VERTUE fell, and here he sleeps his sleep.*
+A fairer name no Roman ever gave
+ To stand sole monument on Valour's grave.
+
+* Major N. H. Vertue, of the Buffs, Brigade-Major to General
+Woodgate, was buried where he fell, on the edge of Spion Kop,
+in front of the British position.
+
+
+
+
+
+The School At War
+
+All night before the brink of death
+ In fitful sleep the army lay,
+For through the dream that stilled their breath
+ Too gauntly glared the coming day.
+
+But we, within whose blood there leaps
+ The fulness of a life as wide
+As Avon's water where he sweeps
+ Seaward at last with Severn's tide,
+
+We heard beyond the desert night
+ The murmur of the fields we knew,
+And our swift souls with one delight
+ Like homing swallows Northward flew.
+
+We played again the immortal games,
+ And grappled with the fierce old friends,
+And cheered the dead undying names,
+ And sang the song that never ends;
+
+Till, when the hard, familiar bell
+ Told that the summer night was late,
+Where long ago we said farewell
+ We said farewell by the old gate.
+
+"O Captains unforgot," they cried,
+ "Come you again or come no more,
+Across the world you keep the pride,
+ Across the world we mark the score."
+
+
+
+
+
+By The Hearth-Stone
+
+By the hearth-stone
+She sits alone,
+ The long night bearing:
+With eyes that gleam
+Into the dream
+ Of the firelight staring.
+
+Low and more low
+The dying glow
+ Burns in the embers;
+She nothing heeds
+And nothing needs---
+ Only remembers.
+
+
+
+
+
+Peace
+
+No more to watch by Night's eternal shore,
+ With England's chivalry at dawn to ride;
+No more defeat, faith, victory---O! no more
+ A cause on earth for which we might have died.
+
+
+
+
+
+April On Waggon Hill
+
+Lad, and can you rest now,
+ There beneath your hill!
+Your hands are on your breast now,
+ But is your heart so still?
+'Twas the right death to die, lad,
+ A gift without regret,
+But unless truth's a lie, lad,
+ You dream of Devon yet.
+
+Ay, ay, the year's awaking,
+ The fire's among the ling,
+The beechen hedge is breaking,
+ The curlew's on the wing;
+Primroses are out, lad,
+ On the high banks of Lee,
+And the sun stirs the trout, lad;
+ From Brendon to the sea.
+
+I know what's in your heart, lad,---
+ The mare he used to hunt---
+And her blue market-cart, lad,
+ With posies tied in front---
+We miss them from the moor road,
+ They're getting old to roam,
+The road they're on's a sure road
+ And nearer, lad, to home.
+
+Your name, the name they cherish?
+ 'Twill fade, lad, 'tis true:
+But stone and all may perish
+ With little loss to you.
+While fame's fame you're Devon, lad,
+ The Glory of the West;
+Till the roll's called in heaven, lad,
+ You may well take your rest.
+
+
+
+
+
+Commemoration
+
+I sat by the granite pillar, and sunlight fell
+ Where the sunlight fell of old,
+And the hour was the hour my heart remembered well,
+ And the sermon rolled and rolled
+As it used to roll when the place was still unhaunted,
+And the strangest tale in the world was still untold.
+
+And I knew that of all this rushing of urgent sound
+ That I so clearly heard,
+The green young forest of saplings clustered round
+ Was heeding not one word:
+Their heads were bowed in a still serried patience
+Such as an angel's breath could never have stirred.
+
+For some were already away to the hazardous pitch,
+ Or lining the parapet wall,
+And some were in glorious battle, or great and rich,
+ Or throned in a college hall:
+And among the rest was one like my own young phantom,
+Dreaming for ever beyond my utmost call.
+
+"O Youth," the preacher was crying, "deem not thou
+ Thy life is thine alone;
+Thou bearest the will of the ages, seeing how
+ They built thee bone by bone,
+And within thy blood the Great Age sleeps sepulchred
+Till thou and thine shall roll away the stone.
+
+"Therefore the days are coming when thou shalt burn
+ With passion whitely hot;
+Rest shall be rest no more; thy feet shall spurn
+ All that thy hand hath got;
+And One that is stronger shall gird thee, and lead thee swiftly
+Whither, O heart of Youth, thou wouldest not."
+
+And the School passed; and I saw the living and dead
+ Set in their seats again,
+And I longed to hear them speak of the word that was said,
+ But I knew that I longed in vain.
+And they stretched forth their hands, and the wind of the spirit took them
+Lightly as drifted leaves on an endless plain.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Echo
+
+Of A Ballad Sung By H. Plunket Greene To His Old School
+
+Twice three hundred boys were we,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+Where the Downs look out to the Severn Sea.
+ Clifton for aye!
+We held by the game and hailed the team,
+For many could play where few could dream.
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+Some were for profit and some for pride,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+Some for the flag they lived and died.
+ Clifton for aye!
+The work of the world must still be done,
+And minds are many though truth be one.
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+But a lad there was to his fellows sang,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+And soon the world to his music rang.
+ Clifton for aye!
+Follow your Captains, crown your Kings,
+But what will ye give to the lad that sings?
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+For the voice ye hear is the voice of home,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+And the voice of Youth with the world to roam.
+ Clifton for aye!
+The voice of passion and human tears,
+And the voice of the vision that lights the years.
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Best School of All
+
+It's good to see the school we knew,
+ The land of youth and dream.
+To greet again the rule we knew
+ Before we took the stream:
+Though long we've missed the sight of her,
+ Our hearts may not forget;
+We've lost the old delight of her,
+ We keep her honour yet.
+
+ We'll honour yet the school we knew,
+ The best school of all:
+ We'll honour yet the rule we knew,
+ Till the last bell call.
+ For working days or holidays,
+ And glad or melancholy days,
+ They were great days and jolly days
+ At the best school of all.
+
+The stars and sounding vanities
+ That half the crowd bewitch,
+What are they but inanities
+ To him that treads the pitch?
+And where's the welth I'm wondering,
+ Could buy the cheers that roll
+When the last charge goes thundering
+ Towards the twilight goal?
+
+Then men that tanned the hide of us,
+ Our daily foes and friends,
+They shall not lose their pride of us,
+ Howe'er the journey ends.
+Their voice to us who sing of it,
+ No more its message bears,
+But the round world shall ring of it,
+ And all we are be theirs.
+
+To speak of fame a venture is,
+ There's little here can bide,
+But we may face the centuries,
+ And dare the deepending tide:
+for though the dust that's part of us,
+ To dust again be gone,
+Yet here shall beat the heart of us---
+ The school we handed on!
+
+ We'll honour yet the school we knew,
+ The best school of all:
+ We'll honour yet the rule we knew,
+ Till the last bell call.
+ For working days or holidays,
+ And glad or melancholy days,
+ They were great days and jolly days
+ At the best school of all.
+
+
+
+
+
+England
+
+Praise thou with praise unending,
+ The Master of the Wine;
+To all their portions sending
+ Himself he mingled thine:
+
+The sea-born flush of morning,
+ The sea-born hush of night,
+The East wind comfort scorning,
+ And the North wind driving right:
+
+The world for gain and giving,
+ The game for man and boy,
+The life that joys in living,
+ The faith that lives in joy.
+
+
+
+
+
+Victoria Regina
+
+(June 21st, 1897*)
+
+A thousand years by sea and land
+ Our race hath served the island kings,
+But not by custom's dull command
+ To-day with song her Empire rings:
+
+Not all the glories of her birth,
+ Her armed renown and ancient throne,
+Could make her less the child of earth
+ Or give her hopes beyond our own:
+
+But stayed on faith more sternly proved
+ And pride than ours more pure and deep,
+She loves the land our fathers loved
+ And keeps the fame our sons shall keep.
+
+* These lines, with music by Dr. Lloyd, formed part of the Cycle of
+Song offered to Queen Victoria, of blessed and glorious memory,
+in celebration of her second Jubilee.
+
+
+
+
+
+The King Of England
+
+(June 24th, 1902)
+
+In that eclipse of noon when joy was hushed
+ Like the bird's song beneath unnatural night,
+And Terror's footfall in the darkness crushed
+ The rose imperial of our delight,
+Then, even then, though no man cried "He comes,"
+ And no man turned to greet him passing there,
+ With phantom heralds challenging renown
+ And silent-throbbing drums
+ I saw the King of England, hale and fair,
+ Ride out with a great train through London town.
+
+Unarmed he rode, but in his ruddy shield
+ The lions bore the dint of many a lance,
+And up and down his mantle's azure field
+ Were strewn the lilies plucked in famous France.
+Before him went with banner floating wide
+ The yeoman breed that served his honour best,
+ And mixed with these his knights of noble blood;
+ But in the place of pride
+ His admirals in billowy lines abreast
+ Convoyed him close like galleons on the flood.
+
+Full of a strength unbroken showed his face
+ And his brow calm with youth's unclouded dawn,
+But round his lips were lines of tenderer grace
+ Such as no hand but Time's hath ever drawn.
+Surely he knew his glory had no part
+ In dull decay, nor unto Death must bend,
+ Yet surely too of lengthening shadows dreamed
+ With sunset in his heart,
+ So brief his beauty now, so near the end,
+ And now so old and so immortal seemed.
+
+O King among the living, these shall hail
+ Sons of thy dust that shall inherit thee:
+O King of men that die, though we must fail
+ Thy life is breathed from thy triumphant sea.
+O man that servest men by right of birth,
+ Our hearts' content thy heart shall also keep,
+ Thou too with us shalt one day lay thee down
+ In our dear native earth,
+ Full sure the King of England, while we sleep,
+ For ever rides abroad, through London town.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Nile
+
+Out of the unknown South,
+Through the dark lands of drouth,
+ Far wanders ancient Nile in slumber gliding:
+Clear-mirrored in his dream
+The deeds that haunt his stream
+ Flash out and fade like stars in midnight sliding.
+Long since, before the life of man
+ Rose from among the lives that creep,
+With Time's own tide began
+ That still mysterious sleep,
+ Only to cease when Time shall reach the eternal deep.
+
+From out his vision vast
+The early gods have passed,
+ They waned and perished with the faith that made them;
+The long phantasmal line
+Of Pharaohs crowned divine
+ Are dust among the dust that once obeyed them.
+Their land is one mute burial mound,
+ Save when across the drifted years
+Some chant of hollow sound,
+ Some triumph blent with tears,
+ From Memnon's lips at dawn wakens the desert meres.
+
+O Nile, and can it be
+No memory dwells with thee
+ Of Grecian lore and the sweet Grecian singer?
+The legions' iron tramp,
+The Goths' wide-wandering camp,
+ Had these no fame that by thy shore might linger?
+Nay, then must all be lost indeed,
+ Lost too the swift pursuing might
+That cleft with passionate speed
+ Aboukir's tranquil night,
+ And shattered in mid-swoop the great world-eagle's flight.
+
+Yet have there been on earth
+Spirits of starry birth,
+ Whose splendour rushed to no eternal setting:
+They over all endure,
+Their course through all is sure,
+ The dark world's light is still of their begetting.
+Though the long past forgotten lies,
+ Nile! in thy dream remember him,
+Whose like no more shall rise
+ Above our twilight's rim,
+ Until the immortal dawn shall make all glories dim.
+
+For this man was not great
+By gold or kingly state,
+ Or the bright sword, or knowledge of earth's wonder;
+But more than all his race
+He saw life face to face,
+ And heard the still small voice above the thunder.
+O river, while thy waters roll
+ By yonder vast deserted tomb,
+There, where so clear a soul
+ So shone through gathering doom,
+ Thou and thy land shall keep the tale of lost Khartoum.
+
+
+
+
+
+Sráhmandázi*
+
+Deep embowered beside the forest river,
+ Where the flame of sunset only falls,
+Lapped in silence lies the House of Dying,
+ House of them to whom the twilight calls.
+
+There within when day was near to ending,
+ By her lord a woman young and strong,
+By his chief a songman old and stricken
+ Watched together till the hour of song.
+
+"O my songman, now the bow is broken,
+ Now the arrows one by one are sped,
+Sing to me the song of Sráhmandázi,
+ Sráhmandázi, home of all the dead."
+
+Then the songman, flinging wide his songnet,
+ On the last token laid his master's hand,
+While he sang the song of Sráhmandázi,
+ None but dying men can understand.
+
+"Yonder sun that fierce and fiery-hearted
+ Marches down the sky to vanish soon,
+At the self-same hour in Sráhmandázi
+ Rises pallid like the rainy moon.
+
+"There he sees the heroes by their river,
+ Where the great fish daily upward swim;
+Yet they are but shadows hunting shadows,
+ Phantom fish in waters drear and dim.
+
+"There he sees the kings among their headmen,
+ Women weaving, children playing games;
+Yet they are but shadows ruling shadows,
+ Phantom folk with dim forgotten names.
+
+"Bid farewell to all that most thou lovest,
+ Tell thy heart thy living life is done;
+All the days and deeds of Sráhmandázi
+ Are not worth an hour of yonder sun.
+
+Dreamily the chief from out the songnet
+ Drew his hand and touched the woman's head:
+"Know they not, then, love in Sráhmandázi?
+ Has a king no bride among the dead?"
+
+Then the songman answered, "O my master,
+ Love they know, but none may learn it there;
+Only souls that reach that land together
+ Keep their troth and find the twilight fair.
+
+"Thou art still a king, and at thy passing
+ By thy latest word must all abide:
+If thou willest, here am I, thy songman;
+ If thou lovest, here is she, thy bride."
+
+Hushed and dreamy lay the House of Dying,
+ Dreamily the sunlight upward failed,
+Dreamily the chief on eyes that loved him
+ Looked with eyes the coming twilight veiled.
+
+Then he cried, "My songman, I am passing;
+ Let her live, her life is but begun;
+All the days and nights of Sráhmandázi
+ Are not worth an hour of yonder sun."
+
+Yet, when there within the House of Dying
+ The last silence held the sunset air,
+Not alone he came to Sráhmandázi,
+ Not alone she found the twilight fair:
+
+While the songman, far beneath the forest
+ Sang of Srahmandazi all night through,
+"Lovely be thy name, O Land of shadows,
+ Land of meeting, Land of all the true!"
+
+* This ballad is founded on materials given to the author by the
+late Miss Mary Kingsley on her return from her last visit to the
+Bantu peoples of West Africa.
+
+
+
+
+
+Outward Bound
+
+Dear Earth, near Earth, the clay that made us men,
+ The land we sowed,
+ The hearth that glowed---
+ O Mother, must we bid farewell to thee?
+Fast dawns the last dawn, and what shall comfort then
+ The lonely hearts that roam the outer sea?
+
+Gray wakes the daybreak, the shivering sails are set,
+ To misty deeps
+ The channel sweeps---
+ O Mother, think on us who think on thee!
+Earth-home, birth-home, with love remember yet
+ The sons in exile on the eternal sea.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hope The Hornblower
+
+"Hark ye, hark to the winding horn;
+Sluggards, awake, and front the morn!
+Hark ye, hark to the winding horn;
+ The sun's on meadow and mill.
+Follow me, hearts that love the chase;
+Follow me, feet that keep the pace:
+Stirrup to stirrup we ride, we ride,
+ We ride by moor and hill."
+
+Huntsman, huntsman, whither away?
+What is the quarry afoot to-day?
+Huntsman, huntsman, whither away,
+ And what the game ye kill?
+Is it the deer, that men may dine?
+Is it the wolf that tears the kine?
+What is the race ye ride, ye ride,
+ Ye ride by moor and hill?
+
+"Ask not yet till the day be dead
+What is the game that's forward fled,
+Ask not yet till the day be dead
+ The game we follow still.
+An echo it may be, floating past;
+A shadow it may be, fading fast:
+Shadow or echo, we ride, we ride,
+ We ride by moor and hill"
+
+
+
+
+
+O Pulchritudo
+
+O Saint whose thousand shrines our feet have trod
+ And our eyes loved thy lamp's eternal beam,
+Dim earthly radiance of the Unknown God,
+ Hope of the darkness, light of them that dream,
+Far off, far off and faint, O glimmer on
+Till we thy pilgrims from the road are gone.
+
+O Word whose meaning every sense hath sought,
+ Voice of the teeming field and grassy mound,
+Deep-whispering fountain of the wells of thought,
+ Will of the wind and soul of all sweet sound,
+Far off, far off and faint, O murmur on
+Till we thy pilgrims from the road are gone.
+
+
+
+
+
+In July
+
+His beauty bore no token,
+ No sign our gladness shook;
+With tender strength unbroken
+ The hand of Life he took:
+But the summer flowers were falling,
+ Falling and fading away,
+And mother birds were calling,
+ Crying and calling
+ For their loves that would not stay.
+
+He knew not Autumn's chillness,
+ Nor Winter's wind nor Spring's.
+He lived with Summer's stillness
+ And sun and sunlit things:
+But when the dusk was falling
+ He went the shadowy way,
+And one more heart is calling,
+ Crying and calling
+ For the love that would not stay.
+
+
+
+
+
+From Generation To Generation
+
+O Son of mine, when dusk shall find thee bending
+ Between a gravestone and a cradle's head---
+Between the love whose name is loss unending
+ And the young love whose thoughts are liker dread,---
+Thou too shalt groan at heart that all thy spending
+ Cannot repay the dead, the hungry dead.
+
+
+
+
+
+When I Remember
+
+When I remember that the day will come
+ For this our love to quit his land of birth,
+ And bid farewell to all the ways of earth
+With lips that must for evermore be dumb,
+
+Then creep I silent from the stirring hum,
+ And shut away the music and the mirth,
+ And reckon up what may be left of worth
+When hearts are cold and love's own body numb.
+
+Something there must be that I know not here,
+Or know too dimly through the symbol dear;
+ Some touch, some beauty, only guessed by this---
+If He that made us loves, it shall replace,
+Beloved, even the vision of thy face
+ And deep communion of thine inmost kiss.
+
+
+
+
+
+Rondel*
+
+Though I wander far-off ways,
+ Dearest, never doubt thou me:
+
+Mine is not the love that strays,
+Though I wander far-off ways:
+
+Faithfully for all my days
+ I have vowed myself to thee:
+Though I wander far-off ways,
+ Dearest, never doubt thou me.
+
+* This and the two following pieces are from
+the French of Wenceslas, Duke of Brabant and
+Luxembourg, who died in 1384.
+
+
+
+
+
+Rondel
+
+Long ago to thee I gave
+Body, soul, and all I have---
+ Nothing in the world I keep:
+
+All that in return I crave
+Is that thou accept the slave
+Long ago to thee I gave---
+Body, soul, and all I have.
+
+Had I more to share or save,
+I would give as give the brave,
+ Stooping not to part the heap;
+Long ago to thee I gave
+Body, soul, and all I have---
+ Nothing in the world I keep.
+
+
+
+
+
+Balade
+
+I cannot tell, of twain beneath this bond,
+Which one in grief the other goes beyond,---
+Narcissus, who to end the pain he bore
+Died of the love that could not help him more;
+Or I, that pine because I cannot see
+The lady who is queen and love to me.
+
+Nay--for Narcissus, in the forest pond
+Seeing his image, made entreaty fond,
+"Beloved, comfort on my longing pour":
+So for a while he soothed his passion sore;
+So cannot I, for all too far is she---
+The lady who is queen and love to me.
+
+But since that I have Love's true colours donned,
+I in his service will not now despond,
+For in extremes Love yet can all restore:
+So till her beauty walks the world no more
+All day remembered in my hope shall be
+The lady who is queen and love to me.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Last Word
+
+Before the April night was late
+A rider came to the castle gate;
+A rider breathing human breath,
+But the words he spoke were the words of Death.
+
+"Greet you well from the King our lord,
+He marches hot for the eastward ford;
+Living or dying, all or one,
+Ye must keep the ford till the race be run.
+
+Sir Alain rose with lips that smiled,
+He kissed his wife, he kissed his child:
+Before the April night was late
+Sir Alain rode from the castle gate.
+
+He called his men-at-arms by name,
+But one there was uncalled that came:
+He bade his troop behind him ride,
+But there was one that rode beside.
+
+ "Why will you spur so fast to die?
+ Be wiser ere the night go by.
+ A message late is a message lost;
+ For all your haste the foe had crossed.
+
+ "Are men such small unmeaning things
+ To strew the board of smiling Kings?
+ With life and death they play their game,
+ And life or death, the end's the same."
+
+Softly the April air above
+Rustled the woodland homes of love:
+Softly the April air below
+Carried the dream of buds that blow.
+
+ "Is he that bears a warrior's fame
+ To shun the pointless stroke of shame?
+ Will he that propped a trembling throne
+ Not stand for right when right's his own?
+
+ "Your oath on the four gospels sworn?
+ What oath can bind resolves unborn?
+ You lose that far eternal life?
+ Is it yours to lose? Is it child and wife?
+
+But now beyond the pathway's bend,
+Sir Alain saw the forest end,
+And winding wide beneath the hill,
+The glassy river lone and still.
+
+And now he saw with lifted eyes
+The East like a great chancel rise,
+And deep through all his senses drawn,
+Received the sacred wine of dawn.
+
+He set his face to the stream below,
+He drew his axe from the saddle bow:
+"Farewell, Messire, the night is sped;
+There lies the ford, when all is said"
+
+
+
+
+
+The Viking's Song
+
+When I thy lover first
+ Shook out my canvas free
+And like a pirate burst
+ Into that dreaming sea,
+The land knew no such thirst
+ As then tormented me.
+
+Now when at eve returned
+ I near that shore divine,
+Where once but watch-fires burned
+ I see thy beacon shine,
+And know the land hath learned
+ Desire that welcomes mine.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Sufi In The City
+
+I.
+
+When late I watched the arrows of the sleet
+Against the windows of the Tavern beat,
+ I heard a Rose that murmured from her Pot:
+"Why trudge thy fellows yonder in the Street?
+
+II.
+
+"Before the phantom of False Morning dies,
+Choked in the bitter Net that binds the skies,
+ Their feet, bemired with Yesterday, set out
+For the dark alleys where To-morrow lies.
+
+III.
+
+"Think you, when all their petals they have bruised,
+And all the fragrances of Life confused,
+ That Night with sweeter rest will comfort these
+Than us, who still within the Garden mused?
+
+IV.
+
+"Think you the Gold they fight for all day long
+Is worth the frugal Peace their clamours wrong?
+ Their Titles, and the Name they toil to build---
+Will they outlast the echoes of our Song?"
+
+V.
+
+O Sons of Omar, what shall be the close
+Seek not to know, for no man living knows:
+ But while within your hands the Wine is set
+Drink ye--to Omar and the Dreaming Rose!
+
+
+
+
+
+Yattendon
+
+Among the woods and tillage
+ That fringe the topmost downs,
+All lonely lies the village,
+ Far off from seas and towns.
+Yet when her own folk slumbered
+ I heard within her street
+Murmur of men unnumbered
+ And march of myriad feet.
+
+For all she lies so lonely,
+ Far off from towns and seas,
+The village holds not only
+ The roofs beneath her trees:
+While Life is sweet and tragic
+ And Death is veiled and dumb,
+Hither, by singer's magic,
+ The pilgrim world must come.
+
+
+
+
+
+Among The Tombs
+
+She is a lady fair and wise,
+ Her heart her counsel keeps,
+And well she knows of time that flies
+ And tide that onward sweeps;
+But still she sits with restless eyes
+ Where Memory sleeps---
+ Where Memory sleeps.
+
+Ye that have heard the whispering dead
+ In every wind that creeps,
+Or felt the stir that strains the lead
+ Beneath the mounded heaps,
+Tread softly, ah! more softly tread
+ Where Memory sleeps---
+ Where Memory sleeps.
+
+
+
+
+
+A Sower
+
+With sanguine looks
+ And rolling walk
+Among the rooks
+ He loved to stalk,
+
+While on the land
+ With gusty laugh
+From a full hand
+ He scattered chaff.
+
+Now that within
+ His spirit sleeps
+A harvest thin
+ The sickle reaps;
+
+But the dumb fields
+ Desire his tread,
+And no earth yields
+ A wheat more red.
+
+
+
+
+
+A Song Of Exmoor
+
+The Forest above and the Combe below,
+ On a bright September morn!
+He's the soul of a clod who thanks not God
+ That ever his body was born!
+So hurry along, the stag's afoot,
+ The Master's up and away!
+Halloo! Halloo! we'll follow it through
+From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+ So hurry along, the stag's afoot,
+ The Master's up and away!
+ Halloo! Halloo! we'll follow it through
+ From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+Hark to the tufters' challenge true,
+ 'Tis a note that the red-deer knows!
+His courage awakes, his covert he breaks,
+ And up for the moor he goes!
+He's all his rights and seven on top,
+ His eye's the eye of a king,
+And he'll beggar the pride of some that ride
+ Before he leaves the ling!
+
+Here comes Antony bringing the pack,
+ Steady! he's laying them on!
+By the sound of their chime you may tell that it's time
+ To harden your heart and be gone.
+Nightacott, Narracott, Hunnacott's passed,
+ Right for the North they race:
+He's leading them straight for Blackmoor Gate,
+ And he's setting a pounding pace!
+
+We're running him now on a breast-high scent,
+ But he leaves us standing still;
+When we swing round by Westland Pound
+ He's far up Challacombe Hill.
+The pack are a string of struggling ants,
+ The quarry's a dancing midge,
+They're trying their reins on the edge of the Chains
+ While he's on Cheriton Ridge.
+
+He's gone by Kittuck and Lucott Moor,
+ He's gone by Woodcock's Ley;
+By the little white town he's turned him down,
+ And he's soiling in open sea.
+So hurry along, we'll both be in,
+ The crowd are a parish away!
+We're a field of two, and we've followed it through
+From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+ So hurry along, we'll both be in,
+ The crowd are a parish away!
+ We're a field of two, and we've followed it through
+ From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+
+
+
+
+Fidele's Grassy Tomb
+
+The Squire sat propped in a pillowed chair,
+His eyes were alive and clear of care,
+But well he knew that the hour was come
+To bid good-bye to his ancient home.
+
+He looked on garden, wood, and hill,
+He looked on the lake, sunny and still:
+The last of earth that his eyes could see
+Was the island church of Orchardleigh.
+
+The last that his heart could understand
+Was the touch of the tongue that licked his hand:
+"Bury the dog at my feet," he said,
+And his voice dropped, and the Squire was dead.
+
+Now the dog was a hound of the Danish breed,
+Staunch to love and strong at need:
+He had dragged his master safe to shore
+When the tide was ebbing at Elsinore.
+
+From that day forth, as reason would,
+He was named "Fidele," and made it good:
+When the last of the mourners left the door
+Fidele was dead on the chantry floor.
+
+They buried him there at his master's feet,
+And all that heard of it deemed it meet:
+The story went the round for years,
+Till it came at last to the Bishop's ears.
+
+Bishop of Bath and Wells was he,
+Lord of the lords of Orchardleigh;
+And he wrote to the Parson the strongest screed
+That Bishop may write or Parson read.
+
+The sum of it was that a soulless hound
+Was known to be buried in hallowed ground:
+From scandal sore the Church to save
+They must take the dog from his masters grave.
+
+The heir was far in a foreign land,
+The Parson was wax to my Lord's command:
+He sent for the Sexton and bade him make
+A lonely grave by the shore of the lake.
+
+The Sexton sat by the water's brink
+Where he used to sit when he used to think:
+He reasoned slow, but he reasoned it out,
+And his argument left him free from doubt.
+
+"A Bishop," he said, "is the top of his trade:
+But there's others can give him a start with the spade:
+Yon dog, he carried the Squire ashore,
+And a Christian couldn't ha' done no more.
+
+The grave was dug; the mason came
+And carved on stone Fidele's name;
+But the dog that the Sexton laid inside
+Was a dog that never had lived or died.
+
+So the Parson was praised,and the scandal stayed,
+Till, a long time after, the church decayed,
+And, laying the floor anew, they found
+In the tomb of the Squire the bones of a hound.
+
+As for the Bishop of Bath and Wells
+No more of him the story tells;
+Doubtless he lived as a Prelate and Prince,
+And died and was buried a century since.
+
+And whether his view was right or wrong
+Has little to do with this my song;
+Something we owe him, you must allow;
+And perhaps he has changed his mind by now.
+
+The Squire in the family chantry sleeps,
+The marble still his memory keeps:
+Remember, when the name you spell,
+There rest Fidele's bones as well.
+
+For the Sexton's grave you need not search,
+'Tis a nameless mound by the island church:
+An ignorant fellow, of humble lot---
+But. he knew one thing that a Bishop did not.
+
+
+
+
+
+Moonset
+
+Past seven o'clock: time to be gone;
+Twelfth-night's over and dawn shivering up:
+A hasty cut of the loaf, a steaming cup,
+Down to the door, and there is Coachman John.
+
+Ruddy of cheek is John and bright of eye;
+But John it appears has none of your grins and winks;
+Civil enough, but short: perhaps he thinks:
+Words come once in a mile, and always dry.
+
+Has he a mind or not? I wonder; but soon
+We turn through a leafless wood, and there to the right,
+Like a sun bewitched in alien realms of night,
+Mellow and yellow and rounded hangs the moon.
+
+Strangely near she seems, and terribly great:
+The world is dead: why are we travelling still?
+Nightmare silence grips my struggling will;
+We are driving for ever and ever to find a gate.
+
+"When you come to consider the moon," says John at last,
+And stops, to feel his footing and take his stand;
+"And then there's some will say there's never a hand
+That made the world!"
+ A flick, and the gates are passed.
+
+Out of the dim magical moonlit park,
+Out to the workday road and wider skies:
+There's a warm flush in the East where day's to rise,
+And I'm feeling the better for Coachman John's remark.
+
+
+
+
+
+Master And Man
+
+Do ye ken hoo to fush for the salmon?
+ If ye'll listen I'll tell ye.
+Dinna trust to the books and their gammon,
+ They're but trying to sell ye.
+Leave professors to read their ain cackle
+ And fush their ain style;
+Come awa', sir, we'll oot wi' oor tackle
+ And be busy the while.
+
+'Tis a wee bit ower bright, ye were thinkin'?
+ Aw, ye'll no be the loser;
+'Tis better ten baskin' and blinkin'
+ Than ane that's a cruiser.
+If ye're bent, as I tak it, on slatter,
+ Ye should pray for the droot,
+For the salmon's her ain when there's watter,
+ But she's oors when it's oot.
+
+Ye may just put your flee-book behind ye,
+ Ane hook wull be plenty;
+If they'll no come for this, my man, mind ye,
+ They'll no come for twenty.
+Ay, a rod; but the shorter the stranger
+ And the nearer to strike;
+For myself I prefare it nae langer
+ Than a yard or the like.
+
+Noo, ye'll stand awa' back while I'm creepin'
+ Wi' my snoot i' the gowans;
+There's a bonny twalve-poonder a-sleepin'
+ I' the shade o' yon rowans.
+Man, man! I was fearin' I'd stirred her,
+ But I've got her the noo!
+Hoot! fushin's as easy as murrder
+ When ye ken what to do.
+
+Na, na, sir, I doot na ye're willin'
+ But I canna permit ye;
+For I'm thinkin' that yon kind o' killin'
+ Wad hardly befit ye.
+And some work is deefficult hushin',
+ There'd be havers and chaff:
+'Twull be best, sir, for you to be fushin'
+ And me wi' the gaff.
+
+
+
+
+
+Gavotte
+
+(Old French)
+
+Memories long in music sleeping,
+ No more sleeping,
+ No more dumb;
+Delicate phantoms softly creeping
+ Softly back from the old-world come.
+
+Faintest odours around them straying,
+ Suddenly straying
+ In chambers dim;
+Whispering silks in order swaying,
+ Glimmering gems on shoulders slim:
+
+Courage advancing strong and tender,
+ Grace untender
+ Fanning desire;
+Suppliant conquest, proud surrender,
+ Courtesy cold of hearts on fire---
+
+Willowy billowy now they're bending,
+ Low they're bending
+ Down-dropt eyes;
+Stately measure and stately ending,
+ Music sobbing, and a dream that dies.
+
+
+
+
+
+Imogen
+
+(A Lady of Tender Age)
+
+Ladies, where were your bright eyes glancing,
+ Where were they glancing yester-night?
+Saw ye Imogen dancing, dancing,
+ Imogen dancing all in white?
+ Laughed she not with a pure delight,
+ Laughed she not with a joy serene,
+Stepped she not with a grace entrancing,
+ Slenderly girt in silken sheen?
+
+All through the night from dusk to daytime
+ Under her feet the hours were swift,
+Under her feet the hours of play-time
+ Rose and fell with a rhythmic lift:
+ Music set her adrift, adrift,
+ Music eddying towards the day
+Swept her along as brooks in May-time
+ Carry the freshly falling May.
+
+Ladies, life is a changing measure,
+ Youth is a lilt that endeth soon;
+Pluck ye never so fast at pleasure
+ Twilight follows the longest noon.
+ Nay, but here is a lasting boon,
+ Life for hearts that are old and chill,
+Youth undying for hearts that treasure
+ Imogen dancing, dancing still.
+
+
+
+
+
+Nel Mezzo Del Cammin
+
+Whisper it not that late in years
+Sorrow shall fade and the world be brighter,
+Life be freed of tremor and tears,
+Heads be wiser and hearts be lighter.
+Ah! but the dream that all endears,
+The dream we sell for your pottage of truth---
+Give us again the passion of youth,
+Sorrow shall fade and the world be brighter.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Invasion
+
+Spring, they say, with his greenery
+ Northward marches at last,
+ Mustering thorn and elm;
+Breezes rumour him conquering,
+ Tell how Victory sits
+ High on his glancing helm.
+
+Smit with sting of his archery,
+ Hardest ashes and oaks
+ Burn at the root below:
+Primrose, violet, daffodil,
+ Start like blood where the shafts
+ Light from his golden bow.
+
+Here where winter oppresses us
+ Still we listen and doubt,
+ Dreading a hope betrayed:
+Sore we long to be greeting him,
+ Still we linger and doubt
+ "What if his march be stayed?"
+
+Folk in thrall to the enemy,
+ Vanquished, tilling a soil
+ Hateful and hostile grown;
+Always wearily, warily,
+ Feeding deep in the heart
+ Passion they dare not own---
+
+So we wait the deliverer;
+ Surely soon shall he come,
+ Soon shall his hour be due:
+Spring shall come with his greenery,
+ Life be lovely again,
+ Earth be the home we knew.
+
+
+
+
+
+Pereunt Et Imputantur
+
+(After Martial)
+
+Bernard, if to you and me
+ Fortune all at once should give
+Years to spend secure and free,
+ With the choice of how to live,
+Tell me, what should we proclaim
+Life deserving of the name?
+
+Winning some one else's case?
+ Saving some one else's seat?
+Hearing with a solemn face
+ People of importance bleat?
+No, I think we should not still
+Waste our time at others' will.
+
+Summer noons beneath the limes,
+ Summer rides at evening cool,
+Winter's tales and home-made rhymes,
+ Figures on the frozen pool---
+These would we for labours take,
+And of these our business make.
+
+Ah! but neither you nor I
+ Dare in earnest venture so;
+Still we let the good days die
+ And to swell the reckoning go.
+What are those that know the way,
+Yet to walk therein delay?
+
+
+
+
+
+Felix Antonius
+
+(After Martial)
+
+To-day, my friend is seventy-five;
+ He tells his tale with no regret;
+ His brave old eyes are steadfast yet,
+His heart the .lightest heart alive.
+
+He sees behind him green and wide
+ The pathway of his pilgrim years;
+ He sees the shore, and dreadless hears
+The whisper of the creeping tide.
+
+For out of all his days, not one
+ Has passed and left its unlaid ghost
+ To seek a light for ever lost,
+Or wail a deed for ever done.
+
+So for reward of life-long truth
+ He lives again, as good men can,
+ Redoubling his allotted span
+With memories of a stainless youth.
+
+
+
+
+
+Ireland, Ireland
+
+Down thy valleys, Ireland, Ireland,
+ Down thy valleys green and sad,
+Still thy spirit wanders wailing,
+ Wanders wailing, wanders mad.
+
+Long ago that anguish took thee,
+ Ireland, Ireland, green and fair,
+Spoilers strong in darkness took thee,
+ Broke thy heart and left thee there.
+
+Down thy valleys, Ireland, Ireland,
+ Still thy spirit wanders mad;
+All too late they love that wronged thee,
+ Ireland, Ireland, green and sad.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hymn
+
+In The Time Of War And Tumults
+
+O Lord Almighty, Thou whose hands
+ Despair and victory give;
+In whom, though tyrants tread their lands,
+ The souls of nations live;
+
+Thou wilt not turn Thy face away
+ From those who work Thy will,
+But send Thy peace on hearts that pray,
+ And guard Thy people still.
+
+Remember not the days of shame,
+ The hands with rapine dyed,
+The wavering will, the baser aim,
+ The brute material pride:
+
+Remember, Lord, the years of faith,
+ The spirits humbly brave,
+The strength that died defying death,
+ The love that loved the slave:
+
+The race that strove to rule Thine earth
+ With equal laws unbought: .
+Who bore for Truth the pangs of birth,
+ And brake the bonds of Thought.
+
+Remember how, since time began,
+ Thy dark eternal mind
+Through lives of men that fear not man
+ ls light for all mankind.
+
+Thou wilt not turn Thy face away
+ From those who work Thy will,
+But send Thy strength on hearts that pray
+ For strength to serve Thee still.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Building Of The Temple
+
+(An Anthem Heard In Canterbury Cathedral)
+
+[The Organ]
+
+O Lord our God, we are strangers before Thee, and sojourners, as were
+all our fathers: our days on the earth are as a shadow, and there is
+none abiding.
+
+O Lord God of our fathers, keep this for ever in the imagination of
+the thoughts of Thy people, and prepare their heart unto Thee.
+
+And give unto Solomon my son a perfect heart to keep Thy commandments,
+and to build the palace for the which I have made provision.
+
+[Boys' voices.]
+
+O come to the Palace of Life,
+Let us build it again.
+It was founded on terror and strife,
+It was laid in the curse of the womb,
+And pillared on toil and pain,
+And hung with veils of doom,
+And vaulted with the darkness of the tomb.
+
+[Men's voices.]
+
+O Lord our God, we are sojourners here for a day,
+ Strangers and sojourners, as all our fathers were:
+Our years on the earth are a shadow that fadeth away;
+ Grant us light for our labour, and a time for prayer.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+But now with endless song,
+And joy fulfilling the Law;
+Of passion as pure as strong
+And pleasure undimmed of awe;
+With garners of wine and grain
+Laid up for the ages long,
+Let us build the Palace again
+And enter with endless song,
+Enter and dwell secure, forgetting the years of wrong.
+
+[Men.]
+
+O Lord our God, we are strangers and sojourners here,
+ Our beginning was night, and our end is hid in Thee:
+Our labour on the earth is hope redeeming fear,
+ In sorrow we build for the days we shall not see.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Great is the name
+Of the strong and skilled,
+Lasting the fame
+Of them that build:
+The tongues of many nations
+Shall speak of our praise,
+And far generations
+Be glad for our days.
+
+[Men.]
+
+We are sojourners here as all our fathers were,
+ As all our children shall be, forgetting and forgot:
+The fame of man is a murmur that passeth on the air,
+ We perish indeed if Thou remember not.
+
+We are sojourners here as all our fathers were,
+ Strangers travelling down to the land of death:
+There is neither work nor device nor knowledge there,
+ O grant us might for our labour, and to rest in faith.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+In joy, in the joy of the light to be,
+
+[Men.]
+
+ O Father of Lights, unvarying and true,
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Let us build the Palace of Life anew.
+
+[Men.]
+
+ Let us build for the years we shall not see.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Lofty of line and glorious of hue,
+With gold and pearl and with the cedar tree,
+
+[Men.]
+
+ With silence due
+ And with service free,
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Let us build it for ever in splendour new.
+
+[Men.]
+
+ Let us build in hope and in sorrow, and rest in Thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTES
+
+
+Drake's Drum.
+
+A state drum, painted with the arms of Sir Francis
+Drake, is preserved among other relics at Buckland Abbey, the seat of
+the Drake family in Devon.
+
+
+The Fighting Téméraire.
+
+The two last stanzas have been misunderstood.
+It seems, therefore, necessary to state that they are intended to
+refer to Turner's picture in the National Gallery of "The Fighting
+_Téméraire_ Tugged to her Last Berth."
+
+
+San Stefano.
+
+Sir Peter Parker was the son of Admiral Christopher
+Parker, grandson of Admiral Sir Peter Parker (the life-long friend and
+chief mourner of Nelson), and great-grandson of Admiral Sir William
+Parker. On his mother's side he was grandson of Admiral Byron, and
+first cousin of Lord Byron, the poet. He was killed in action near
+Baltimore in 1814, and buried in St. Margaret's, Westminster,
+where may be seen the monument erected to his memory by the officers
+of the _Menelaus_.
+
+
+The Quarter-Gunner's Yarn.
+
+This ballad is founded on fragmentary lines
+communicated to the author by Admiral Sir Windham Hornby, K.C.B., who
+served under Sir Thomas Hardy in 1827.
+
+
+Væ Victis.
+
+See _Livy_, XXX.,43, _Diodorus Siculus_, XIX., 106.
+
+
+Seringapatam.
+
+In 1780, while attempting to relieve Arcot, a British
+force of three thousand men was cut to pieces by Hyder Ali. Baird,
+then a young captain in the 73rd, was left for dead on the field. He
+was afterwards, with forty-nine other officers, kept in prison at
+Seringapatam, and treated with Oriental barbarity and treachery by
+Hyder Ali and his son Tippoo Sahib, Sultans of Mysore. Twenty-three of
+the prisoners died by poison, torture, and fever; the rest were
+surrendered in 1784. In 1799, at the siege of Seringapatam,
+Major-General Baird commanded the first European brigade, and
+volunteered to lead the storming column. Tippoo Sahib, with eight
+thousand of his men, fell in the assault, but the victor spared the
+lives of his sons and forbade a general sack of the city.
+
+
+Clifton Chapel.
+
+Clifton is one of the schools from which the largest
+number of boys pass direct into the R.M.A., Woolwich, and R.M.C.,
+Sandhurst. Thirty-five Old Cliftonian officers served in the campaign
+of 1897 on the Indian Frontier, of whom twenty-two were mentioned in
+despatches and six recommended for the Distinguished Service Order. Of
+the three hundred Cliftonians who served in the war in South Africa,
+thirty were killed in action and fourteen died of wounds or fever.
+
+ Clifton, remember these thy sons who fell
+ Fighting far oversea;
+ For they in a dark hour remembered well
+ Their warfare learned of thee.
+
+
+The Echo.
+
+The ballad was "The Twa Sisters of Binnorie," as set by
+Arthur Somervell.
+
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Collected Poems 1897 - 1907, by Henry Newbolt
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13900 ***
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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #13900 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13900)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Collected Poems 1897 - 1907, by Henry Newbolt
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Collected Poems 1897 - 1907
+
+Author: Henry Newbolt
+
+Release Date: October 31, 2004 [EBook #13900]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLLECTED POEMS 1897 - 1907 ***
+
+
+
+
+Processed by Tom Harris. In memory of my mother, Elizabeth Harris,
+who loved poetry, and scanned from her own copy of the book.
+
+
+
+
+
+Collected Poems 1897 - 1907
+by
+Henry Newbolt
+
+To Thomas Hardy
+
+
+
+
+
+Drake's Drum
+
+Drake he's in his hammock an' a thousand miles away,
+ (Capten, art tha sleepin' there below?)
+Slung atween the round shot in Nombre Dios Bay,
+ An' dreamin' arl the time O' Plymouth Hoe.
+Yarnder lumes the Island, yarnder lie the ships,
+ Wi' sailor lads a-dancing' heel-an'-toe,
+An' the shore-lights flashin', an' the night-tide dashin',
+ He sees et arl so plainly as he saw et long ago.
+
+Drake he was a Devon man, an' rüled the Devon seas,
+ (Capten, art tha' sleepin' there below?)
+Roving' tho' his death fell, he went wi' heart at ease,
+ An' dreamin' arl the time o' Plymouth Hoe.
+"Take my drum to England, hang et by the shore,
+ Strike et when your powder's runnin' low;
+If the Dons sight Devon, I'll quit the port o' Heaven,
+ An' drum them up the Channel as we drummed them long ago."
+
+Drake he's in his hammock till the great Armadas come,
+ (Capten, art tha sleepin' there below?)
+Slung atween the round shot, listenin' for the drum,
+ An' dreamin arl the time o' Plymouth Hoe.
+Call him on the deep sea, call him up the Sound,
+ Call him when ye sail to meet the foe;
+Where the old trade's plyin' an' the old flag flyin'
+ They shall find him ware an' wakin', as they found him long ago!
+
+
+
+
+
+The Fighting Téméraire
+
+It was eight bells ringing,
+ For the morning watch was done,
+And the gunner's lads were singing
+ As they polished every gun.
+It was eight bells ringing,
+And the gunner's lads were singing,
+For the ship she rode a-swinging,
+ As they polished every gun.
+
+ Oh! to see the linstock lighting,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+ Oh! to hear the round shot biting,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+
+ Oh! to see the linstock lighting,
+ And to hear the round shot biting,
+ For we're all in love with fighting
+ On the fighting Téméraire.
+
+It was noontide ringing,
+ And the battle just begun,
+When the ship her way was winging,
+ As they loaded every gun.
+It was noontide ringing,
+When the ship her way was winging,
+And the gunner's lads were singing
+ As they loaded every gun.
+
+ There'll be many grim and gory,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+ There'll be few to tell the story,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+
+ There'll be many grim and gory,
+ There'll be few to tell the story,
+ But we'll all be one in glory
+ With the Fighting Téméraire.
+
+There's a far bell ringing
+ At the setting of the sun,
+And a phantom voice is singing
+ Of the great days done.
+There's a far bell ringing,
+And a phantom voice is singing
+Of renown for ever clinging
+ To the great days done.
+
+ Now the sunset breezes shiver,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+ And she's fading down the river,
+ Téméraire! Téméraire!
+
+ Now the sunset's breezes shiver,
+ And she's fading down the river,
+ But in England's song for ever
+ She's the Fighting Téméraire.
+
+
+
+
+
+Admirals All
+
+Effingham, Grenville, Raleigh, Drake,
+ Here's to the bold and free!
+Benbow, Collingwood, Byron, Blake,
+ Hail to the Kings of the Sea!
+Admirals all, for England's sake,
+ Honour be yours and fame!
+And honour, as long as waves shall break,
+ To Nelson's peerless name!
+
+ Admirals all, for England's sake,
+ Honour be yours and fame!
+ And honour, as long as waves shall break,
+ To Nelson's peerless name!
+
+Essex was fretting in Cadiz Bay
+ With the galleons fair in sight;
+Howard at last must give him his way,
+ And the word was passed to fight.
+Never was schoolboy gayer than he,
+ Since holidays first began:
+He tossed his bonnet to wind and sea,
+ And under the guns he ran.
+
+Drake nor devil nor Spaniard feared,
+ Their cities he put to the sack;
+He singed his Catholic Majesty's beard,
+ And harried his ships to wrack.
+He was playing at Plymouth a rubber of bowls
+ When the great Armada came;
+But he said, "They must wait their turn, good souls,"
+ And he stooped and finished the game.
+
+Fifteen sail were the Dutchmen bold,
+ Duncan he had but two;
+But he anchored them fast where the Texel shoaled,
+ And his colours aloft he flew.
+"I've taken the depth to a fathom," he cried,
+ "And I'll sink with a right good will:
+For I know when we're all of us under the tide
+ My flag will be fluttering still."
+
+Splinters were flying above, below,
+ When Nelson sailed the Sound:
+"Mark you, I wouldn't be elsewhere now,"
+ Said he, "for a thousand pound!"
+The Admiral's signal bade him fly
+ But he wickedly wagged his head:
+He clapped the glass to his sightless eye,
+ And "I'm damned if I see it!" he said.
+
+Admirals all, they said their say
+ (The echoes are ringing still).
+Admirals all, they went their way
+ To the haven under the hill.
+But they left us a kingdom none can take,
+ The realm of the circling sea,
+To be ruled by the rightful sons of Blake,
+ And the Rodneys yet to be.
+
+ Admirals all, for England's sake,
+ Honour be yours and fame!
+ And honour, as long as waves shall break,
+ To Nelson's peerless name!
+
+
+
+
+
+San Stefano
+
+(A Ballad of the Bold Menelaus)
+
+It was morning at St. Helen's, in the great and gallant days,
+ And the sea beneath the sun glittered wide,
+When the frigate set her courses, all a-shimmer in the haze
+ And she hauled her cable home and took the tide.
+She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+And they cheered her from the shore for her colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ put to sea.
+
+ She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+ And they cheered her from the shore for her colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ put to sea.
+
+She was clear of Monte Cristo, she was heading for the land,
+ When she spied a pennant red and white and blue;
+They were foemen, and they knew it, and they'd half a league in hand,
+ But she flung aloft her royals, and she flew.
+She was nearer, nearer, nearer, they were caught beyond a doubt,
+ But they slipped her into Orbetello Bay,
+And the lubbers gave a shout as they paid their cables out,
+ With the guns grinning round them where they lay.
+
+Now, Sir Peter was a captain of a famous fighting race,
+ Son and grandson of an admiral was he;
+And he looked upon the batteries, he looked upon the chase,
+ And he heard the shout that echoed out to sea.
+And he called across the decks, "Ay! the cheering might be late
+ If they kept it till the _Menelaus_ runs;
+Bid the master and his mate heave the lead and lay her straight
+ For the prize lying yonder by the guns!"
+
+When the summer moon was setting, into Orbetello Bay
+ Came the _Menelaus_ gliding like a ghost;
+And her boats were manned in silence, and in silence pulled away,
+ And in silence every gunner took his post.
+With a volley from her broadside the citadel she woke,
+ And they hammered back like heroes all the night;
+But before the morning broke she had vanished through the smoke
+ With her prize upon her quarter grappled tight.
+
+It was evening at St. Helen's in the great and gallant time,
+ And the sky behind the down was flushing far;
+And the flags were all a-flutter, and the bells were all a-chime,
+ When the frigate cast her anchor off the bar.
+She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+And they cheered her from the shore for the colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ came from the sea.
+
+ She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+ And they cheered her from the shore for her colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ came from the sea.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hawke
+
+In seventeen hundred and fifty-nine,
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West,
+The French King's Admiral with twenty of the line,
+ Was sailing forth to sack us, out of Brest.
+The ports of France were crowded, the quays of France a-hum
+With thirty thousand soldiers marching to the drum,
+For bragging time was over and fighting time was come
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West.
+
+'Twas long past noon of a wild November day
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West;
+He heard the breakers thundering in Quiberon Bay,
+ But he flew the flag for battle, line abreast.
+Down upon the quicksands roaring out of sight
+Fiercely beat the storm-wind, darkly fell the night,
+But they took the foe for pilot and the cannon's glare for light
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West.
+
+The Frenchmen turned like a covey down the wind
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West;
+One he sank with all hands, one he caught and pinned,
+ And the shallows and the storm took the rest.
+The guns that should have conquered us they rusted on the shore,
+The men that would have mastered us they drummed and marched no more,
+For England was England, and a mighty brood she bore
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Bright Medusa
+
+(1807)
+
+She's the daughter of the breeze,
+She's the darling of the seas,
+ And we call her, if you please, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+From beneath her bosom bare
+To the snakes among her hair
+ She's a flash o' golden light, the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+When the ensign dips above
+And the guns are all for love,
+ She's as gentle as a dove, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+But when the shot's in rack
+And her forestay flies the Jack,
+ He's a merry man would slight the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+When she got the word to go
+Up to Monte Video,
+ There she found the river low, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+So she tumbled out her guns
+And a hundred of her sons,
+ And she taught the Dons to fight the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+When the foeman can be found
+With the pluck to cross her ground,
+ First she walks him round and round, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+Then she rakes him fore and aft
+Till he's just a jolly raft,
+ And she grabs him like a kite, the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+She's the daughter of the breeze,
+She's the darling of the seas,
+ And you'll call her, if you please, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+For till England's sun be set--
+And it's not for setting yet--
+ She shall bear her name by right, the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Old Superb
+
+The wind was rising easterly, the morning sky was blue,
+ The Straits before us opened wide and free;
+We looked towards the Admiral, where high the Peter flew,
+ And all our hearts were dancing like the sea.
+"The French are gone to Martinique with four and twenty sail!
+ The Old _Superb_ is old and foul and slow,
+But the French are gone to Martinique, and Nelson's on the trail.
+ And where he goes the Old _Superb_ must go!"
+
+ So Westward ho! for Trinidad, and Eastward ho! for Spain,
+ And "Ship ahoy!" a hundred times a day;
+ Round the world if need be, and round the world again,
+ With a lame duck lagging all the way.
+
+The Old _Superb_ was barnacled and green as grass below,
+ Her sticks were only fit for stirring grog;
+The pride of all her midshipmen was silent long ago,
+ And long ago they ceased to heave the log.
+Four year out from home she was, and ne'er a week in port,
+ And nothing save the guns aboard her bright;
+But Captain Keats he knew the game, and swore to share the sport,
+ For he never yet came in too late to fight.
+
+ So Westward ho! for Trinidad, and Eastward ho! for Spain,
+ And "Ship ahoy!" a hundred times a day;
+ Round the world if need be, and round the world again,
+ With a lame duck lagging all the way.
+
+"Now up, my lads," the Captain cried, "for sure the case were hard
+ If longest out were first to fall behind;
+Aloft, aloft with studding sails, and lash them on the yard,
+ For night and day the Trades are driving blind!"
+So all day long and all day long behind the fleet we crept,
+ And how we fretted none but Nelson guessed;
+But every night the Old _Superb_ she sailed when others slept,
+ Till we ran the French to earth with all the rest.
+
+ Oh, 'twas Westward ho! for Trinidad, and Eastward ho! for Spain,
+ And "Ship ahoy!" a hundred times a day;
+ Round the world if need be, and round the world again,
+ With a lame duck lagging all the way.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Quarter-Gunner's Yarn
+
+We lay at St. Helen's, and easy she rode
+With one anchor catted and fresh-water stowed;
+When the barge came alongside like bullocks we roared,
+For we knew what we carried with Nelson aboard.
+
+Our Captain was Hardy, the pride of us all,
+I'll ask for none better when danger shall call;
+He was hardy by nature and Hardy by name,
+And soon by his conduct to honour he came.
+
+The third day the Lizard was under our lee,
+Where the _Ajax_ and _Thunderer_ joined us at sea,
+But what with foul weather and tacking about,
+When we sighted the Fleet we were thirteen days out.
+
+The Captains they all came aboard quick enough,
+But the news that they brought was as heavy as duff;
+So backward an enemy never was seen,
+They were harder to come at than Cheeks the Marine.
+
+The lubbers had hare's lugs where seamen have ears,
+So we stowed all saluting and smothered our cheers,
+And to humour their stomachs and tempt them to dine,
+In the offing we showed them but six of the line.
+
+One morning the topmen reported below
+The old _Agamemnon_ escaped from the foe.
+Says Nelson: "My lads, there'll be honour for some,
+For we're sure of a battle now Berry has come."
+
+"Up hammocks!" at last cried the bo'sun at dawn;
+The guns were cast loose and the tompions drawn;
+The gunner was bustling the shot racks to fill,
+And "All hands to quarters!" was piped with a will.
+
+We now saw the enemy bearing ahead,
+And to East of them Cape Traflagar it was said,
+'Tis a name we remember from father to son,
+That the days of old England may never be done.
+
+The _Victory_ led, to her flag it was due,
+Tho' the _Téméraires_ thought themselves Admirals too;
+But Lord Nelson he hailed them with masterful grace:
+"Cap'n Harvey, I'll thank you to keep in your place."
+
+To begin with we closed the _Bucentaure_ alone,
+An eighty-gun ship and their Admiral's own;
+We raked her but once, and the rest of the day
+Like a hospital hulk on the water she lay.
+
+To our battering next the _Redoutable_ struck,
+But her sharpshooters gave us the worst of the luck:
+Lord Nelson was wounded, most cruel to tell.
+"They've done for me; Hardy!" he cried as he fell.
+
+To the cockpit in silence they carried him past,
+And sad were the looks that were after him cast;
+His face with a kerchief he tried to conceal,
+But we knew him too well from the truck to the keel.
+
+When the Captain reported a victory won,
+"Thank God!" he kept saying, "my duty I've done."
+At last came the moment to kiss him good-bye,
+And the Captain for once had the salt in his eye.
+
+"Now anchor, dear Hardy," the Admiral cried;
+But before we could make it he fainted and died.
+All night in the trough of the sea we were tossed,
+And for want of ground-tackle good prizes were lost.
+
+Then we hauled down the flag, at the fore it was red,
+And blue at the mizzen was hoisted instead
+By Nelson's famed Captain, the pride of each tar,
+Who fought in the _Victory_ off Cape Traflagar.
+
+
+
+
+
+Northumberland
+
+"The Old and Bold"
+
+When England sets her banner forth
+ And bids her armour shine,
+She'll not forget the famous North,
+ The lads of moor and Tyne;
+And when the loving-cup's in hand,
+ And Honour leads the cry,
+They know not old Northumberland
+ Who'll pass her memory by.
+
+When Nelson sailed for Trafalgar
+ With all his country's best,
+He held them dear as brothers are,
+ But one beyond the rest.
+For when the fleet with heroes manned
+ To clear the decks began,
+The boast of old Northumberland
+ He sent to lead the van.
+
+
+Himself by _Victory's_ bulwarks stood
+ And cheered to see the sight;
+"That noble fellow Collingwood,
+ How bold he goes to fight!"
+Love, that the league of Ocean spanned,
+ Heard him as face to face;
+"What would he give, Northumberland,
+ To share our pride of place?"
+
+The flag that goes the world around
+ And flaps on every breeze
+Has never gladdened fairer ground
+ Or kinder hearts than these.
+So when the loving-cup's in hand
+ And Honour leads the cry,
+They know not old Northumberland
+ Who'll pass her memory by.
+
+
+
+
+
+For A Trafalgar Cenotaph
+
+Lover of England, stand awhile and gaze
+With thankful heart, and lips refrained from praise;
+They rest beyond the speech of human pride
+Who served with Nelson and with Nelson died.
+
+
+
+
+
+Craven
+
+(Mobile Bay, 1864)
+
+Over the turret, shut in his iron-clad tower,
+ Craven was conning his ship through smoke and flame;
+Gun to gun he had battered the fort for an hour,
+ Now was the time for a charge to end the game.
+
+There lay the narrowing channel, smooth and grim,
+ A hundred deaths beneath it, and never a sign;
+There lay the enemy's ships, and sink or swim
+ The flag was flying, and he was head of the line.
+
+The fleet behind was jamming; the monitor hung
+ Beating the stream; the roar for a moment hushed,
+Craven spoke to the pilot; slow she swung;
+ Again he spoke, and right for the foe she rushed.
+
+Into the narrowing channel, between the shore
+ And the sunk torpedoes lying in treacherous rank;
+She turned but a yard too short; a muffled roar,
+ A mountainous wave, and she rolled, righted, and sank.
+
+Over the manhole, up in the iron-clad tower,
+ Pilot and Captain met as they turned to fly:
+The hundredth part of a moment seemed an hour,
+ For one could pass to be saved, and one must die.
+
+They stood like men in a dream: Craven spoke,
+ Spoke as he lived and fought, with a Captain's pride,
+"After you, Pilot." The pilot woke,
+ Down the ladder he went, and Craven died.
+
+ All men praise the deed and the manner, but we---
+ We set it apart from the pride that stoops to the proud,
+ The strength that is supple to serve the strong and free,
+ The grace of the empty hands and promises loud:
+
+ Sidney thirsting, a humbler need to slake,
+ Nelson waiting his turn for the surgeon's hand,
+ Lucas crushed with chains for a comrade's sake,
+ Outram coveting right before command:
+
+ These were paladins, these were Craven's peers,
+ These with him shall be crowned in story and song,
+ Crowned with the glitter of steel and the glimmer of tears,
+ Princes of courtesy, merciful, proud, and strong.
+
+
+
+
+
+Messmates
+
+He gave us all a good-bye cheerily
+ At the first dawn of day;
+We dropped him down the side full drearily
+ When the light died away.
+It's a dead dark watch that he's a-keeping there,
+And a long, long night that lags a-creeping there,
+Where the Trades and the tides roll over him
+ And the great ships go by.
+
+He's there alone with green seas rocking him
+ For a thousand miles round;
+He's there alone with dumb things mocking him,
+ And we're homeward bound.
+It's a long, lone watch that he's a-keeping there,
+And a dead cold night that lags a-creeping there,
+While the months and the years roll over him
+ And the great ships go by.
+
+I wonder if the tramps come near enough
+ As they thrash to and fro,
+And the battle-ships' bells ring clear enough
+ To be heard down below;
+If through all the lone watch that he's a-keeping there,
+And the long, cold night that lags a-creeping there,
+The voices of the sailor-men shall comfort him
+ When the great ships go by.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Death Of Admiral Blake
+
+(August 7th, 1657)
+
+Laden with spoil of the South, fulfilled with the glory of achievement,
+ And freshly crowned with never-dying fame,
+Sweeping by shores where the names are the names of the victories of England,
+ Across the Bay the squadron homeward came.
+
+Proudly they came, but their pride was the pomp of a funeral at midnight,
+ When dreader yet the lonely morrow looms;
+Few are the words that are spoken, and faces are gaunt beneath the torchlight
+ That does but darken more the nodding plumes.
+
+Low on the field of his fame, past hope lay the Admiral triumphant,
+ And fain to rest him after all his pain;
+Yet for the love that he bore to his own land, ever unforgotten,
+ He prayed to see the western hills again.
+
+Fainter than stars in a sky long gray with the coming of the daybreak,
+ Or sounds of night that fade when night is done,
+So in the death-dawn faded the splendour and loud renown of warfare,
+ And life of all its longings kept but one.
+
+"Oh! to be there for an hour when the shade draws in beside the hedgerows,
+ And falling apples wake the drowsy noon:
+Oh! for the hour when the elms grow sombre and human in the twilight,
+ And gardens dream beneath the rising moon.
+
+"Only to look once more on the land of the memories of childhood,
+ Forgetting weary winds and barren foam:
+Only to bid farewell to the combe and the orchard and the moorland,
+ And sleep at last among the fields of home!"
+
+So he was silently praying, till now, when his strength was ebbing faster,
+ The Lizard lay before them faintly blue;
+Now on the gleaming horizon the white cliffs laughed along the coast-line,
+ And now the forelands took the shapes they knew.
+
+There lay the Sound and the Island with green leaves down beside the water,
+ The town, the Hoe, the masts with sunset fired----
+Dreams! ay, dreams of the dead! for the great heart faltered on the threshold,
+ And darkness took the land his soul desired.
+
+
+
+
+
+Væ Victis
+
+Beside the placid sea that mirrored her
+ With the old glory of dawn that cannot die,
+The sleeping city began to moan and stir,
+ As one that fain from an ill dream would fly;
+ Yet more she feared the daylight bringing nigh
+Such dreams as know not sunrise, soon or late,---
+ Visions of honour lost and power gone by,
+ Of loyal valour betrayed by factious hate,
+And craven sloth that shrank from the labour of forging fate.
+
+They knew and knew not, this bewildered crowd,
+ That up her streets in silence hurrying passed,
+What manner of death should make their anguish loud,
+ What corpse across the funeral pyre be cast,
+ For none had spoken it; only, gathering fast
+As darkness gathers at noon in the sun's eclipse,
+ A shadow of doom enfolded them, vague and vast,
+ And a cry was heard, unfathered of earthly lips,
+"What of the ships, O Carthage? Carthage, what of the ships?"
+
+They reached the wall, and nowise strange it seemed
+ To find the gates unguarded and open wide;
+They climbed the shoulder, and meet enough they deemed
+ The black that shrouded the seaward rampart's side
+ And veiled in drooping gloom the turrets' pride;
+But this was nought, for suddenly down the slope
+ They saw the harbour, and sense within them died;
+ Keel nor mast was there, rudder nor rope;
+It lay like a sea-hawk's eyry spoiled of life and hope.
+
+Beyond, where dawn was a glittering carpet, rolled
+ From sky to shore on level and endless seas,
+Hardly their eyes discerned in a dazzle of gold
+ That here in fifties, yonder in twos and threes,
+ The ships they sought, like a swarm of drowning bees
+By a wanton gust on the pool of a mill-dam hurled,
+ Floated forsaken of life-giving tide and breeze,
+ Their oars broken, their sails for ever furled,
+For ever deserted the bulwarks that guarded the wealth of the world.
+
+A moment yet, with breathing quickly drawn
+ And hands agrip, the Carthaginian folk
+Stared in the bright untroubled face of dawn,
+ And strove with vehement heaped denial to choke
+ Their sure surmise of fate's impending stroke;
+Vainly--for even now beneath their gaze
+ A thousand delicate spires of distant smoke
+ Reddened the disc of the sun with a stealthy haze,
+And the smouldering grief of a nation burst with the kindling blaze.
+
+"O dying Carthage!" so their passion raved,
+ "Would nought but these the conqueror's hate assuage?
+If these be taken, how may the land be saved
+ Whose meat and drink was empire, age by age?"
+ And bitter memory cursed with idle rage
+The greed that coveted gold beyond renown,
+ The feeble hearts that feared their heritage,
+ The hands that cast the sea-kings' sceptre down
+And left to alien brows their famed ancestral crown.
+
+The endless noon, the endless evening through,
+ All other needs forgetting, great or small,
+They drank despair with thirst whose torment grew
+ As the hours died beneath that stifling pall.
+ At last they saw the fires to blackness fall
+One after one, and slowly turned them home,
+ A little longer yet their own to call
+ A city enslaved, and wear the bonds of Rome,
+With weary hearts foreboding all the woe to come.
+
+
+
+
+
+Minora Sidera
+
+(The Dictionary Of National Biography)
+
+Sitting at times over a hearth that burns
+ With dull domestic glow,
+My thought, leaving the book, gratefully turns
+ To you who planned it so.
+
+Not of the great only you deigned to tell---
+ The stars by which we steer---
+But lights out of the night that flashed, and fell
+ Tonight again, are here.
+
+Such as were those, dogs of an elder day,
+ Who sacked the golden ports,
+And those later who dared grapple their prey
+ Beneath the harbour forts:
+
+Some with flag at the fore, sweeping the world
+ To find an equal fight,
+And some who joined war to their trade, and hurled
+ Ships of the line in flight.
+
+Whether their fame centuries long should ring
+ They cared not over-much,
+But cared greatly to serve God and the king,
+ And keep the Nelson touch;
+
+And fought to build Britain above the tide
+ Of wars and windy fate;
+And passed content, leaving to us the pride
+ Of lives obscurely great.
+
+
+
+
+
+Laudabunt Alii
+
+(After Horace)
+
+Let others praise, as fancy wills,
+ Berlin beneath her trees,
+Or Rome upon her seven hills,
+ Or Venice by her seas;
+Stamboul by double tides embraced,
+Or green Damascus in the waste.
+
+For me there's nought I would not leave
+ For the good Devon land,
+Whose orchards down the echoing cleeve
+ Bedewed with spray-drift stand,
+And hardly bear the red fruit up
+That shall be next year's cider-cup.
+
+You too, my friend, may wisely mark
+ How clear skies follow rain,
+And, lingering in your own green park
+ Or drilled on Laffan's Plain,
+Forget not with the festal bowl
+To soothe at times your weary soul.
+
+When Drake must bid to Plymouth Hoe
+ Good-bye for many a day,
+And some were sad and feared to go,
+ And some that dared not stay,
+Be sure he bade them broach the best,
+And raised his tankard with the rest.
+
+"Drake's luck to all that sail with Drake
+ For promised lands of gold!
+Brave lads, whatever storms may break,
+ We've weathered worse of old!
+To-night the loving-cup we'll drain,
+To-morrow for the Spanish Main!"
+
+
+
+
+
+Admiral Death
+
+Boys, are ye calling a toast to-night?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+Fill for a bumper strong and bright,
+ And here's to Admiral Death!
+He's sailed in a hundred builds o' boat,
+He's fought in a thousand kinds o' coat,
+He's the senior flag of all that float,
+ And his name's Admiral Death!
+
+Which of you looks for a service free?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+The rules o' the service are but three
+ When ye sail with Admiral Death.
+Steady your hand in time o' squalls,
+Stand to the last by him that falls,
+And answer clear to the voice that calls,
+ "Ay, Ay! Admiral Death!"
+
+How will ye know him among the rest?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+By the glint o' the stars that cover his breast
+ Ye may find Admiral Death.
+By the forehead grim with an ancient scar,
+By the voice that rolls like thunder far,
+By the tenderest eyes of all that are,
+ Ye may know Admiral Death.
+
+Where are the lads that sailed before?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+Their bones are white by many a shore,
+ They sleep with Admiral Death.
+Oh! but they loved him, young and old,
+For he left the laggard, and took the bold,
+And the fight was fought, and the story's told,
+ And they sleep with Admiral Death.
+
+
+
+
+
+Homeward Bound
+
+After long labouring in the windy ways,
+ On smooth and shining tides
+ Swiftly the great ship glides,
+ Her storms forgot, her weary watches past;
+Northward she glides, and through the enchanted haze
+ Faint on the verge her far hope dawns at last.
+
+The phantom sky-line of a shadowy down,
+ Whose pale white cliffs below
+ Through sunny mist aglow,
+ Like noon-day ghosts of summer moonshine gleam---
+Soft as old sorrow, bright as old renown,
+ There lies the home, of all our mortal dream.
+
+
+
+
+
+Gillespie.
+
+Riding at dawn, riding alone,
+ Gillespie left the town behind;
+Before he turned by the Westward road
+ A horseman crossed him, staggering blind.
+
+"The Devil's abroad in false Vellore,
+ The Devil that stabs by night," he said,
+"Women and children, rank and file,
+ Dying and dead, dying and dead."
+
+Without a word, without a groan,
+ Sudden and swift Gillespie turned,
+The blood roared in his ears like fire,
+ Like fire the road beneath him burned.
+
+He thundered back to Arcot gate,
+ He thundered up through Arcot town,
+Before he thought a second thought
+ In the barrack yard he lighted down.
+
+"Trumpeter, sound for the Light Dragoons,
+ Sound to saddle and spur," he said;
+"He that is ready may ride with me,
+ And he that can may ride ahead."
+
+Fierce and fain, fierce and fain,
+ Behind him went the troopers grim,
+They rode as ride the Light Dragoons
+ But never a man could ride with him.
+
+Their rowels ripped their horses' sides,
+ Their hearts were red with a deeper goad,
+But ever alone before them all
+ Gillespie rode, Gillespie rode.
+
+Alone he came to false Vellore,
+ The walls were lined, the gates were barred;
+Alone he walked where the bullets bit,
+ And called above to the Sergeant's Guard.
+
+"Sergeant, Sergeant, over the gate,
+ Where are your officers all?" he said;
+Heavily came the Sergeant's voice,
+ "There are two living and forty dead."
+
+"A rope, a rope," Gillespie cried :
+ They bound their belts to serve his need.
+There was not a rebel behind the wall
+ But laid his barrel and drew his bead.
+
+There was not a rebel among them all
+ But pulled his trigger and cursed his aim,
+For lightly swung and rightly swung
+ Over the gate Gillespie came.
+
+He dressed the line, he led the charge,
+ They swept the wall like a stream in spate,
+And roaring over the roar they heard
+ The galloper guns that burst the gate.
+
+Fierce and fain, fierce and fain,
+ The troopers rode the reeking flight:
+The very stones remember still
+ The end of them that stab by night.
+
+They've kept the tale a hundred years,
+ They'll keep the tale a hundred more:
+Riding at dawn, riding alone,
+ Gillespie came to false Vellore.
+
+
+
+
+
+Seringapatam
+
+"The sleep that Tippoo Sahib sleeps
+ Heeds not the cry of man;
+The faith that Tippoo Sahib keeps
+ No judge on earth may scan;
+He is the lord of whom ye hold
+ Spirit and sense and limb,
+Fetter and chain are all ye gain
+ Who dared to plead with him."
+
+Baird was bonny and Baird was young,
+ His heart was strong as steel,
+But life and death in the balance hung,
+ For his wounds were ill to heal.
+"Of fifty chains the Sultan gave
+ We have filled but forty-nine:
+We dare not fail of the perfect tale
+ For all Golconda's mine."
+
+That was the hour when Lucas first
+ Leapt to his long renown;
+Like summer rains his anger burst,
+ And swept their scruples down.
+"Tell ye the lord to whom ye crouch,
+ His fetters bite their fill:
+To save your oath I'll wear them both,
+ And step the lighter still."
+
+The seasons came, the seasons passed,
+ They watched their fellows die;
+But still their thought was forward cast,
+ Their courage still was high.
+Through tortured days and fevered nights
+ Their limbs alone were weak,
+And year by year they kept their cheer,
+ And spoke as freemen speak.
+
+But once a year, on the fourth of June,
+ Their speech to silence died,
+And the silence beat to a soundless tune
+ And sang with a wordless pride;
+Till when the Indian stars were bright,
+ And bells at home would ring,
+To the fetters' clank they rose and drank
+ "England! God save the King!"
+
+The years came, and the years went,
+ The wheel full-circle rolled;
+The tyrant's neck must yet be bent,
+ The price of blood be told:
+The city yet must hear the roar
+ Of Baird's avenging guns,
+And see him stand with lifted hand
+ By Tippoo Sahib's sons.
+
+The lads were bonny, the lads were young,
+ But he claimed a pitiless debt;
+Life and death in the balance hung,
+ They watched it swing and set.
+They saw him search with sombre eyes,
+ They knew the place he sought;
+They saw him feel for the hilted steel,
+ They bowed before his thought.
+
+But he--he saw the prison there
+ In the old quivering heat,
+Where merry hearts had met despair
+ And died without defeat;
+Where feeble hands had raised the cup
+ For feebler lips to drain,
+And one had worn with smiling scorn
+ His double load of pain.
+
+"The sleep that Tippoo Sahib sleeps
+ Hears not the voice of man;
+The faith that Tippoo Sahib keeps
+ No earthly judge may scan;
+For all the wrong your father wrought
+ Your father's sons are free;
+Where Lucas lay no tongue shall say
+ That Mercy bound not me."
+
+
+
+
+
+A Ballad of John Nicholson
+
+It fell in the year of Mutiny,
+ At darkest of the night,
+John Nicholson by Jalándhar came,
+ On his way to Delhi fight.
+
+And as he by Jalándhar came,
+ He thought what he must do,
+And he sent to the Rajah fair greeting,
+ To try if he were true.
+
+"God grant your Highness length of days,
+ And friends when need shall be;
+And I pray you send your Captains hither,
+ That they may speak with me."
+
+On the morrow through Jalándhar town
+ The Captains rode in state;
+They came to the house of John Nicholson,
+ And stood before the gate.
+
+The chief of them was Mehtab Singh,
+ He was both proud and sly;
+His turban gleamed with rubies red,
+ He held his chin full high.
+
+He marked his fellows how they put
+ Their shoes from off their feet;
+"Now wherefore make ye such ado
+ These fallen lords to greet?
+
+"They have ruled us for a hundred years,
+ In truth I know not how,
+But though they be fain of mastery
+ They dare not claim it now."
+
+Right haughtily before them all
+ The durbar hall he trod,
+With rubies red his turban gleamed,
+ His feet with pride were shod.
+
+They had not been an hour together,
+ A scanty hour or so,
+When Mehtab Singh rose in his place
+ And turned about to go.
+
+Then swiftly came John Nicholson
+ Between the door and him,
+With anger smouldering in his eyes,
+ That made the rubies dim.
+
+"You are over-hasty, Mehtab Singh,"---
+ Oh, but his voice was low!
+He held his wrath with a curb of iron
+ That furrowed cheek and brow.
+
+"You are overhasty, Mehtab Singh,
+ When that the rest are gone,
+I have a word that may not wait
+ To speak with you alone."
+
+The Captains passed in silence forth
+ And stood the door behind;
+To go before the game was played
+ Be sure they had no mind.
+
+But there within John Nicholson
+ Turned him on Mehtab Singh,
+"So long as the soul is in my body
+ You shall not do this thing.
+
+"Have ye served us for a hundred years
+ And yet ye know not why?
+We brook no doubt of our mastery,
+ We rule until we die.
+
+"Were I the one last Englishman
+ Drawing the breath of life,
+And you the master-rebel of all
+ That stir this land to strife---
+
+"Were I," he said, "but a Corporal,
+ And you a Rajput King,
+So long as the soul was in my body
+ You should not do this thing.
+
+"Take off, take off, those shoes of pride,
+ Carry them whence they came;
+Your Captains saw your insolence,
+ And they shall see your shame."
+
+When Mehtab Singh came to the door
+ His shoes they burned his hand,
+For there in long and silent lines
+ He saw the Captains stand.
+
+When Mehtab Singh rode from the gate
+ His chin was on his breast:
+The Captains said, "When the strong command
+ Obedience is best."
+
+
+
+
+
+The Guides at Cabul
+
+(1879)
+
+Sons of the Island race, wherever ye dwell,
+ Who speak of your fathers' battles with lips that burn,
+The deed of an alien legion hear me tell,
+ And think not shame from the hearts ye tamed to learn,
+ When succour shall fail and the tide for a season turn,
+To fight with joyful courage, a passionate pride,
+To die at last as the Guides of Cabul died.
+
+For a handful of seventy men in a barrack of mud,
+ Foodless, waterless, dwindling one by one,
+Answered a thousand yelling for English blood
+ With stormy volleys that swept them gunner from gun,
+ And charge on charge in the glare of the Afghan sun,
+Till the walls were shattered wherein they couched at bay,
+And dead or dying half of the seventy lay.
+
+Twice they had taken the cannon that wrecked their hold,
+ Twice toiled in vain to drag it back,
+Thrice they toiled, and alone, wary and bold,
+ Whirling a hurricane sword to scatter the rack,
+ Hamilton, last of the English, covered their track.
+"Never give in!" he cried, and he heard them shout,
+And grappled with death as a man that knows not doubt.
+
+And the Guides looked down from their smouldering barrack again,
+ And behold, a banner of truce, and a voice that spoke:
+"Come, for we know that the English all are slain,
+ We keep no feud with men of a kindred folk;
+ Rejoice with us to be free of the conqueror's yolk."
+Silence fell for a moment, then was heard
+A sound of laughter and scorn, and an answering word.
+
+"Is it we or the lords we serve who have earned this wrong,
+ That ye call us to flinch from the battle they bade us fight?
+We that live--do ye doubt that our hands are strong?
+ They that are fallen--ye know that their blood was bright!
+ Think ye the Guides will barter for lust of the light
+The pride of an ancient people in warfare bred,
+Honour of comrades living, and faith to the dead?"
+
+Then the joy that spurs the warrior's heart
+ To the last thundering gallop and sheer leap
+Came on the men of the Guides: they flung apart
+ The doors not all their valour could longer keep;
+ They dressed their slender line; they breathed deep,
+And with never a foot lagging or head bent
+To the clash and clamour and dust of death they went.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Gay Gordons
+
+(Dargai, October 20, 1897)
+
+Whos for the Gathering, who's for the Fair?
+ (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
+The bravest of the brave are at deadlock there,
+ (Highlanders! march! by the right!)
+There are bullets by the hundred buzzing in the air,
+There are bonny lads lying on the hillside bare;
+But the Gordons know what the Gordons dare
+ When they hear the pipers playing!
+
+The happiest English heart today
+ (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
+Is the heart of the Colonel, hide it as he may;
+ (Steady there! steady on the right!)
+He sees his work and he sees his way,
+He knows his time and the word to say,
+And he's thinking of the tune that the Gordons play
+ When he sets the pipers playing.
+
+Rising, roaring, rushing like the tide,
+ (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
+They're up through the fire-zone, not be be denied;
+ (Bayonets! and charge! by the right!)
+Thirty bullets straight where the rest went wide,
+And thirty lads are lying on the bare hillside;
+But they passed in the hour of the Gordons' pride,
+ To the skirl of the pipers' playing.
+
+
+
+
+
+He Fell Among Thieves
+
+"Ye have robbed," said he, "ye have slaughtered and made an end,
+ Take your ill-got plunder, and bury the dead:
+What will ye more of your guest and sometime friend?"
+ "Blood for our blood," they said.
+
+He laughed: "If one may settle the score for five,
+ I am ready; but let the reckoning stand til day:
+I have loved the sunlight as dearly as any alive."
+ "You shall die at dawn," said they.
+
+He flung his empty revolver down the slope,
+ He climbed alone to the Eastward edge of the trees;
+All night long in a dream untroubled of hope
+ He brooded, clasping his knees.
+
+He did not hear the monotonous roar that fills
+ The ravine where the Yassin river sullenly flows;
+He did not see the starlight on the Laspur hills,
+ Or the far Afghan snows.
+
+He saw the April noon on his books aglow,
+ The wistaria trailing in at the window wide;
+He heard his father's voice from the terrace below
+ Calling him down to ride.
+
+He saw the gray little church across the park,
+ The mounds that hid the loved and honoured dead;
+The Norman arch, the chancel softly dark,
+ The brasses black and red.
+
+He saw the School Close, sunny and green,
+ The runner beside him, the stand by the parapet wall,
+The distant tape, and the crowd roaring between,
+ His own name over all.
+
+He saw the dark wainscot and timbered roof,
+ The long tables, and the faces merry and keen;
+The College Eight and their trainer dining aloof,
+ The Dons on the daïs serene.
+
+He watched the liner's stem ploughing the foam,
+ He felt her trembling speed and the thrash of her screw;
+He heard the passengers' voices talking of home,
+ He saw the flag she flew.
+
+And now it was dawn. He rose strong on his feet,
+ And strode to his ruined camp below the wood;
+He drank the breath of the morning cool and sweet:
+ His murderers round him stood.
+
+Light on the Laspur hills was broadening fast,
+ The blood-red snow-peaks chilled to dazzling white:
+He turned, and saw the golden circle at last,
+ Cut by the Eastern height.
+
+"O glorious Life, Who dwellest in earth and sun,
+ I have lived, I praise and adore Thee."
+ A sword swept.
+Over the pass the voices one by one
+ Faded, and the hill slept.
+
+
+
+
+
+Ionicus
+
+With failing feet and shoulders bowed
+ Beneath the weight of happier days,
+He lagged among the heedless crowd,
+ Or crept along suburban ways.
+But still through all his heart was young,
+ His mood a joy that nought could mar,
+A courage, a pride, a rapture, sprung
+ Of the strength and splendour of England's war.
+
+From ill-requited toil he turned
+ To ride with Picton and with Pack,
+Among his grammars inly burned
+ To storm the Afghan mountain-track.
+When midnight chimed, before Quebec
+ He watched with Wolfe till the morning star;
+At noon he saw from _Victory's_ deck
+ The sweep and splendour of England's war.
+
+Beyond the book his teaching sped,
+ He left on whom he taught the trace
+Of kinship with the deathless dead,
+ And faith in all the Island Race.
+He passed: his life a tangle seemed,
+ His age from fame and power was far;
+But his heart was night to the end, and dreamed
+ Of the sound and splendour of England's war.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Non-Combatant
+
+Among a race high-handed, strong of heart,
+Sea-rovers, conquerors, builders in the waste,
+He had his birth; a nature too complete,
+Eager and doubtful, no man's soldier sworn
+And no man's chosen captain; born to fail,
+A name without an echo: yet he too
+Within the cloister of his narrow days
+Fulfilled the ancestral rites, and kept alive
+The eternal fire; it may be, not in vain;
+For out of those who dropped a downward glance
+Upon the weakling huddled at his prayers,
+Perchance some looked beyond him, and then first
+Beheld the glory, and what shrine it filled,
+And to what Spirit sacred: or perchance
+Some heard him chanting, though but to himself,
+The old heroic names: and went their way:
+And hummed his music on the march to death.
+
+
+
+
+
+Clifton Chapel
+
+This is the Chapel: here, my son,
+ Your father thought the thoughts of youth,
+And heard the words that one by one
+ The touch of Life has turned to truth.
+Here in a day that is not far,
+ You too may speak with noble ghosts
+Of manhood and the vows of war
+ You made before the Lord of Hosts.
+
+To set the cause above renown,
+ To love the game beyond the prize,
+To honour, while you strike him down,
+ The foe that comes with fearless eyes;
+To count the life of battle good,
+ And dear the land that gave you birth,
+And dearer yet the brotherhood
+ That binds the brave of all the earth---
+
+My son, the oath is yours: the end
+ Is His, Who built the world of strife,
+Who gave His children Pain for friend,
+ And Death for surest hope of life.
+To-day and here the fight's begun,
+ Of the great fellowship you're free;
+Henceforth the School and you are one,
+ And what You are, the race shall be.
+
+God send you fortune: yet be sure,
+ Among the lights that gleam and pass,
+You'll live to follow none more pure
+ Than that which glows on yonder brass:
+"Qui procul hinc," the legend's writ,---
+ The frontier-grave is far away---
+"Qui ante diem periit:
+ Sed miles, sed pro patriâ."
+
+
+
+
+
+Vitaï Lampada
+
+There's a breathless hush in the Close to-night---
+ Ten to make and the match to win---
+A bumping pitch and a blinding light,
+ An hour to play and the last man in.
+And it's not for the sake of a ribboned coat,
+ Or the selfish hope of a season's fame,
+But his Captain's hand on his shoulder smote---
+ "Play up! play up! and play the game!"
+
+The sand of the desert is sodden red,---
+ Red with the wreck of a square that broke;---
+The Gatling's jammed and the colonel dead,
+ And the regiment blind with dust and smoke.
+The river of death has brimmed his banks,
+ And England's far, and Honour a name,
+But the voice of schoolboy rallies the ranks,
+ "Play up! play up! and play the game!"
+
+This is the word that year by year,
+ While in her place the School is set,
+Every one of her sons must hear,
+ And none that hears it dare forget.
+This they all with a joyful mind
+ Bear through life like a torch in flame,
+And falling fling to the host behind---
+ "Play up! play up! and play the game!"
+
+
+
+
+
+The Vigil
+
+England! where the sacred flame
+ Burns before the inmost shrine,
+Where the lips that love thy name
+ Consecrate their hopes and thine,
+Where the banners of thy dead
+Weave their shadows overhead,
+Watch beside thine arms to-night,
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+Think that when to-morrow comes
+ War shall claim command of all,
+Thou must hear the roll of drums,
+ Thou must hear the trumpet's call.
+Now, before they silence ruth,
+Commune with the voice of truth;
+England! on thy knees to-night
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+Hast thou counted up the cost,
+ What to foeman, what to friend?
+Glory sought is Honour lost,
+ How should this be knighthood's end?
+Know'st thou what is Hatred's meed?
+What the surest gain of greed?
+England! wilt thou dare to-night
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+Single-hearted, unafraid,
+ Hither all thy heroes came,
+On this altar's steps were laid
+ Gordon's life and Outram's fame.
+England! if thy will be yet
+By their great example set,
+Here beside thine arms to-night
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+So shalt thou when morning comes
+ Rise to conquer or to fall,
+Joyful hear the rolling drums,
+ Joyful hear the trumpets call,
+Then let Memory tell thy heart:
+"England! what thou wert, thou art!"
+Gird thee with thine ancient might,
+Forth! and God defend the Right!
+
+
+
+
+
+The Sailing Of The Long-Ships
+
+(October, 1899)
+
+They saw the cables loosened, they saw the gangways cleared,
+They heard the women weeping, they heard the men that cheered;
+Far off, far off, the tumult faded and died away,
+And all alone the sea-wind came singing up the Bay.
+
+"I came by Cape St. Vincent, I came by Trafalgar,
+I swept from Torres Vedras to golden Vigo Bar,
+I saw the beacons blazing that fired the world with light
+When down their ancient highway your fathers passed to fight.
+
+"O race of tireless fighters, flushed with a youth renewed,
+Right well the wars of Freedom befit the Sea-kings' brood;
+Yet as ye go forget not the fame of yonder shore,
+The fame ye owe your fathers and the old time before.
+
+"Long-suffering were the Sea-kings, they were not swift to kill,
+But when the sands had fallen they waited no man's will;
+Though all the world forbade them, they counted not nor cared,
+They weighed not help or hindrance, they did the thing they dared.
+
+"The Sea-kings loved not boasting, they cursed not him that cursed,
+They honoured all men duly, and him that faced them, first;
+They strove and knew not hatred, they smote and toiled to save,
+They tended whom they vanquished, they praised the fallen brave.
+
+"Their fame's on Torres Vedras, their fame's on Vigo Bar,
+Far-flashed to Cape St. Vincent it burns from Trafalgar;
+Mark as ye go the beacons that woke the world with light
+When down their ancient highway your fathers passed to fight."
+
+
+
+
+
+Waggon Hill
+
+Drake in the North Sea grimly prowling,
+ Treading his dear _Revenge's_ deck,
+Watched, with the sea-dogs round him growling,
+ Galleons drifting wreck by wreck.
+ "Fetter and Faith for England's neck,
+ Faggot and Father, Saint and chain,---
+Yonder the Devil and all go howling,
+ Devon, O Devon, in wind and rain!
+
+Drake at the last off Nombre lying,
+ Knowing the night that toward him crept,
+Gave to the sea-dogs round him crying,
+ This for a sign before he slept:---
+ "Pride of the West! What Devon hath kept
+ Devon shall keep on tide or main;
+Call to the storm and drive them flying,
+ Devon, O Devon, in wind and rain!"
+
+Valour of England gaunt and whitening,
+ Far in a South land brought to bay,
+Locked in a death-grip all day tightening,
+ Waited the end in twilight gray.
+ Battle and storm and the sea-dog's way!
+ Drake from his long rest turned again,
+Victory lit thy steel with lightning,
+ Devon, o Devon, in wind and rain!
+
+
+
+
+
+The Volunteer
+
+"He leapt to arms unbidden,
+ Unneeded, over-bold;
+His face by earth is hidden,
+ His heart in earth is cold.
+
+"Curse on the reckless daring
+ That could not wait the call,
+The proud fantastic bearing
+ That would be first to fall!"
+
+O tears of human passion,
+ Blur not the image true;
+This was not folly's fashion,
+ This was the man we knew.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Only Son
+
+O Bitter wind toward the sunset blowing,
+ What of the dales to-night?
+In yonder gray old hall what fires are glowing,
+ What ring of festal light?
+
+ "In the great window as the day was dwindling
+ I saw an old man stand;
+ His head was proudly held and his eyes kindling,
+ But the list shook in his hand."
+
+O wind of twilight, was there no word uttered,
+ No sound of joy or wail?
+"'A great fight and a good death,' he muttered;
+ 'Trust him, he would not fail.'"
+
+What of the chamber dark where she was lying;
+ For whom all life is done?
+"Within her heart she rocks a dead child, crying
+ 'My son, my ltttle son.'"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Grenadier's Good-Bye
+
+"When Lieutenant Murray fell, the only words he spoke were,
+'Forward, Grenadiers!'"---Press Telegram.
+
+Here they halted, here once more
+ Hand from hand was rent;
+Here his voice above the roar
+ Rang, and on they went.
+Yonder out of sight they crossed,
+ Yonder died the cheers;
+One word lives where all is lost---
+ "Forward, Grenadiers!"
+
+This alone he asked of fame,
+ This alone of pride;
+Still with this he faced the flame,
+ Answered Death, and died.
+Crest of battle sunward tossed,
+ Song of the marching years,
+This shall live though all be lost---
+ "Forward, Grenadiers!"
+
+
+
+
+
+The Schoolfellow
+
+Our game was his but yesteryear;
+ We wished him back; we could not know
+The self-same hour we missed him here
+ He led the line that broke the foe.
+
+Blood-red behind our guarded posts
+ Sank as of old and dying day;
+The battle ceased; the mingled hosts
+ Weary and cheery went their way:
+
+"To-morrow well may bring," we said,
+ "As fair a fight, as clear a sun."
+Dear lad, before the world was sped,
+ For evermore thy goal was won.
+
+
+
+
+
+On Spion Kop
+
+Foremost of all on battle's fiery steep
+ Here VERTUE fell, and here he sleeps his sleep.*
+A fairer name no Roman ever gave
+ To stand sole monument on Valour's grave.
+
+* Major N. H. Vertue, of the Buffs, Brigade-Major to General
+Woodgate, was buried where he fell, on the edge of Spion Kop,
+in front of the British position.
+
+
+
+
+
+The School At War
+
+All night before the brink of death
+ In fitful sleep the army lay,
+For through the dream that stilled their breath
+ Too gauntly glared the coming day.
+
+But we, within whose blood there leaps
+ The fulness of a life as wide
+As Avon's water where he sweeps
+ Seaward at last with Severn's tide,
+
+We heard beyond the desert night
+ The murmur of the fields we knew,
+And our swift souls with one delight
+ Like homing swallows Northward flew.
+
+We played again the immortal games,
+ And grappled with the fierce old friends,
+And cheered the dead undying names,
+ And sang the song that never ends;
+
+Till, when the hard, familiar bell
+ Told that the summer night was late,
+Where long ago we said farewell
+ We said farewell by the old gate.
+
+"O Captains unforgot," they cried,
+ "Come you again or come no more,
+Across the world you keep the pride,
+ Across the world we mark the score."
+
+
+
+
+
+By The Hearth-Stone
+
+By the hearth-stone
+She sits alone,
+ The long night bearing:
+With eyes that gleam
+Into the dream
+ Of the firelight staring.
+
+Low and more low
+The dying glow
+ Burns in the embers;
+She nothing heeds
+And nothing needs---
+ Only remembers.
+
+
+
+
+
+Peace
+
+No more to watch by Night's eternal shore,
+ With England's chivalry at dawn to ride;
+No more defeat, faith, victory---O! no more
+ A cause on earth for which we might have died.
+
+
+
+
+
+April On Waggon Hill
+
+Lad, and can you rest now,
+ There beneath your hill!
+Your hands are on your breast now,
+ But is your heart so still?
+'Twas the right death to die, lad,
+ A gift without regret,
+But unless truth's a lie, lad,
+ You dream of Devon yet.
+
+Ay, ay, the year's awaking,
+ The fire's among the ling,
+The beechen hedge is breaking,
+ The curlew's on the wing;
+Primroses are out, lad,
+ On the high banks of Lee,
+And the sun stirs the trout, lad;
+ From Brendon to the sea.
+
+I know what's in your heart, lad,---
+ The mare he used to hunt---
+And her blue market-cart, lad,
+ With posies tied in front---
+We miss them from the moor road,
+ They're getting old to roam,
+The road they're on's a sure road
+ And nearer, lad, to home.
+
+Your name, the name they cherish?
+ 'Twill fade, lad, 'tis true:
+But stone and all may perish
+ With little loss to you.
+While fame's fame you're Devon, lad,
+ The Glory of the West;
+Till the roll's called in heaven, lad,
+ You may well take your rest.
+
+
+
+
+
+Commemoration
+
+I sat by the granite pillar, and sunlight fell
+ Where the sunlight fell of old,
+And the hour was the hour my heart remembered well,
+ And the sermon rolled and rolled
+As it used to roll when the place was still unhaunted,
+And the strangest tale in the world was still untold.
+
+And I knew that of all this rushing of urgent sound
+ That I so clearly heard,
+The green young forest of saplings clustered round
+ Was heeding not one word:
+Their heads were bowed in a still serried patience
+Such as an angel's breath could never have stirred.
+
+For some were already away to the hazardous pitch,
+ Or lining the parapet wall,
+And some were in glorious battle, or great and rich,
+ Or throned in a college hall:
+And among the rest was one like my own young phantom,
+Dreaming for ever beyond my utmost call.
+
+"O Youth," the preacher was crying, "deem not thou
+ Thy life is thine alone;
+Thou bearest the will of the ages, seeing how
+ They built thee bone by bone,
+And within thy blood the Great Age sleeps sepulchred
+Till thou and thine shall roll away the stone.
+
+"Therefore the days are coming when thou shalt burn
+ With passion whitely hot;
+Rest shall be rest no more; thy feet shall spurn
+ All that thy hand hath got;
+And One that is stronger shall gird thee, and lead thee swiftly
+Whither, O heart of Youth, thou wouldest not."
+
+And the School passed; and I saw the living and dead
+ Set in their seats again,
+And I longed to hear them speak of the word that was said,
+ But I knew that I longed in vain.
+And they stretched forth their hands, and the wind of the spirit took them
+Lightly as drifted leaves on an endless plain.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Echo
+
+Of A Ballad Sung By H. Plunket Greene To His Old School
+
+Twice three hundred boys were we,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+Where the Downs look out to the Severn Sea.
+ Clifton for aye!
+We held by the game and hailed the team,
+For many could play where few could dream.
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+Some were for profit and some for pride,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+Some for the flag they lived and died.
+ Clifton for aye!
+The work of the world must still be done,
+And minds are many though truth be one.
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+But a lad there was to his fellows sang,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+And soon the world to his music rang.
+ Clifton for aye!
+Follow your Captains, crown your Kings,
+But what will ye give to the lad that sings?
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+For the voice ye hear is the voice of home,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+And the voice of Youth with the world to roam.
+ Clifton for aye!
+The voice of passion and human tears,
+And the voice of the vision that lights the years.
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Best School of All
+
+It's good to see the school we knew,
+ The land of youth and dream.
+To greet again the rule we knew
+ Before we took the stream:
+Though long we've missed the sight of her,
+ Our hearts may not forget;
+We've lost the old delight of her,
+ We keep her honour yet.
+
+ We'll honour yet the school we knew,
+ The best school of all:
+ We'll honour yet the rule we knew,
+ Till the last bell call.
+ For working days or holidays,
+ And glad or melancholy days,
+ They were great days and jolly days
+ At the best school of all.
+
+The stars and sounding vanities
+ That half the crowd bewitch,
+What are they but inanities
+ To him that treads the pitch?
+And where's the welth I'm wondering,
+ Could buy the cheers that roll
+When the last charge goes thundering
+ Towards the twilight goal?
+
+Then men that tanned the hide of us,
+ Our daily foes and friends,
+They shall not lose their pride of us,
+ Howe'er the journey ends.
+Their voice to us who sing of it,
+ No more its message bears,
+But the round world shall ring of it,
+ And all we are be theirs.
+
+To speak of fame a venture is,
+ There's little here can bide,
+But we may face the centuries,
+ And dare the deepending tide:
+for though the dust that's part of us,
+ To dust again be gone,
+Yet here shall beat the heart of us---
+ The school we handed on!
+
+ We'll honour yet the school we knew,
+ The best school of all:
+ We'll honour yet the rule we knew,
+ Till the last bell call.
+ For working days or holidays,
+ And glad or melancholy days,
+ They were great days and jolly days
+ At the best school of all.
+
+
+
+
+
+England
+
+Praise thou with praise unending,
+ The Master of the Wine;
+To all their portions sending
+ Himself he mingled thine:
+
+The sea-born flush of morning,
+ The sea-born hush of night,
+The East wind comfort scorning,
+ And the North wind driving right:
+
+The world for gain and giving,
+ The game for man and boy,
+The life that joys in living,
+ The faith that lives in joy.
+
+
+
+
+
+Victoria Regina
+
+(June 21st, 1897*)
+
+A thousand years by sea and land
+ Our race hath served the island kings,
+But not by custom's dull command
+ To-day with song her Empire rings:
+
+Not all the glories of her birth,
+ Her armed renown and ancient throne,
+Could make her less the child of earth
+ Or give her hopes beyond our own:
+
+But stayed on faith more sternly proved
+ And pride than ours more pure and deep,
+She loves the land our fathers loved
+ And keeps the fame our sons shall keep.
+
+* These lines, with music by Dr. Lloyd, formed part of the Cycle of
+Song offered to Queen Victoria, of blessed and glorious memory,
+in celebration of her second Jubilee.
+
+
+
+
+
+The King Of England
+
+(June 24th, 1902)
+
+In that eclipse of noon when joy was hushed
+ Like the bird's song beneath unnatural night,
+And Terror's footfall in the darkness crushed
+ The rose imperial of our delight,
+Then, even then, though no man cried "He comes,"
+ And no man turned to greet him passing there,
+ With phantom heralds challenging renown
+ And silent-throbbing drums
+ I saw the King of England, hale and fair,
+ Ride out with a great train through London town.
+
+Unarmed he rode, but in his ruddy shield
+ The lions bore the dint of many a lance,
+And up and down his mantle's azure field
+ Were strewn the lilies plucked in famous France.
+Before him went with banner floating wide
+ The yeoman breed that served his honour best,
+ And mixed with these his knights of noble blood;
+ But in the place of pride
+ His admirals in billowy lines abreast
+ Convoyed him close like galleons on the flood.
+
+Full of a strength unbroken showed his face
+ And his brow calm with youth's unclouded dawn,
+But round his lips were lines of tenderer grace
+ Such as no hand but Time's hath ever drawn.
+Surely he knew his glory had no part
+ In dull decay, nor unto Death must bend,
+ Yet surely too of lengthening shadows dreamed
+ With sunset in his heart,
+ So brief his beauty now, so near the end,
+ And now so old and so immortal seemed.
+
+O King among the living, these shall hail
+ Sons of thy dust that shall inherit thee:
+O King of men that die, though we must fail
+ Thy life is breathed from thy triumphant sea.
+O man that servest men by right of birth,
+ Our hearts' content thy heart shall also keep,
+ Thou too with us shalt one day lay thee down
+ In our dear native earth,
+ Full sure the King of England, while we sleep,
+ For ever rides abroad, through London town.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Nile
+
+Out of the unknown South,
+Through the dark lands of drouth,
+ Far wanders ancient Nile in slumber gliding:
+Clear-mirrored in his dream
+The deeds that haunt his stream
+ Flash out and fade like stars in midnight sliding.
+Long since, before the life of man
+ Rose from among the lives that creep,
+With Time's own tide began
+ That still mysterious sleep,
+ Only to cease when Time shall reach the eternal deep.
+
+From out his vision vast
+The early gods have passed,
+ They waned and perished with the faith that made them;
+The long phantasmal line
+Of Pharaohs crowned divine
+ Are dust among the dust that once obeyed them.
+Their land is one mute burial mound,
+ Save when across the drifted years
+Some chant of hollow sound,
+ Some triumph blent with tears,
+ From Memnon's lips at dawn wakens the desert meres.
+
+O Nile, and can it be
+No memory dwells with thee
+ Of Grecian lore and the sweet Grecian singer?
+The legions' iron tramp,
+The Goths' wide-wandering camp,
+ Had these no fame that by thy shore might linger?
+Nay, then must all be lost indeed,
+ Lost too the swift pursuing might
+That cleft with passionate speed
+ Aboukir's tranquil night,
+ And shattered in mid-swoop the great world-eagle's flight.
+
+Yet have there been on earth
+Spirits of starry birth,
+ Whose splendour rushed to no eternal setting:
+They over all endure,
+Their course through all is sure,
+ The dark world's light is still of their begetting.
+Though the long past forgotten lies,
+ Nile! in thy dream remember him,
+Whose like no more shall rise
+ Above our twilight's rim,
+ Until the immortal dawn shall make all glories dim.
+
+For this man was not great
+By gold or kingly state,
+ Or the bright sword, or knowledge of earth's wonder;
+But more than all his race
+He saw life face to face,
+ And heard the still small voice above the thunder.
+O river, while thy waters roll
+ By yonder vast deserted tomb,
+There, where so clear a soul
+ So shone through gathering doom,
+ Thou and thy land shall keep the tale of lost Khartoum.
+
+
+
+
+
+Sráhmandázi*
+
+Deep embowered beside the forest river,
+ Where the flame of sunset only falls,
+Lapped in silence lies the House of Dying,
+ House of them to whom the twilight calls.
+
+There within when day was near to ending,
+ By her lord a woman young and strong,
+By his chief a songman old and stricken
+ Watched together till the hour of song.
+
+"O my songman, now the bow is broken,
+ Now the arrows one by one are sped,
+Sing to me the song of Sráhmandázi,
+ Sráhmandázi, home of all the dead."
+
+Then the songman, flinging wide his songnet,
+ On the last token laid his master's hand,
+While he sang the song of Sráhmandázi,
+ None but dying men can understand.
+
+"Yonder sun that fierce and fiery-hearted
+ Marches down the sky to vanish soon,
+At the self-same hour in Sráhmandázi
+ Rises pallid like the rainy moon.
+
+"There he sees the heroes by their river,
+ Where the great fish daily upward swim;
+Yet they are but shadows hunting shadows,
+ Phantom fish in waters drear and dim.
+
+"There he sees the kings among their headmen,
+ Women weaving, children playing games;
+Yet they are but shadows ruling shadows,
+ Phantom folk with dim forgotten names.
+
+"Bid farewell to all that most thou lovest,
+ Tell thy heart thy living life is done;
+All the days and deeds of Sráhmandázi
+ Are not worth an hour of yonder sun.
+
+Dreamily the chief from out the songnet
+ Drew his hand and touched the woman's head:
+"Know they not, then, love in Sráhmandázi?
+ Has a king no bride among the dead?"
+
+Then the songman answered, "O my master,
+ Love they know, but none may learn it there;
+Only souls that reach that land together
+ Keep their troth and find the twilight fair.
+
+"Thou art still a king, and at thy passing
+ By thy latest word must all abide:
+If thou willest, here am I, thy songman;
+ If thou lovest, here is she, thy bride."
+
+Hushed and dreamy lay the House of Dying,
+ Dreamily the sunlight upward failed,
+Dreamily the chief on eyes that loved him
+ Looked with eyes the coming twilight veiled.
+
+Then he cried, "My songman, I am passing;
+ Let her live, her life is but begun;
+All the days and nights of Sráhmandázi
+ Are not worth an hour of yonder sun."
+
+Yet, when there within the House of Dying
+ The last silence held the sunset air,
+Not alone he came to Sráhmandázi,
+ Not alone she found the twilight fair:
+
+While the songman, far beneath the forest
+ Sang of Srahmandazi all night through,
+"Lovely be thy name, O Land of shadows,
+ Land of meeting, Land of all the true!"
+
+* This ballad is founded on materials given to the author by the
+late Miss Mary Kingsley on her return from her last visit to the
+Bantu peoples of West Africa.
+
+
+
+
+
+Outward Bound
+
+Dear Earth, near Earth, the clay that made us men,
+ The land we sowed,
+ The hearth that glowed---
+ O Mother, must we bid farewell to thee?
+Fast dawns the last dawn, and what shall comfort then
+ The lonely hearts that roam the outer sea?
+
+Gray wakes the daybreak, the shivering sails are set,
+ To misty deeps
+ The channel sweeps---
+ O Mother, think on us who think on thee!
+Earth-home, birth-home, with love remember yet
+ The sons in exile on the eternal sea.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hope The Hornblower
+
+"Hark ye, hark to the winding horn;
+Sluggards, awake, and front the morn!
+Hark ye, hark to the winding horn;
+ The sun's on meadow and mill.
+Follow me, hearts that love the chase;
+Follow me, feet that keep the pace:
+Stirrup to stirrup we ride, we ride,
+ We ride by moor and hill."
+
+Huntsman, huntsman, whither away?
+What is the quarry afoot to-day?
+Huntsman, huntsman, whither away,
+ And what the game ye kill?
+Is it the deer, that men may dine?
+Is it the wolf that tears the kine?
+What is the race ye ride, ye ride,
+ Ye ride by moor and hill?
+
+"Ask not yet till the day be dead
+What is the game that's forward fled,
+Ask not yet till the day be dead
+ The game we follow still.
+An echo it may be, floating past;
+A shadow it may be, fading fast:
+Shadow or echo, we ride, we ride,
+ We ride by moor and hill"
+
+
+
+
+
+O Pulchritudo
+
+O Saint whose thousand shrines our feet have trod
+ And our eyes loved thy lamp's eternal beam,
+Dim earthly radiance of the Unknown God,
+ Hope of the darkness, light of them that dream,
+Far off, far off and faint, O glimmer on
+Till we thy pilgrims from the road are gone.
+
+O Word whose meaning every sense hath sought,
+ Voice of the teeming field and grassy mound,
+Deep-whispering fountain of the wells of thought,
+ Will of the wind and soul of all sweet sound,
+Far off, far off and faint, O murmur on
+Till we thy pilgrims from the road are gone.
+
+
+
+
+
+In July
+
+His beauty bore no token,
+ No sign our gladness shook;
+With tender strength unbroken
+ The hand of Life he took:
+But the summer flowers were falling,
+ Falling and fading away,
+And mother birds were calling,
+ Crying and calling
+ For their loves that would not stay.
+
+He knew not Autumn's chillness,
+ Nor Winter's wind nor Spring's.
+He lived with Summer's stillness
+ And sun and sunlit things:
+But when the dusk was falling
+ He went the shadowy way,
+And one more heart is calling,
+ Crying and calling
+ For the love that would not stay.
+
+
+
+
+
+From Generation To Generation
+
+O Son of mine, when dusk shall find thee bending
+ Between a gravestone and a cradle's head---
+Between the love whose name is loss unending
+ And the young love whose thoughts are liker dread,---
+Thou too shalt groan at heart that all thy spending
+ Cannot repay the dead, the hungry dead.
+
+
+
+
+
+When I Remember
+
+When I remember that the day will come
+ For this our love to quit his land of birth,
+ And bid farewell to all the ways of earth
+With lips that must for evermore be dumb,
+
+Then creep I silent from the stirring hum,
+ And shut away the music and the mirth,
+ And reckon up what may be left of worth
+When hearts are cold and love's own body numb.
+
+Something there must be that I know not here,
+Or know too dimly through the symbol dear;
+ Some touch, some beauty, only guessed by this---
+If He that made us loves, it shall replace,
+Beloved, even the vision of thy face
+ And deep communion of thine inmost kiss.
+
+
+
+
+
+Rondel*
+
+Though I wander far-off ways,
+ Dearest, never doubt thou me:
+
+Mine is not the love that strays,
+Though I wander far-off ways:
+
+Faithfully for all my days
+ I have vowed myself to thee:
+Though I wander far-off ways,
+ Dearest, never doubt thou me.
+
+* This and the two following pieces are from
+the French of Wenceslas, Duke of Brabant and
+Luxembourg, who died in 1384.
+
+
+
+
+
+Rondel
+
+Long ago to thee I gave
+Body, soul, and all I have---
+ Nothing in the world I keep:
+
+All that in return I crave
+Is that thou accept the slave
+Long ago to thee I gave---
+Body, soul, and all I have.
+
+Had I more to share or save,
+I would give as give the brave,
+ Stooping not to part the heap;
+Long ago to thee I gave
+Body, soul, and all I have---
+ Nothing in the world I keep.
+
+
+
+
+
+Balade
+
+I cannot tell, of twain beneath this bond,
+Which one in grief the other goes beyond,---
+Narcissus, who to end the pain he bore
+Died of the love that could not help him more;
+Or I, that pine because I cannot see
+The lady who is queen and love to me.
+
+Nay--for Narcissus, in the forest pond
+Seeing his image, made entreaty fond,
+"Beloved, comfort on my longing pour":
+So for a while he soothed his passion sore;
+So cannot I, for all too far is she---
+The lady who is queen and love to me.
+
+But since that I have Love's true colours donned,
+I in his service will not now despond,
+For in extremes Love yet can all restore:
+So till her beauty walks the world no more
+All day remembered in my hope shall be
+The lady who is queen and love to me.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Last Word
+
+Before the April night was late
+A rider came to the castle gate;
+A rider breathing human breath,
+But the words he spoke were the words of Death.
+
+"Greet you well from the King our lord,
+He marches hot for the eastward ford;
+Living or dying, all or one,
+Ye must keep the ford till the race be run.
+
+Sir Alain rose with lips that smiled,
+He kissed his wife, he kissed his child:
+Before the April night was late
+Sir Alain rode from the castle gate.
+
+He called his men-at-arms by name,
+But one there was uncalled that came:
+He bade his troop behind him ride,
+But there was one that rode beside.
+
+ "Why will you spur so fast to die?
+ Be wiser ere the night go by.
+ A message late is a message lost;
+ For all your haste the foe had crossed.
+
+ "Are men such small unmeaning things
+ To strew the board of smiling Kings?
+ With life and death they play their game,
+ And life or death, the end's the same."
+
+Softly the April air above
+Rustled the woodland homes of love:
+Softly the April air below
+Carried the dream of buds that blow.
+
+ "Is he that bears a warrior's fame
+ To shun the pointless stroke of shame?
+ Will he that propped a trembling throne
+ Not stand for right when right's his own?
+
+ "Your oath on the four gospels sworn?
+ What oath can bind resolves unborn?
+ You lose that far eternal life?
+ Is it yours to lose? Is it child and wife?
+
+But now beyond the pathway's bend,
+Sir Alain saw the forest end,
+And winding wide beneath the hill,
+The glassy river lone and still.
+
+And now he saw with lifted eyes
+The East like a great chancel rise,
+And deep through all his senses drawn,
+Received the sacred wine of dawn.
+
+He set his face to the stream below,
+He drew his axe from the saddle bow:
+"Farewell, Messire, the night is sped;
+There lies the ford, when all is said"
+
+
+
+
+
+The Viking's Song
+
+When I thy lover first
+ Shook out my canvas free
+And like a pirate burst
+ Into that dreaming sea,
+The land knew no such thirst
+ As then tormented me.
+
+Now when at eve returned
+ I near that shore divine,
+Where once but watch-fires burned
+ I see thy beacon shine,
+And know the land hath learned
+ Desire that welcomes mine.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Sufi In The City
+
+I.
+
+When late I watched the arrows of the sleet
+Against the windows of the Tavern beat,
+ I heard a Rose that murmured from her Pot:
+"Why trudge thy fellows yonder in the Street?
+
+II.
+
+"Before the phantom of False Morning dies,
+Choked in the bitter Net that binds the skies,
+ Their feet, bemired with Yesterday, set out
+For the dark alleys where To-morrow lies.
+
+III.
+
+"Think you, when all their petals they have bruised,
+And all the fragrances of Life confused,
+ That Night with sweeter rest will comfort these
+Than us, who still within the Garden mused?
+
+IV.
+
+"Think you the Gold they fight for all day long
+Is worth the frugal Peace their clamours wrong?
+ Their Titles, and the Name they toil to build---
+Will they outlast the echoes of our Song?"
+
+V.
+
+O Sons of Omar, what shall be the close
+Seek not to know, for no man living knows:
+ But while within your hands the Wine is set
+Drink ye--to Omar and the Dreaming Rose!
+
+
+
+
+
+Yattendon
+
+Among the woods and tillage
+ That fringe the topmost downs,
+All lonely lies the village,
+ Far off from seas and towns.
+Yet when her own folk slumbered
+ I heard within her street
+Murmur of men unnumbered
+ And march of myriad feet.
+
+For all she lies so lonely,
+ Far off from towns and seas,
+The village holds not only
+ The roofs beneath her trees:
+While Life is sweet and tragic
+ And Death is veiled and dumb,
+Hither, by singer's magic,
+ The pilgrim world must come.
+
+
+
+
+
+Among The Tombs
+
+She is a lady fair and wise,
+ Her heart her counsel keeps,
+And well she knows of time that flies
+ And tide that onward sweeps;
+But still she sits with restless eyes
+ Where Memory sleeps---
+ Where Memory sleeps.
+
+Ye that have heard the whispering dead
+ In every wind that creeps,
+Or felt the stir that strains the lead
+ Beneath the mounded heaps,
+Tread softly, ah! more softly tread
+ Where Memory sleeps---
+ Where Memory sleeps.
+
+
+
+
+
+A Sower
+
+With sanguine looks
+ And rolling walk
+Among the rooks
+ He loved to stalk,
+
+While on the land
+ With gusty laugh
+From a full hand
+ He scattered chaff.
+
+Now that within
+ His spirit sleeps
+A harvest thin
+ The sickle reaps;
+
+But the dumb fields
+ Desire his tread,
+And no earth yields
+ A wheat more red.
+
+
+
+
+
+A Song Of Exmoor
+
+The Forest above and the Combe below,
+ On a bright September morn!
+He's the soul of a clod who thanks not God
+ That ever his body was born!
+So hurry along, the stag's afoot,
+ The Master's up and away!
+Halloo! Halloo! we'll follow it through
+From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+ So hurry along, the stag's afoot,
+ The Master's up and away!
+ Halloo! Halloo! we'll follow it through
+ From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+Hark to the tufters' challenge true,
+ 'Tis a note that the red-deer knows!
+His courage awakes, his covert he breaks,
+ And up for the moor he goes!
+He's all his rights and seven on top,
+ His eye's the eye of a king,
+And he'll beggar the pride of some that ride
+ Before he leaves the ling!
+
+Here comes Antony bringing the pack,
+ Steady! he's laying them on!
+By the sound of their chime you may tell that it's time
+ To harden your heart and be gone.
+Nightacott, Narracott, Hunnacott's passed,
+ Right for the North they race:
+He's leading them straight for Blackmoor Gate,
+ And he's setting a pounding pace!
+
+We're running him now on a breast-high scent,
+ But he leaves us standing still;
+When we swing round by Westland Pound
+ He's far up Challacombe Hill.
+The pack are a string of struggling ants,
+ The quarry's a dancing midge,
+They're trying their reins on the edge of the Chains
+ While he's on Cheriton Ridge.
+
+He's gone by Kittuck and Lucott Moor,
+ He's gone by Woodcock's Ley;
+By the little white town he's turned him down,
+ And he's soiling in open sea.
+So hurry along, we'll both be in,
+ The crowd are a parish away!
+We're a field of two, and we've followed it through
+From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+ So hurry along, we'll both be in,
+ The crowd are a parish away!
+ We're a field of two, and we've followed it through
+ From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+
+
+
+
+Fidele's Grassy Tomb
+
+The Squire sat propped in a pillowed chair,
+His eyes were alive and clear of care,
+But well he knew that the hour was come
+To bid good-bye to his ancient home.
+
+He looked on garden, wood, and hill,
+He looked on the lake, sunny and still:
+The last of earth that his eyes could see
+Was the island church of Orchardleigh.
+
+The last that his heart could understand
+Was the touch of the tongue that licked his hand:
+"Bury the dog at my feet," he said,
+And his voice dropped, and the Squire was dead.
+
+Now the dog was a hound of the Danish breed,
+Staunch to love and strong at need:
+He had dragged his master safe to shore
+When the tide was ebbing at Elsinore.
+
+From that day forth, as reason would,
+He was named "Fidele," and made it good:
+When the last of the mourners left the door
+Fidele was dead on the chantry floor.
+
+They buried him there at his master's feet,
+And all that heard of it deemed it meet:
+The story went the round for years,
+Till it came at last to the Bishop's ears.
+
+Bishop of Bath and Wells was he,
+Lord of the lords of Orchardleigh;
+And he wrote to the Parson the strongest screed
+That Bishop may write or Parson read.
+
+The sum of it was that a soulless hound
+Was known to be buried in hallowed ground:
+From scandal sore the Church to save
+They must take the dog from his masters grave.
+
+The heir was far in a foreign land,
+The Parson was wax to my Lord's command:
+He sent for the Sexton and bade him make
+A lonely grave by the shore of the lake.
+
+The Sexton sat by the water's brink
+Where he used to sit when he used to think:
+He reasoned slow, but he reasoned it out,
+And his argument left him free from doubt.
+
+"A Bishop," he said, "is the top of his trade:
+But there's others can give him a start with the spade:
+Yon dog, he carried the Squire ashore,
+And a Christian couldn't ha' done no more.
+
+The grave was dug; the mason came
+And carved on stone Fidele's name;
+But the dog that the Sexton laid inside
+Was a dog that never had lived or died.
+
+So the Parson was praised,and the scandal stayed,
+Till, a long time after, the church decayed,
+And, laying the floor anew, they found
+In the tomb of the Squire the bones of a hound.
+
+As for the Bishop of Bath and Wells
+No more of him the story tells;
+Doubtless he lived as a Prelate and Prince,
+And died and was buried a century since.
+
+And whether his view was right or wrong
+Has little to do with this my song;
+Something we owe him, you must allow;
+And perhaps he has changed his mind by now.
+
+The Squire in the family chantry sleeps,
+The marble still his memory keeps:
+Remember, when the name you spell,
+There rest Fidele's bones as well.
+
+For the Sexton's grave you need not search,
+'Tis a nameless mound by the island church:
+An ignorant fellow, of humble lot---
+But. he knew one thing that a Bishop did not.
+
+
+
+
+
+Moonset
+
+Past seven o'clock: time to be gone;
+Twelfth-night's over and dawn shivering up:
+A hasty cut of the loaf, a steaming cup,
+Down to the door, and there is Coachman John.
+
+Ruddy of cheek is John and bright of eye;
+But John it appears has none of your grins and winks;
+Civil enough, but short: perhaps he thinks:
+Words come once in a mile, and always dry.
+
+Has he a mind or not? I wonder; but soon
+We turn through a leafless wood, and there to the right,
+Like a sun bewitched in alien realms of night,
+Mellow and yellow and rounded hangs the moon.
+
+Strangely near she seems, and terribly great:
+The world is dead: why are we travelling still?
+Nightmare silence grips my struggling will;
+We are driving for ever and ever to find a gate.
+
+"When you come to consider the moon," says John at last,
+And stops, to feel his footing and take his stand;
+"And then there's some will say there's never a hand
+That made the world!"
+ A flick, and the gates are passed.
+
+Out of the dim magical moonlit park,
+Out to the workday road and wider skies:
+There's a warm flush in the East where day's to rise,
+And I'm feeling the better for Coachman John's remark.
+
+
+
+
+
+Master And Man
+
+Do ye ken hoo to fush for the salmon?
+ If ye'll listen I'll tell ye.
+Dinna trust to the books and their gammon,
+ They're but trying to sell ye.
+Leave professors to read their ain cackle
+ And fush their ain style;
+Come awa', sir, we'll oot wi' oor tackle
+ And be busy the while.
+
+'Tis a wee bit ower bright, ye were thinkin'?
+ Aw, ye'll no be the loser;
+'Tis better ten baskin' and blinkin'
+ Than ane that's a cruiser.
+If ye're bent, as I tak it, on slatter,
+ Ye should pray for the droot,
+For the salmon's her ain when there's watter,
+ But she's oors when it's oot.
+
+Ye may just put your flee-book behind ye,
+ Ane hook wull be plenty;
+If they'll no come for this, my man, mind ye,
+ They'll no come for twenty.
+Ay, a rod; but the shorter the stranger
+ And the nearer to strike;
+For myself I prefare it nae langer
+ Than a yard or the like.
+
+Noo, ye'll stand awa' back while I'm creepin'
+ Wi' my snoot i' the gowans;
+There's a bonny twalve-poonder a-sleepin'
+ I' the shade o' yon rowans.
+Man, man! I was fearin' I'd stirred her,
+ But I've got her the noo!
+Hoot! fushin's as easy as murrder
+ When ye ken what to do.
+
+Na, na, sir, I doot na ye're willin'
+ But I canna permit ye;
+For I'm thinkin' that yon kind o' killin'
+ Wad hardly befit ye.
+And some work is deefficult hushin',
+ There'd be havers and chaff:
+'Twull be best, sir, for you to be fushin'
+ And me wi' the gaff.
+
+
+
+
+
+Gavotte
+
+(Old French)
+
+Memories long in music sleeping,
+ No more sleeping,
+ No more dumb;
+Delicate phantoms softly creeping
+ Softly back from the old-world come.
+
+Faintest odours around them straying,
+ Suddenly straying
+ In chambers dim;
+Whispering silks in order swaying,
+ Glimmering gems on shoulders slim:
+
+Courage advancing strong and tender,
+ Grace untender
+ Fanning desire;
+Suppliant conquest, proud surrender,
+ Courtesy cold of hearts on fire---
+
+Willowy billowy now they're bending,
+ Low they're bending
+ Down-dropt eyes;
+Stately measure and stately ending,
+ Music sobbing, and a dream that dies.
+
+
+
+
+
+Imogen
+
+(A Lady of Tender Age)
+
+Ladies, where were your bright eyes glancing,
+ Where were they glancing yester-night?
+Saw ye Imogen dancing, dancing,
+ Imogen dancing all in white?
+ Laughed she not with a pure delight,
+ Laughed she not with a joy serene,
+Stepped she not with a grace entrancing,
+ Slenderly girt in silken sheen?
+
+All through the night from dusk to daytime
+ Under her feet the hours were swift,
+Under her feet the hours of play-time
+ Rose and fell with a rhythmic lift:
+ Music set her adrift, adrift,
+ Music eddying towards the day
+Swept her along as brooks in May-time
+ Carry the freshly falling May.
+
+Ladies, life is a changing measure,
+ Youth is a lilt that endeth soon;
+Pluck ye never so fast at pleasure
+ Twilight follows the longest noon.
+ Nay, but here is a lasting boon,
+ Life for hearts that are old and chill,
+Youth undying for hearts that treasure
+ Imogen dancing, dancing still.
+
+
+
+
+
+Nel Mezzo Del Cammin
+
+Whisper it not that late in years
+Sorrow shall fade and the world be brighter,
+Life be freed of tremor and tears,
+Heads be wiser and hearts be lighter.
+Ah! but the dream that all endears,
+The dream we sell for your pottage of truth---
+Give us again the passion of youth,
+Sorrow shall fade and the world be brighter.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Invasion
+
+Spring, they say, with his greenery
+ Northward marches at last,
+ Mustering thorn and elm;
+Breezes rumour him conquering,
+ Tell how Victory sits
+ High on his glancing helm.
+
+Smit with sting of his archery,
+ Hardest ashes and oaks
+ Burn at the root below:
+Primrose, violet, daffodil,
+ Start like blood where the shafts
+ Light from his golden bow.
+
+Here where winter oppresses us
+ Still we listen and doubt,
+ Dreading a hope betrayed:
+Sore we long to be greeting him,
+ Still we linger and doubt
+ "What if his march be stayed?"
+
+Folk in thrall to the enemy,
+ Vanquished, tilling a soil
+ Hateful and hostile grown;
+Always wearily, warily,
+ Feeding deep in the heart
+ Passion they dare not own---
+
+So we wait the deliverer;
+ Surely soon shall he come,
+ Soon shall his hour be due:
+Spring shall come with his greenery,
+ Life be lovely again,
+ Earth be the home we knew.
+
+
+
+
+
+Pereunt Et Imputantur
+
+(After Martial)
+
+Bernard, if to you and me
+ Fortune all at once should give
+Years to spend secure and free,
+ With the choice of how to live,
+Tell me, what should we proclaim
+Life deserving of the name?
+
+Winning some one else's case?
+ Saving some one else's seat?
+Hearing with a solemn face
+ People of importance bleat?
+No, I think we should not still
+Waste our time at others' will.
+
+Summer noons beneath the limes,
+ Summer rides at evening cool,
+Winter's tales and home-made rhymes,
+ Figures on the frozen pool---
+These would we for labours take,
+And of these our business make.
+
+Ah! but neither you nor I
+ Dare in earnest venture so;
+Still we let the good days die
+ And to swell the reckoning go.
+What are those that know the way,
+Yet to walk therein delay?
+
+
+
+
+
+Felix Antonius
+
+(After Martial)
+
+To-day, my friend is seventy-five;
+ He tells his tale with no regret;
+ His brave old eyes are steadfast yet,
+His heart the .lightest heart alive.
+
+He sees behind him green and wide
+ The pathway of his pilgrim years;
+ He sees the shore, and dreadless hears
+The whisper of the creeping tide.
+
+For out of all his days, not one
+ Has passed and left its unlaid ghost
+ To seek a light for ever lost,
+Or wail a deed for ever done.
+
+So for reward of life-long truth
+ He lives again, as good men can,
+ Redoubling his allotted span
+With memories of a stainless youth.
+
+
+
+
+
+Ireland, Ireland
+
+Down thy valleys, Ireland, Ireland,
+ Down thy valleys green and sad,
+Still thy spirit wanders wailing,
+ Wanders wailing, wanders mad.
+
+Long ago that anguish took thee,
+ Ireland, Ireland, green and fair,
+Spoilers strong in darkness took thee,
+ Broke thy heart and left thee there.
+
+Down thy valleys, Ireland, Ireland,
+ Still thy spirit wanders mad;
+All too late they love that wronged thee,
+ Ireland, Ireland, green and sad.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hymn
+
+In The Time Of War And Tumults
+
+O Lord Almighty, Thou whose hands
+ Despair and victory give;
+In whom, though tyrants tread their lands,
+ The souls of nations live;
+
+Thou wilt not turn Thy face away
+ From those who work Thy will,
+But send Thy peace on hearts that pray,
+ And guard Thy people still.
+
+Remember not the days of shame,
+ The hands with rapine dyed,
+The wavering will, the baser aim,
+ The brute material pride:
+
+Remember, Lord, the years of faith,
+ The spirits humbly brave,
+The strength that died defying death,
+ The love that loved the slave:
+
+The race that strove to rule Thine earth
+ With equal laws unbought: .
+Who bore for Truth the pangs of birth,
+ And brake the bonds of Thought.
+
+Remember how, since time began,
+ Thy dark eternal mind
+Through lives of men that fear not man
+ ls light for all mankind.
+
+Thou wilt not turn Thy face away
+ From those who work Thy will,
+But send Thy strength on hearts that pray
+ For strength to serve Thee still.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Building Of The Temple
+
+(An Anthem Heard In Canterbury Cathedral)
+
+[The Organ]
+
+O Lord our God, we are strangers before Thee, and sojourners, as were
+all our fathers: our days on the earth are as a shadow, and there is
+none abiding.
+
+O Lord God of our fathers, keep this for ever in the imagination of
+the thoughts of Thy people, and prepare their heart unto Thee.
+
+And give unto Solomon my son a perfect heart to keep Thy commandments,
+and to build the palace for the which I have made provision.
+
+[Boys' voices.]
+
+O come to the Palace of Life,
+Let us build it again.
+It was founded on terror and strife,
+It was laid in the curse of the womb,
+And pillared on toil and pain,
+And hung with veils of doom,
+And vaulted with the darkness of the tomb.
+
+[Men's voices.]
+
+O Lord our God, we are sojourners here for a day,
+ Strangers and sojourners, as all our fathers were:
+Our years on the earth are a shadow that fadeth away;
+ Grant us light for our labour, and a time for prayer.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+But now with endless song,
+And joy fulfilling the Law;
+Of passion as pure as strong
+And pleasure undimmed of awe;
+With garners of wine and grain
+Laid up for the ages long,
+Let us build the Palace again
+And enter with endless song,
+Enter and dwell secure, forgetting the years of wrong.
+
+[Men.]
+
+O Lord our God, we are strangers and sojourners here,
+ Our beginning was night, and our end is hid in Thee:
+Our labour on the earth is hope redeeming fear,
+ In sorrow we build for the days we shall not see.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Great is the name
+Of the strong and skilled,
+Lasting the fame
+Of them that build:
+The tongues of many nations
+Shall speak of our praise,
+And far generations
+Be glad for our days.
+
+[Men.]
+
+We are sojourners here as all our fathers were,
+ As all our children shall be, forgetting and forgot:
+The fame of man is a murmur that passeth on the air,
+ We perish indeed if Thou remember not.
+
+We are sojourners here as all our fathers were,
+ Strangers travelling down to the land of death:
+There is neither work nor device nor knowledge there,
+ O grant us might for our labour, and to rest in faith.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+In joy, in the joy of the light to be,
+
+[Men.]
+
+ O Father of Lights, unvarying and true,
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Let us build the Palace of Life anew.
+
+[Men.]
+
+ Let us build for the years we shall not see.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Lofty of line and glorious of hue,
+With gold and pearl and with the cedar tree,
+
+[Men.]
+
+ With silence due
+ And with service free,
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Let us build it for ever in splendour new.
+
+[Men.]
+
+ Let us build in hope and in sorrow, and rest in Thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTES
+
+
+Drake's Drum.
+
+A state drum, painted with the arms of Sir Francis
+Drake, is preserved among other relics at Buckland Abbey, the seat of
+the Drake family in Devon.
+
+
+The Fighting Téméraire.
+
+The two last stanzas have been misunderstood.
+It seems, therefore, necessary to state that they are intended to
+refer to Turner's picture in the National Gallery of "The Fighting
+_Téméraire_ Tugged to her Last Berth."
+
+
+San Stefano.
+
+Sir Peter Parker was the son of Admiral Christopher
+Parker, grandson of Admiral Sir Peter Parker (the life-long friend and
+chief mourner of Nelson), and great-grandson of Admiral Sir William
+Parker. On his mother's side he was grandson of Admiral Byron, and
+first cousin of Lord Byron, the poet. He was killed in action near
+Baltimore in 1814, and buried in St. Margaret's, Westminster,
+where may be seen the monument erected to his memory by the officers
+of the _Menelaus_.
+
+
+The Quarter-Gunner's Yarn.
+
+This ballad is founded on fragmentary lines
+communicated to the author by Admiral Sir Windham Hornby, K.C.B., who
+served under Sir Thomas Hardy in 1827.
+
+
+Væ Victis.
+
+See _Livy_, XXX.,43, _Diodorus Siculus_, XIX., 106.
+
+
+Seringapatam.
+
+In 1780, while attempting to relieve Arcot, a British
+force of three thousand men was cut to pieces by Hyder Ali. Baird,
+then a young captain in the 73rd, was left for dead on the field. He
+was afterwards, with forty-nine other officers, kept in prison at
+Seringapatam, and treated with Oriental barbarity and treachery by
+Hyder Ali and his son Tippoo Sahib, Sultans of Mysore. Twenty-three of
+the prisoners died by poison, torture, and fever; the rest were
+surrendered in 1784. In 1799, at the siege of Seringapatam,
+Major-General Baird commanded the first European brigade, and
+volunteered to lead the storming column. Tippoo Sahib, with eight
+thousand of his men, fell in the assault, but the victor spared the
+lives of his sons and forbade a general sack of the city.
+
+
+Clifton Chapel.
+
+Clifton is one of the schools from which the largest
+number of boys pass direct into the R.M.A., Woolwich, and R.M.C.,
+Sandhurst. Thirty-five Old Cliftonian officers served in the campaign
+of 1897 on the Indian Frontier, of whom twenty-two were mentioned in
+despatches and six recommended for the Distinguished Service Order. Of
+the three hundred Cliftonians who served in the war in South Africa,
+thirty were killed in action and fourteen died of wounds or fever.
+
+ Clifton, remember these thy sons who fell
+ Fighting far oversea;
+ For they in a dark hour remembered well
+ Their warfare learned of thee.
+
+
+The Echo.
+
+The ballad was "The Twa Sisters of Binnorie," as set by
+Arthur Somervell.
+
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Collected Poems 1897 - 1907, by Henry Newbolt
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLLECTED POEMS 1897 - 1907 ***
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Collected Poems 1897 - 1907, by Henry Newbolt
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Collected Poems 1897 - 1907
+
+Author: Henry Newbolt
+
+Release Date: October 31, 2004 [EBook #13900]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLLECTED POEMS 1897 - 1907 ***
+
+
+
+
+Processed by Tom Harris. In memory of my mother, Elizabeth Harris,
+who loved poetry, and scanned from her own copy of the book.
+
+
+
+
+
+Collected Poems 1897 - 1907
+by
+Henry Newbolt
+
+To Thomas Hardy
+
+
+
+
+
+Drake's Drum
+
+Drake he's in his hammock an' a thousand miles away,
+ (Capten, art tha sleepin' there below?)
+Slung atween the round shot in Nombre Dios Bay,
+ An' dreamin' arl the time O' Plymouth Hoe.
+Yarnder lumes the Island, yarnder lie the ships,
+ Wi' sailor lads a-dancing' heel-an'-toe,
+An' the shore-lights flashin', an' the night-tide dashin',
+ He sees et arl so plainly as he saw et long ago.
+
+Drake he was a Devon man, an' ruled the Devon seas,
+ (Capten, art tha' sleepin' there below?)
+Roving' tho' his death fell, he went wi' heart at ease,
+ An' dreamin' arl the time o' Plymouth Hoe.
+"Take my drum to England, hang et by the shore,
+ Strike et when your powder's runnin' low;
+If the Dons sight Devon, I'll quit the port o' Heaven,
+ An' drum them up the Channel as we drummed them long ago."
+
+Drake he's in his hammock till the great Armadas come,
+ (Capten, art tha sleepin' there below?)
+Slung atween the round shot, listenin' for the drum,
+ An' dreamin arl the time o' Plymouth Hoe.
+Call him on the deep sea, call him up the Sound,
+ Call him when ye sail to meet the foe;
+Where the old trade's plyin' an' the old flag flyin'
+ They shall find him ware an' wakin', as they found him long ago!
+
+
+
+
+
+The Fighting Temeraire
+
+It was eight bells ringing,
+ For the morning watch was done,
+And the gunner's lads were singing
+ As they polished every gun.
+It was eight bells ringing,
+And the gunner's lads were singing,
+For the ship she rode a-swinging,
+ As they polished every gun.
+
+ Oh! to see the linstock lighting,
+ Temeraire! Temeraire!
+ Oh! to hear the round shot biting,
+ Temeraire! Temeraire!
+
+ Oh! to see the linstock lighting,
+ And to hear the round shot biting,
+ For we're all in love with fighting
+ On the fighting Temeraire.
+
+It was noontide ringing,
+ And the battle just begun,
+When the ship her way was winging,
+ As they loaded every gun.
+It was noontide ringing,
+When the ship her way was winging,
+And the gunner's lads were singing
+ As they loaded every gun.
+
+ There'll be many grim and gory,
+ Temeraire! Temeraire!
+ There'll be few to tell the story,
+ Temeraire! Temeraire!
+
+ There'll be many grim and gory,
+ There'll be few to tell the story,
+ But we'll all be one in glory
+ With the Fighting Temeraire.
+
+There's a far bell ringing
+ At the setting of the sun,
+And a phantom voice is singing
+ Of the great days done.
+There's a far bell ringing,
+And a phantom voice is singing
+Of renown for ever clinging
+ To the great days done.
+
+ Now the sunset breezes shiver,
+ Temeraire! Temeraire!
+ And she's fading down the river,
+ Temeraire! Temeraire!
+
+ Now the sunset's breezes shiver,
+ And she's fading down the river,
+ But in England's song for ever
+ She's the Fighting Temeraire.
+
+
+
+
+
+Admirals All
+
+Effingham, Grenville, Raleigh, Drake,
+ Here's to the bold and free!
+Benbow, Collingwood, Byron, Blake,
+ Hail to the Kings of the Sea!
+Admirals all, for England's sake,
+ Honour be yours and fame!
+And honour, as long as waves shall break,
+ To Nelson's peerless name!
+
+ Admirals all, for England's sake,
+ Honour be yours and fame!
+ And honour, as long as waves shall break,
+ To Nelson's peerless name!
+
+Essex was fretting in Cadiz Bay
+ With the galleons fair in sight;
+Howard at last must give him his way,
+ And the word was passed to fight.
+Never was schoolboy gayer than he,
+ Since holidays first began:
+He tossed his bonnet to wind and sea,
+ And under the guns he ran.
+
+Drake nor devil nor Spaniard feared,
+ Their cities he put to the sack;
+He singed his Catholic Majesty's beard,
+ And harried his ships to wrack.
+He was playing at Plymouth a rubber of bowls
+ When the great Armada came;
+But he said, "They must wait their turn, good souls,"
+ And he stooped and finished the game.
+
+Fifteen sail were the Dutchmen bold,
+ Duncan he had but two;
+But he anchored them fast where the Texel shoaled,
+ And his colours aloft he flew.
+"I've taken the depth to a fathom," he cried,
+ "And I'll sink with a right good will:
+For I know when we're all of us under the tide
+ My flag will be fluttering still."
+
+Splinters were flying above, below,
+ When Nelson sailed the Sound:
+"Mark you, I wouldn't be elsewhere now,"
+ Said he, "for a thousand pound!"
+The Admiral's signal bade him fly
+ But he wickedly wagged his head:
+He clapped the glass to his sightless eye,
+ And "I'm damned if I see it!" he said.
+
+Admirals all, they said their say
+ (The echoes are ringing still).
+Admirals all, they went their way
+ To the haven under the hill.
+But they left us a kingdom none can take,
+ The realm of the circling sea,
+To be ruled by the rightful sons of Blake,
+ And the Rodneys yet to be.
+
+ Admirals all, for England's sake,
+ Honour be yours and fame!
+ And honour, as long as waves shall break,
+ To Nelson's peerless name!
+
+
+
+
+
+San Stefano
+
+(A Ballad of the Bold Menelaus)
+
+It was morning at St. Helen's, in the great and gallant days,
+ And the sea beneath the sun glittered wide,
+When the frigate set her courses, all a-shimmer in the haze
+ And she hauled her cable home and took the tide.
+She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+And they cheered her from the shore for her colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ put to sea.
+
+ She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+ And they cheered her from the shore for her colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ put to sea.
+
+She was clear of Monte Cristo, she was heading for the land,
+ When she spied a pennant red and white and blue;
+They were foemen, and they knew it, and they'd half a league in hand,
+ But she flung aloft her royals, and she flew.
+She was nearer, nearer, nearer, they were caught beyond a doubt,
+ But they slipped her into Orbetello Bay,
+And the lubbers gave a shout as they paid their cables out,
+ With the guns grinning round them where they lay.
+
+Now, Sir Peter was a captain of a famous fighting race,
+ Son and grandson of an admiral was he;
+And he looked upon the batteries, he looked upon the chase,
+ And he heard the shout that echoed out to sea.
+And he called across the decks, "Ay! the cheering might be late
+ If they kept it till the _Menelaus_ runs;
+Bid the master and his mate heave the lead and lay her straight
+ For the prize lying yonder by the guns!"
+
+When the summer moon was setting, into Orbetello Bay
+ Came the _Menelaus_ gliding like a ghost;
+And her boats were manned in silence, and in silence pulled away,
+ And in silence every gunner took his post.
+With a volley from her broadside the citadel she woke,
+ And they hammered back like heroes all the night;
+But before the morning broke she had vanished through the smoke
+ With her prize upon her quarter grappled tight.
+
+It was evening at St. Helen's in the great and gallant time,
+ And the sky behind the down was flushing far;
+And the flags were all a-flutter, and the bells were all a-chime,
+ When the frigate cast her anchor off the bar.
+She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+And they cheered her from the shore for the colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ came from the sea.
+
+ She'd a right fighting company, three hundred men and more,
+ Nine and forty guns in tackle running free;
+ And they cheered her from the shore for her colours at the fore,
+ When the bold _Menelaus_ came from the sea.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hawke
+
+In seventeen hundred and fifty-nine,
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West,
+The French King's Admiral with twenty of the line,
+ Was sailing forth to sack us, out of Brest.
+The ports of France were crowded, the quays of France a-hum
+With thirty thousand soldiers marching to the drum,
+For bragging time was over and fighting time was come
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West.
+
+'Twas long past noon of a wild November day
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West;
+He heard the breakers thundering in Quiberon Bay,
+ But he flew the flag for battle, line abreast.
+Down upon the quicksands roaring out of sight
+Fiercely beat the storm-wind, darkly fell the night,
+But they took the foe for pilot and the cannon's glare for light
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West.
+
+The Frenchmen turned like a covey down the wind
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West;
+One he sank with all hands, one he caught and pinned,
+ And the shallows and the storm took the rest.
+The guns that should have conquered us they rusted on the shore,
+The men that would have mastered us they drummed and marched no more,
+For England was England, and a mighty brood she bore
+ When Hawke came swooping from the West.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Bright Medusa
+
+(1807)
+
+She's the daughter of the breeze,
+She's the darling of the seas,
+ And we call her, if you please, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+From beneath her bosom bare
+To the snakes among her hair
+ She's a flash o' golden light, the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+When the ensign dips above
+And the guns are all for love,
+ She's as gentle as a dove, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+But when the shot's in rack
+And her forestay flies the Jack,
+ He's a merry man would slight the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+When she got the word to go
+Up to Monte Video,
+ There she found the river low, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+So she tumbled out her guns
+And a hundred of her sons,
+ And she taught the Dons to fight the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+When the foeman can be found
+With the pluck to cross her ground,
+ First she walks him round and round, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+Then she rakes him fore and aft
+Till he's just a jolly raft,
+ And she grabs him like a kite, the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+She's the daughter of the breeze,
+She's the darling of the seas,
+ And you'll call her, if you please, the bright _Medu--sa_;
+For till England's sun be set--
+And it's not for setting yet--
+ She shall bear her name by right, the bright _Medu--sa_.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Old Superb
+
+The wind was rising easterly, the morning sky was blue,
+ The Straits before us opened wide and free;
+We looked towards the Admiral, where high the Peter flew,
+ And all our hearts were dancing like the sea.
+"The French are gone to Martinique with four and twenty sail!
+ The Old _Superb_ is old and foul and slow,
+But the French are gone to Martinique, and Nelson's on the trail.
+ And where he goes the Old _Superb_ must go!"
+
+ So Westward ho! for Trinidad, and Eastward ho! for Spain,
+ And "Ship ahoy!" a hundred times a day;
+ Round the world if need be, and round the world again,
+ With a lame duck lagging all the way.
+
+The Old _Superb_ was barnacled and green as grass below,
+ Her sticks were only fit for stirring grog;
+The pride of all her midshipmen was silent long ago,
+ And long ago they ceased to heave the log.
+Four year out from home she was, and ne'er a week in port,
+ And nothing save the guns aboard her bright;
+But Captain Keats he knew the game, and swore to share the sport,
+ For he never yet came in too late to fight.
+
+ So Westward ho! for Trinidad, and Eastward ho! for Spain,
+ And "Ship ahoy!" a hundred times a day;
+ Round the world if need be, and round the world again,
+ With a lame duck lagging all the way.
+
+"Now up, my lads," the Captain cried, "for sure the case were hard
+ If longest out were first to fall behind;
+Aloft, aloft with studding sails, and lash them on the yard,
+ For night and day the Trades are driving blind!"
+So all day long and all day long behind the fleet we crept,
+ And how we fretted none but Nelson guessed;
+But every night the Old _Superb_ she sailed when others slept,
+ Till we ran the French to earth with all the rest.
+
+ Oh, 'twas Westward ho! for Trinidad, and Eastward ho! for Spain,
+ And "Ship ahoy!" a hundred times a day;
+ Round the world if need be, and round the world again,
+ With a lame duck lagging all the way.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Quarter-Gunner's Yarn
+
+We lay at St. Helen's, and easy she rode
+With one anchor catted and fresh-water stowed;
+When the barge came alongside like bullocks we roared,
+For we knew what we carried with Nelson aboard.
+
+Our Captain was Hardy, the pride of us all,
+I'll ask for none better when danger shall call;
+He was hardy by nature and Hardy by name,
+And soon by his conduct to honour he came.
+
+The third day the Lizard was under our lee,
+Where the _Ajax_ and _Thunderer_ joined us at sea,
+But what with foul weather and tacking about,
+When we sighted the Fleet we were thirteen days out.
+
+The Captains they all came aboard quick enough,
+But the news that they brought was as heavy as duff;
+So backward an enemy never was seen,
+They were harder to come at than Cheeks the Marine.
+
+The lubbers had hare's lugs where seamen have ears,
+So we stowed all saluting and smothered our cheers,
+And to humour their stomachs and tempt them to dine,
+In the offing we showed them but six of the line.
+
+One morning the topmen reported below
+The old _Agamemnon_ escaped from the foe.
+Says Nelson: "My lads, there'll be honour for some,
+For we're sure of a battle now Berry has come."
+
+"Up hammocks!" at last cried the bo'sun at dawn;
+The guns were cast loose and the tompions drawn;
+The gunner was bustling the shot racks to fill,
+And "All hands to quarters!" was piped with a will.
+
+We now saw the enemy bearing ahead,
+And to East of them Cape Traflagar it was said,
+'Tis a name we remember from father to son,
+That the days of old England may never be done.
+
+The _Victory_ led, to her flag it was due,
+Tho' the _Temeraires_ thought themselves Admirals too;
+But Lord Nelson he hailed them with masterful grace:
+"Cap'n Harvey, I'll thank you to keep in your place."
+
+To begin with we closed the _Bucentaure_ alone,
+An eighty-gun ship and their Admiral's own;
+We raked her but once, and the rest of the day
+Like a hospital hulk on the water she lay.
+
+To our battering next the _Redoutable_ struck,
+But her sharpshooters gave us the worst of the luck:
+Lord Nelson was wounded, most cruel to tell.
+"They've done for me; Hardy!" he cried as he fell.
+
+To the cockpit in silence they carried him past,
+And sad were the looks that were after him cast;
+His face with a kerchief he tried to conceal,
+But we knew him too well from the truck to the keel.
+
+When the Captain reported a victory won,
+"Thank God!" he kept saying, "my duty I've done."
+At last came the moment to kiss him good-bye,
+And the Captain for once had the salt in his eye.
+
+"Now anchor, dear Hardy," the Admiral cried;
+But before we could make it he fainted and died.
+All night in the trough of the sea we were tossed,
+And for want of ground-tackle good prizes were lost.
+
+Then we hauled down the flag, at the fore it was red,
+And blue at the mizzen was hoisted instead
+By Nelson's famed Captain, the pride of each tar,
+Who fought in the _Victory_ off Cape Traflagar.
+
+
+
+
+
+Northumberland
+
+"The Old and Bold"
+
+When England sets her banner forth
+ And bids her armour shine,
+She'll not forget the famous North,
+ The lads of moor and Tyne;
+And when the loving-cup's in hand,
+ And Honour leads the cry,
+They know not old Northumberland
+ Who'll pass her memory by.
+
+When Nelson sailed for Trafalgar
+ With all his country's best,
+He held them dear as brothers are,
+ But one beyond the rest.
+For when the fleet with heroes manned
+ To clear the decks began,
+The boast of old Northumberland
+ He sent to lead the van.
+
+
+Himself by _Victory's_ bulwarks stood
+ And cheered to see the sight;
+"That noble fellow Collingwood,
+ How bold he goes to fight!"
+Love, that the league of Ocean spanned,
+ Heard him as face to face;
+"What would he give, Northumberland,
+ To share our pride of place?"
+
+The flag that goes the world around
+ And flaps on every breeze
+Has never gladdened fairer ground
+ Or kinder hearts than these.
+So when the loving-cup's in hand
+ And Honour leads the cry,
+They know not old Northumberland
+ Who'll pass her memory by.
+
+
+
+
+
+For A Trafalgar Cenotaph
+
+Lover of England, stand awhile and gaze
+With thankful heart, and lips refrained from praise;
+They rest beyond the speech of human pride
+Who served with Nelson and with Nelson died.
+
+
+
+
+
+Craven
+
+(Mobile Bay, 1864)
+
+Over the turret, shut in his iron-clad tower,
+ Craven was conning his ship through smoke and flame;
+Gun to gun he had battered the fort for an hour,
+ Now was the time for a charge to end the game.
+
+There lay the narrowing channel, smooth and grim,
+ A hundred deaths beneath it, and never a sign;
+There lay the enemy's ships, and sink or swim
+ The flag was flying, and he was head of the line.
+
+The fleet behind was jamming; the monitor hung
+ Beating the stream; the roar for a moment hushed,
+Craven spoke to the pilot; slow she swung;
+ Again he spoke, and right for the foe she rushed.
+
+Into the narrowing channel, between the shore
+ And the sunk torpedoes lying in treacherous rank;
+She turned but a yard too short; a muffled roar,
+ A mountainous wave, and she rolled, righted, and sank.
+
+Over the manhole, up in the iron-clad tower,
+ Pilot and Captain met as they turned to fly:
+The hundredth part of a moment seemed an hour,
+ For one could pass to be saved, and one must die.
+
+They stood like men in a dream: Craven spoke,
+ Spoke as he lived and fought, with a Captain's pride,
+"After you, Pilot." The pilot woke,
+ Down the ladder he went, and Craven died.
+
+ All men praise the deed and the manner, but we---
+ We set it apart from the pride that stoops to the proud,
+ The strength that is supple to serve the strong and free,
+ The grace of the empty hands and promises loud:
+
+ Sidney thirsting, a humbler need to slake,
+ Nelson waiting his turn for the surgeon's hand,
+ Lucas crushed with chains for a comrade's sake,
+ Outram coveting right before command:
+
+ These were paladins, these were Craven's peers,
+ These with him shall be crowned in story and song,
+ Crowned with the glitter of steel and the glimmer of tears,
+ Princes of courtesy, merciful, proud, and strong.
+
+
+
+
+
+Messmates
+
+He gave us all a good-bye cheerily
+ At the first dawn of day;
+We dropped him down the side full drearily
+ When the light died away.
+It's a dead dark watch that he's a-keeping there,
+And a long, long night that lags a-creeping there,
+Where the Trades and the tides roll over him
+ And the great ships go by.
+
+He's there alone with green seas rocking him
+ For a thousand miles round;
+He's there alone with dumb things mocking him,
+ And we're homeward bound.
+It's a long, lone watch that he's a-keeping there,
+And a dead cold night that lags a-creeping there,
+While the months and the years roll over him
+ And the great ships go by.
+
+I wonder if the tramps come near enough
+ As they thrash to and fro,
+And the battle-ships' bells ring clear enough
+ To be heard down below;
+If through all the lone watch that he's a-keeping there,
+And the long, cold night that lags a-creeping there,
+The voices of the sailor-men shall comfort him
+ When the great ships go by.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Death Of Admiral Blake
+
+(August 7th, 1657)
+
+Laden with spoil of the South, fulfilled with the glory of achievement,
+ And freshly crowned with never-dying fame,
+Sweeping by shores where the names are the names of the victories of England,
+ Across the Bay the squadron homeward came.
+
+Proudly they came, but their pride was the pomp of a funeral at midnight,
+ When dreader yet the lonely morrow looms;
+Few are the words that are spoken, and faces are gaunt beneath the torchlight
+ That does but darken more the nodding plumes.
+
+Low on the field of his fame, past hope lay the Admiral triumphant,
+ And fain to rest him after all his pain;
+Yet for the love that he bore to his own land, ever unforgotten,
+ He prayed to see the western hills again.
+
+Fainter than stars in a sky long gray with the coming of the daybreak,
+ Or sounds of night that fade when night is done,
+So in the death-dawn faded the splendour and loud renown of warfare,
+ And life of all its longings kept but one.
+
+"Oh! to be there for an hour when the shade draws in beside the hedgerows,
+ And falling apples wake the drowsy noon:
+Oh! for the hour when the elms grow sombre and human in the twilight,
+ And gardens dream beneath the rising moon.
+
+"Only to look once more on the land of the memories of childhood,
+ Forgetting weary winds and barren foam:
+Only to bid farewell to the combe and the orchard and the moorland,
+ And sleep at last among the fields of home!"
+
+So he was silently praying, till now, when his strength was ebbing faster,
+ The Lizard lay before them faintly blue;
+Now on the gleaming horizon the white cliffs laughed along the coast-line,
+ And now the forelands took the shapes they knew.
+
+There lay the Sound and the Island with green leaves down beside the water,
+ The town, the Hoe, the masts with sunset fired----
+Dreams! ay, dreams of the dead! for the great heart faltered on the threshold,
+ And darkness took the land his soul desired.
+
+
+
+
+
+Vae Victis
+
+Beside the placid sea that mirrored her
+ With the old glory of dawn that cannot die,
+The sleeping city began to moan and stir,
+ As one that fain from an ill dream would fly;
+ Yet more she feared the daylight bringing nigh
+Such dreams as know not sunrise, soon or late,---
+ Visions of honour lost and power gone by,
+ Of loyal valour betrayed by factious hate,
+And craven sloth that shrank from the labour of forging fate.
+
+They knew and knew not, this bewildered crowd,
+ That up her streets in silence hurrying passed,
+What manner of death should make their anguish loud,
+ What corpse across the funeral pyre be cast,
+ For none had spoken it; only, gathering fast
+As darkness gathers at noon in the sun's eclipse,
+ A shadow of doom enfolded them, vague and vast,
+ And a cry was heard, unfathered of earthly lips,
+"What of the ships, O Carthage? Carthage, what of the ships?"
+
+They reached the wall, and nowise strange it seemed
+ To find the gates unguarded and open wide;
+They climbed the shoulder, and meet enough they deemed
+ The black that shrouded the seaward rampart's side
+ And veiled in drooping gloom the turrets' pride;
+But this was nought, for suddenly down the slope
+ They saw the harbour, and sense within them died;
+ Keel nor mast was there, rudder nor rope;
+It lay like a sea-hawk's eyry spoiled of life and hope.
+
+Beyond, where dawn was a glittering carpet, rolled
+ From sky to shore on level and endless seas,
+Hardly their eyes discerned in a dazzle of gold
+ That here in fifties, yonder in twos and threes,
+ The ships they sought, like a swarm of drowning bees
+By a wanton gust on the pool of a mill-dam hurled,
+ Floated forsaken of life-giving tide and breeze,
+ Their oars broken, their sails for ever furled,
+For ever deserted the bulwarks that guarded the wealth of the world.
+
+A moment yet, with breathing quickly drawn
+ And hands agrip, the Carthaginian folk
+Stared in the bright untroubled face of dawn,
+ And strove with vehement heaped denial to choke
+ Their sure surmise of fate's impending stroke;
+Vainly--for even now beneath their gaze
+ A thousand delicate spires of distant smoke
+ Reddened the disc of the sun with a stealthy haze,
+And the smouldering grief of a nation burst with the kindling blaze.
+
+"O dying Carthage!" so their passion raved,
+ "Would nought but these the conqueror's hate assuage?
+If these be taken, how may the land be saved
+ Whose meat and drink was empire, age by age?"
+ And bitter memory cursed with idle rage
+The greed that coveted gold beyond renown,
+ The feeble hearts that feared their heritage,
+ The hands that cast the sea-kings' sceptre down
+And left to alien brows their famed ancestral crown.
+
+The endless noon, the endless evening through,
+ All other needs forgetting, great or small,
+They drank despair with thirst whose torment grew
+ As the hours died beneath that stifling pall.
+ At last they saw the fires to blackness fall
+One after one, and slowly turned them home,
+ A little longer yet their own to call
+ A city enslaved, and wear the bonds of Rome,
+With weary hearts foreboding all the woe to come.
+
+
+
+
+
+Minora Sidera
+
+(The Dictionary Of National Biography)
+
+Sitting at times over a hearth that burns
+ With dull domestic glow,
+My thought, leaving the book, gratefully turns
+ To you who planned it so.
+
+Not of the great only you deigned to tell---
+ The stars by which we steer---
+But lights out of the night that flashed, and fell
+ Tonight again, are here.
+
+Such as were those, dogs of an elder day,
+ Who sacked the golden ports,
+And those later who dared grapple their prey
+ Beneath the harbour forts:
+
+Some with flag at the fore, sweeping the world
+ To find an equal fight,
+And some who joined war to their trade, and hurled
+ Ships of the line in flight.
+
+Whether their fame centuries long should ring
+ They cared not over-much,
+But cared greatly to serve God and the king,
+ And keep the Nelson touch;
+
+And fought to build Britain above the tide
+ Of wars and windy fate;
+And passed content, leaving to us the pride
+ Of lives obscurely great.
+
+
+
+
+
+Laudabunt Alii
+
+(After Horace)
+
+Let others praise, as fancy wills,
+ Berlin beneath her trees,
+Or Rome upon her seven hills,
+ Or Venice by her seas;
+Stamboul by double tides embraced,
+Or green Damascus in the waste.
+
+For me there's nought I would not leave
+ For the good Devon land,
+Whose orchards down the echoing cleeve
+ Bedewed with spray-drift stand,
+And hardly bear the red fruit up
+That shall be next year's cider-cup.
+
+You too, my friend, may wisely mark
+ How clear skies follow rain,
+And, lingering in your own green park
+ Or drilled on Laffan's Plain,
+Forget not with the festal bowl
+To soothe at times your weary soul.
+
+When Drake must bid to Plymouth Hoe
+ Good-bye for many a day,
+And some were sad and feared to go,
+ And some that dared not stay,
+Be sure he bade them broach the best,
+And raised his tankard with the rest.
+
+"Drake's luck to all that sail with Drake
+ For promised lands of gold!
+Brave lads, whatever storms may break,
+ We've weathered worse of old!
+To-night the loving-cup we'll drain,
+To-morrow for the Spanish Main!"
+
+
+
+
+
+Admiral Death
+
+Boys, are ye calling a toast to-night?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+Fill for a bumper strong and bright,
+ And here's to Admiral Death!
+He's sailed in a hundred builds o' boat,
+He's fought in a thousand kinds o' coat,
+He's the senior flag of all that float,
+ And his name's Admiral Death!
+
+Which of you looks for a service free?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+The rules o' the service are but three
+ When ye sail with Admiral Death.
+Steady your hand in time o' squalls,
+Stand to the last by him that falls,
+And answer clear to the voice that calls,
+ "Ay, Ay! Admiral Death!"
+
+How will ye know him among the rest?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+By the glint o' the stars that cover his breast
+ Ye may find Admiral Death.
+By the forehead grim with an ancient scar,
+By the voice that rolls like thunder far,
+By the tenderest eyes of all that are,
+ Ye may know Admiral Death.
+
+Where are the lads that sailed before?
+ (Hear what the sea-wind saith)
+Their bones are white by many a shore,
+ They sleep with Admiral Death.
+Oh! but they loved him, young and old,
+For he left the laggard, and took the bold,
+And the fight was fought, and the story's told,
+ And they sleep with Admiral Death.
+
+
+
+
+
+Homeward Bound
+
+After long labouring in the windy ways,
+ On smooth and shining tides
+ Swiftly the great ship glides,
+ Her storms forgot, her weary watches past;
+Northward she glides, and through the enchanted haze
+ Faint on the verge her far hope dawns at last.
+
+The phantom sky-line of a shadowy down,
+ Whose pale white cliffs below
+ Through sunny mist aglow,
+ Like noon-day ghosts of summer moonshine gleam---
+Soft as old sorrow, bright as old renown,
+ There lies the home, of all our mortal dream.
+
+
+
+
+
+Gillespie.
+
+Riding at dawn, riding alone,
+ Gillespie left the town behind;
+Before he turned by the Westward road
+ A horseman crossed him, staggering blind.
+
+"The Devil's abroad in false Vellore,
+ The Devil that stabs by night," he said,
+"Women and children, rank and file,
+ Dying and dead, dying and dead."
+
+Without a word, without a groan,
+ Sudden and swift Gillespie turned,
+The blood roared in his ears like fire,
+ Like fire the road beneath him burned.
+
+He thundered back to Arcot gate,
+ He thundered up through Arcot town,
+Before he thought a second thought
+ In the barrack yard he lighted down.
+
+"Trumpeter, sound for the Light Dragoons,
+ Sound to saddle and spur," he said;
+"He that is ready may ride with me,
+ And he that can may ride ahead."
+
+Fierce and fain, fierce and fain,
+ Behind him went the troopers grim,
+They rode as ride the Light Dragoons
+ But never a man could ride with him.
+
+Their rowels ripped their horses' sides,
+ Their hearts were red with a deeper goad,
+But ever alone before them all
+ Gillespie rode, Gillespie rode.
+
+Alone he came to false Vellore,
+ The walls were lined, the gates were barred;
+Alone he walked where the bullets bit,
+ And called above to the Sergeant's Guard.
+
+"Sergeant, Sergeant, over the gate,
+ Where are your officers all?" he said;
+Heavily came the Sergeant's voice,
+ "There are two living and forty dead."
+
+"A rope, a rope," Gillespie cried :
+ They bound their belts to serve his need.
+There was not a rebel behind the wall
+ But laid his barrel and drew his bead.
+
+There was not a rebel among them all
+ But pulled his trigger and cursed his aim,
+For lightly swung and rightly swung
+ Over the gate Gillespie came.
+
+He dressed the line, he led the charge,
+ They swept the wall like a stream in spate,
+And roaring over the roar they heard
+ The galloper guns that burst the gate.
+
+Fierce and fain, fierce and fain,
+ The troopers rode the reeking flight:
+The very stones remember still
+ The end of them that stab by night.
+
+They've kept the tale a hundred years,
+ They'll keep the tale a hundred more:
+Riding at dawn, riding alone,
+ Gillespie came to false Vellore.
+
+
+
+
+
+Seringapatam
+
+"The sleep that Tippoo Sahib sleeps
+ Heeds not the cry of man;
+The faith that Tippoo Sahib keeps
+ No judge on earth may scan;
+He is the lord of whom ye hold
+ Spirit and sense and limb,
+Fetter and chain are all ye gain
+ Who dared to plead with him."
+
+Baird was bonny and Baird was young,
+ His heart was strong as steel,
+But life and death in the balance hung,
+ For his wounds were ill to heal.
+"Of fifty chains the Sultan gave
+ We have filled but forty-nine:
+We dare not fail of the perfect tale
+ For all Golconda's mine."
+
+That was the hour when Lucas first
+ Leapt to his long renown;
+Like summer rains his anger burst,
+ And swept their scruples down.
+"Tell ye the lord to whom ye crouch,
+ His fetters bite their fill:
+To save your oath I'll wear them both,
+ And step the lighter still."
+
+The seasons came, the seasons passed,
+ They watched their fellows die;
+But still their thought was forward cast,
+ Their courage still was high.
+Through tortured days and fevered nights
+ Their limbs alone were weak,
+And year by year they kept their cheer,
+ And spoke as freemen speak.
+
+But once a year, on the fourth of June,
+ Their speech to silence died,
+And the silence beat to a soundless tune
+ And sang with a wordless pride;
+Till when the Indian stars were bright,
+ And bells at home would ring,
+To the fetters' clank they rose and drank
+ "England! God save the King!"
+
+The years came, and the years went,
+ The wheel full-circle rolled;
+The tyrant's neck must yet be bent,
+ The price of blood be told:
+The city yet must hear the roar
+ Of Baird's avenging guns,
+And see him stand with lifted hand
+ By Tippoo Sahib's sons.
+
+The lads were bonny, the lads were young,
+ But he claimed a pitiless debt;
+Life and death in the balance hung,
+ They watched it swing and set.
+They saw him search with sombre eyes,
+ They knew the place he sought;
+They saw him feel for the hilted steel,
+ They bowed before his thought.
+
+But he--he saw the prison there
+ In the old quivering heat,
+Where merry hearts had met despair
+ And died without defeat;
+Where feeble hands had raised the cup
+ For feebler lips to drain,
+And one had worn with smiling scorn
+ His double load of pain.
+
+"The sleep that Tippoo Sahib sleeps
+ Hears not the voice of man;
+The faith that Tippoo Sahib keeps
+ No earthly judge may scan;
+For all the wrong your father wrought
+ Your father's sons are free;
+Where Lucas lay no tongue shall say
+ That Mercy bound not me."
+
+
+
+
+
+A Ballad of John Nicholson
+
+It fell in the year of Mutiny,
+ At darkest of the night,
+John Nicholson by Jalandhar came,
+ On his way to Delhi fight.
+
+And as he by Jalandhar came,
+ He thought what he must do,
+And he sent to the Rajah fair greeting,
+ To try if he were true.
+
+"God grant your Highness length of days,
+ And friends when need shall be;
+And I pray you send your Captains hither,
+ That they may speak with me."
+
+On the morrow through Jalandhar town
+ The Captains rode in state;
+They came to the house of John Nicholson,
+ And stood before the gate.
+
+The chief of them was Mehtab Singh,
+ He was both proud and sly;
+His turban gleamed with rubies red,
+ He held his chin full high.
+
+He marked his fellows how they put
+ Their shoes from off their feet;
+"Now wherefore make ye such ado
+ These fallen lords to greet?
+
+"They have ruled us for a hundred years,
+ In truth I know not how,
+But though they be fain of mastery
+ They dare not claim it now."
+
+Right haughtily before them all
+ The durbar hall he trod,
+With rubies red his turban gleamed,
+ His feet with pride were shod.
+
+They had not been an hour together,
+ A scanty hour or so,
+When Mehtab Singh rose in his place
+ And turned about to go.
+
+Then swiftly came John Nicholson
+ Between the door and him,
+With anger smouldering in his eyes,
+ That made the rubies dim.
+
+"You are over-hasty, Mehtab Singh,"---
+ Oh, but his voice was low!
+He held his wrath with a curb of iron
+ That furrowed cheek and brow.
+
+"You are overhasty, Mehtab Singh,
+ When that the rest are gone,
+I have a word that may not wait
+ To speak with you alone."
+
+The Captains passed in silence forth
+ And stood the door behind;
+To go before the game was played
+ Be sure they had no mind.
+
+But there within John Nicholson
+ Turned him on Mehtab Singh,
+"So long as the soul is in my body
+ You shall not do this thing.
+
+"Have ye served us for a hundred years
+ And yet ye know not why?
+We brook no doubt of our mastery,
+ We rule until we die.
+
+"Were I the one last Englishman
+ Drawing the breath of life,
+And you the master-rebel of all
+ That stir this land to strife---
+
+"Were I," he said, "but a Corporal,
+ And you a Rajput King,
+So long as the soul was in my body
+ You should not do this thing.
+
+"Take off, take off, those shoes of pride,
+ Carry them whence they came;
+Your Captains saw your insolence,
+ And they shall see your shame."
+
+When Mehtab Singh came to the door
+ His shoes they burned his hand,
+For there in long and silent lines
+ He saw the Captains stand.
+
+When Mehtab Singh rode from the gate
+ His chin was on his breast:
+The Captains said, "When the strong command
+ Obedience is best."
+
+
+
+
+
+The Guides at Cabul
+
+(1879)
+
+Sons of the Island race, wherever ye dwell,
+ Who speak of your fathers' battles with lips that burn,
+The deed of an alien legion hear me tell,
+ And think not shame from the hearts ye tamed to learn,
+ When succour shall fail and the tide for a season turn,
+To fight with joyful courage, a passionate pride,
+To die at last as the Guides of Cabul died.
+
+For a handful of seventy men in a barrack of mud,
+ Foodless, waterless, dwindling one by one,
+Answered a thousand yelling for English blood
+ With stormy volleys that swept them gunner from gun,
+ And charge on charge in the glare of the Afghan sun,
+Till the walls were shattered wherein they couched at bay,
+And dead or dying half of the seventy lay.
+
+Twice they had taken the cannon that wrecked their hold,
+ Twice toiled in vain to drag it back,
+Thrice they toiled, and alone, wary and bold,
+ Whirling a hurricane sword to scatter the rack,
+ Hamilton, last of the English, covered their track.
+"Never give in!" he cried, and he heard them shout,
+And grappled with death as a man that knows not doubt.
+
+And the Guides looked down from their smouldering barrack again,
+ And behold, a banner of truce, and a voice that spoke:
+"Come, for we know that the English all are slain,
+ We keep no feud with men of a kindred folk;
+ Rejoice with us to be free of the conqueror's yolk."
+Silence fell for a moment, then was heard
+A sound of laughter and scorn, and an answering word.
+
+"Is it we or the lords we serve who have earned this wrong,
+ That ye call us to flinch from the battle they bade us fight?
+We that live--do ye doubt that our hands are strong?
+ They that are fallen--ye know that their blood was bright!
+ Think ye the Guides will barter for lust of the light
+The pride of an ancient people in warfare bred,
+Honour of comrades living, and faith to the dead?"
+
+Then the joy that spurs the warrior's heart
+ To the last thundering gallop and sheer leap
+Came on the men of the Guides: they flung apart
+ The doors not all their valour could longer keep;
+ They dressed their slender line; they breathed deep,
+And with never a foot lagging or head bent
+To the clash and clamour and dust of death they went.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Gay Gordons
+
+(Dargai, October 20, 1897)
+
+Whos for the Gathering, who's for the Fair?
+ (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
+The bravest of the brave are at deadlock there,
+ (Highlanders! march! by the right!)
+There are bullets by the hundred buzzing in the air,
+There are bonny lads lying on the hillside bare;
+But the Gordons know what the Gordons dare
+ When they hear the pipers playing!
+
+The happiest English heart today
+ (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
+Is the heart of the Colonel, hide it as he may;
+ (Steady there! steady on the right!)
+He sees his work and he sees his way,
+He knows his time and the word to say,
+And he's thinking of the tune that the Gordons play
+ When he sets the pipers playing.
+
+Rising, roaring, rushing like the tide,
+ (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
+They're up through the fire-zone, not be be denied;
+ (Bayonets! and charge! by the right!)
+Thirty bullets straight where the rest went wide,
+And thirty lads are lying on the bare hillside;
+But they passed in the hour of the Gordons' pride,
+ To the skirl of the pipers' playing.
+
+
+
+
+
+He Fell Among Thieves
+
+"Ye have robbed," said he, "ye have slaughtered and made an end,
+ Take your ill-got plunder, and bury the dead:
+What will ye more of your guest and sometime friend?"
+ "Blood for our blood," they said.
+
+He laughed: "If one may settle the score for five,
+ I am ready; but let the reckoning stand til day:
+I have loved the sunlight as dearly as any alive."
+ "You shall die at dawn," said they.
+
+He flung his empty revolver down the slope,
+ He climbed alone to the Eastward edge of the trees;
+All night long in a dream untroubled of hope
+ He brooded, clasping his knees.
+
+He did not hear the monotonous roar that fills
+ The ravine where the Yassin river sullenly flows;
+He did not see the starlight on the Laspur hills,
+ Or the far Afghan snows.
+
+He saw the April noon on his books aglow,
+ The wistaria trailing in at the window wide;
+He heard his father's voice from the terrace below
+ Calling him down to ride.
+
+He saw the gray little church across the park,
+ The mounds that hid the loved and honoured dead;
+The Norman arch, the chancel softly dark,
+ The brasses black and red.
+
+He saw the School Close, sunny and green,
+ The runner beside him, the stand by the parapet wall,
+The distant tape, and the crowd roaring between,
+ His own name over all.
+
+He saw the dark wainscot and timbered roof,
+ The long tables, and the faces merry and keen;
+The College Eight and their trainer dining aloof,
+ The Dons on the dais serene.
+
+He watched the liner's stem ploughing the foam,
+ He felt her trembling speed and the thrash of her screw;
+He heard the passengers' voices talking of home,
+ He saw the flag she flew.
+
+And now it was dawn. He rose strong on his feet,
+ And strode to his ruined camp below the wood;
+He drank the breath of the morning cool and sweet:
+ His murderers round him stood.
+
+Light on the Laspur hills was broadening fast,
+ The blood-red snow-peaks chilled to dazzling white:
+He turned, and saw the golden circle at last,
+ Cut by the Eastern height.
+
+"O glorious Life, Who dwellest in earth and sun,
+ I have lived, I praise and adore Thee."
+ A sword swept.
+Over the pass the voices one by one
+ Faded, and the hill slept.
+
+
+
+
+
+Ionicus
+
+With failing feet and shoulders bowed
+ Beneath the weight of happier days,
+He lagged among the heedless crowd,
+ Or crept along suburban ways.
+But still through all his heart was young,
+ His mood a joy that nought could mar,
+A courage, a pride, a rapture, sprung
+ Of the strength and splendour of England's war.
+
+From ill-requited toil he turned
+ To ride with Picton and with Pack,
+Among his grammars inly burned
+ To storm the Afghan mountain-track.
+When midnight chimed, before Quebec
+ He watched with Wolfe till the morning star;
+At noon he saw from _Victory's_ deck
+ The sweep and splendour of England's war.
+
+Beyond the book his teaching sped,
+ He left on whom he taught the trace
+Of kinship with the deathless dead,
+ And faith in all the Island Race.
+He passed: his life a tangle seemed,
+ His age from fame and power was far;
+But his heart was night to the end, and dreamed
+ Of the sound and splendour of England's war.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Non-Combatant
+
+Among a race high-handed, strong of heart,
+Sea-rovers, conquerors, builders in the waste,
+He had his birth; a nature too complete,
+Eager and doubtful, no man's soldier sworn
+And no man's chosen captain; born to fail,
+A name without an echo: yet he too
+Within the cloister of his narrow days
+Fulfilled the ancestral rites, and kept alive
+The eternal fire; it may be, not in vain;
+For out of those who dropped a downward glance
+Upon the weakling huddled at his prayers,
+Perchance some looked beyond him, and then first
+Beheld the glory, and what shrine it filled,
+And to what Spirit sacred: or perchance
+Some heard him chanting, though but to himself,
+The old heroic names: and went their way:
+And hummed his music on the march to death.
+
+
+
+
+
+Clifton Chapel
+
+This is the Chapel: here, my son,
+ Your father thought the thoughts of youth,
+And heard the words that one by one
+ The touch of Life has turned to truth.
+Here in a day that is not far,
+ You too may speak with noble ghosts
+Of manhood and the vows of war
+ You made before the Lord of Hosts.
+
+To set the cause above renown,
+ To love the game beyond the prize,
+To honour, while you strike him down,
+ The foe that comes with fearless eyes;
+To count the life of battle good,
+ And dear the land that gave you birth,
+And dearer yet the brotherhood
+ That binds the brave of all the earth---
+
+My son, the oath is yours: the end
+ Is His, Who built the world of strife,
+Who gave His children Pain for friend,
+ And Death for surest hope of life.
+To-day and here the fight's begun,
+ Of the great fellowship you're free;
+Henceforth the School and you are one,
+ And what You are, the race shall be.
+
+God send you fortune: yet be sure,
+ Among the lights that gleam and pass,
+You'll live to follow none more pure
+ Than that which glows on yonder brass:
+"Qui procul hinc," the legend's writ,---
+ The frontier-grave is far away---
+"Qui ante diem periit:
+ Sed miles, sed pro patria."
+
+
+
+
+
+Vitai Lampada
+
+There's a breathless hush in the Close to-night---
+ Ten to make and the match to win---
+A bumping pitch and a blinding light,
+ An hour to play and the last man in.
+And it's not for the sake of a ribboned coat,
+ Or the selfish hope of a season's fame,
+But his Captain's hand on his shoulder smote---
+ "Play up! play up! and play the game!"
+
+The sand of the desert is sodden red,---
+ Red with the wreck of a square that broke;---
+The Gatling's jammed and the colonel dead,
+ And the regiment blind with dust and smoke.
+The river of death has brimmed his banks,
+ And England's far, and Honour a name,
+But the voice of schoolboy rallies the ranks,
+ "Play up! play up! and play the game!"
+
+This is the word that year by year,
+ While in her place the School is set,
+Every one of her sons must hear,
+ And none that hears it dare forget.
+This they all with a joyful mind
+ Bear through life like a torch in flame,
+And falling fling to the host behind---
+ "Play up! play up! and play the game!"
+
+
+
+
+
+The Vigil
+
+England! where the sacred flame
+ Burns before the inmost shrine,
+Where the lips that love thy name
+ Consecrate their hopes and thine,
+Where the banners of thy dead
+Weave their shadows overhead,
+Watch beside thine arms to-night,
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+Think that when to-morrow comes
+ War shall claim command of all,
+Thou must hear the roll of drums,
+ Thou must hear the trumpet's call.
+Now, before they silence ruth,
+Commune with the voice of truth;
+England! on thy knees to-night
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+Hast thou counted up the cost,
+ What to foeman, what to friend?
+Glory sought is Honour lost,
+ How should this be knighthood's end?
+Know'st thou what is Hatred's meed?
+What the surest gain of greed?
+England! wilt thou dare to-night
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+Single-hearted, unafraid,
+ Hither all thy heroes came,
+On this altar's steps were laid
+ Gordon's life and Outram's fame.
+England! if thy will be yet
+By their great example set,
+Here beside thine arms to-night
+Pray that God defend the Right.
+
+So shalt thou when morning comes
+ Rise to conquer or to fall,
+Joyful hear the rolling drums,
+ Joyful hear the trumpets call,
+Then let Memory tell thy heart:
+"England! what thou wert, thou art!"
+Gird thee with thine ancient might,
+Forth! and God defend the Right!
+
+
+
+
+
+The Sailing Of The Long-Ships
+
+(October, 1899)
+
+They saw the cables loosened, they saw the gangways cleared,
+They heard the women weeping, they heard the men that cheered;
+Far off, far off, the tumult faded and died away,
+And all alone the sea-wind came singing up the Bay.
+
+"I came by Cape St. Vincent, I came by Trafalgar,
+I swept from Torres Vedras to golden Vigo Bar,
+I saw the beacons blazing that fired the world with light
+When down their ancient highway your fathers passed to fight.
+
+"O race of tireless fighters, flushed with a youth renewed,
+Right well the wars of Freedom befit the Sea-kings' brood;
+Yet as ye go forget not the fame of yonder shore,
+The fame ye owe your fathers and the old time before.
+
+"Long-suffering were the Sea-kings, they were not swift to kill,
+But when the sands had fallen they waited no man's will;
+Though all the world forbade them, they counted not nor cared,
+They weighed not help or hindrance, they did the thing they dared.
+
+"The Sea-kings loved not boasting, they cursed not him that cursed,
+They honoured all men duly, and him that faced them, first;
+They strove and knew not hatred, they smote and toiled to save,
+They tended whom they vanquished, they praised the fallen brave.
+
+"Their fame's on Torres Vedras, their fame's on Vigo Bar,
+Far-flashed to Cape St. Vincent it burns from Trafalgar;
+Mark as ye go the beacons that woke the world with light
+When down their ancient highway your fathers passed to fight."
+
+
+
+
+
+Waggon Hill
+
+Drake in the North Sea grimly prowling,
+ Treading his dear _Revenge's_ deck,
+Watched, with the sea-dogs round him growling,
+ Galleons drifting wreck by wreck.
+ "Fetter and Faith for England's neck,
+ Faggot and Father, Saint and chain,---
+Yonder the Devil and all go howling,
+ Devon, O Devon, in wind and rain!
+
+Drake at the last off Nombre lying,
+ Knowing the night that toward him crept,
+Gave to the sea-dogs round him crying,
+ This for a sign before he slept:---
+ "Pride of the West! What Devon hath kept
+ Devon shall keep on tide or main;
+Call to the storm and drive them flying,
+ Devon, O Devon, in wind and rain!"
+
+Valour of England gaunt and whitening,
+ Far in a South land brought to bay,
+Locked in a death-grip all day tightening,
+ Waited the end in twilight gray.
+ Battle and storm and the sea-dog's way!
+ Drake from his long rest turned again,
+Victory lit thy steel with lightning,
+ Devon, o Devon, in wind and rain!
+
+
+
+
+
+The Volunteer
+
+"He leapt to arms unbidden,
+ Unneeded, over-bold;
+His face by earth is hidden,
+ His heart in earth is cold.
+
+"Curse on the reckless daring
+ That could not wait the call,
+The proud fantastic bearing
+ That would be first to fall!"
+
+O tears of human passion,
+ Blur not the image true;
+This was not folly's fashion,
+ This was the man we knew.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Only Son
+
+O Bitter wind toward the sunset blowing,
+ What of the dales to-night?
+In yonder gray old hall what fires are glowing,
+ What ring of festal light?
+
+ "In the great window as the day was dwindling
+ I saw an old man stand;
+ His head was proudly held and his eyes kindling,
+ But the list shook in his hand."
+
+O wind of twilight, was there no word uttered,
+ No sound of joy or wail?
+"'A great fight and a good death,' he muttered;
+ 'Trust him, he would not fail.'"
+
+What of the chamber dark where she was lying;
+ For whom all life is done?
+"Within her heart she rocks a dead child, crying
+ 'My son, my ltttle son.'"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Grenadier's Good-Bye
+
+"When Lieutenant Murray fell, the only words he spoke were,
+'Forward, Grenadiers!'"---Press Telegram.
+
+Here they halted, here once more
+ Hand from hand was rent;
+Here his voice above the roar
+ Rang, and on they went.
+Yonder out of sight they crossed,
+ Yonder died the cheers;
+One word lives where all is lost---
+ "Forward, Grenadiers!"
+
+This alone he asked of fame,
+ This alone of pride;
+Still with this he faced the flame,
+ Answered Death, and died.
+Crest of battle sunward tossed,
+ Song of the marching years,
+This shall live though all be lost---
+ "Forward, Grenadiers!"
+
+
+
+
+
+The Schoolfellow
+
+Our game was his but yesteryear;
+ We wished him back; we could not know
+The self-same hour we missed him here
+ He led the line that broke the foe.
+
+Blood-red behind our guarded posts
+ Sank as of old and dying day;
+The battle ceased; the mingled hosts
+ Weary and cheery went their way:
+
+"To-morrow well may bring," we said,
+ "As fair a fight, as clear a sun."
+Dear lad, before the world was sped,
+ For evermore thy goal was won.
+
+
+
+
+
+On Spion Kop
+
+Foremost of all on battle's fiery steep
+ Here VERTUE fell, and here he sleeps his sleep.*
+A fairer name no Roman ever gave
+ To stand sole monument on Valour's grave.
+
+* Major N. H. Vertue, of the Buffs, Brigade-Major to General
+Woodgate, was buried where he fell, on the edge of Spion Kop,
+in front of the British position.
+
+
+
+
+
+The School At War
+
+All night before the brink of death
+ In fitful sleep the army lay,
+For through the dream that stilled their breath
+ Too gauntly glared the coming day.
+
+But we, within whose blood there leaps
+ The fulness of a life as wide
+As Avon's water where he sweeps
+ Seaward at last with Severn's tide,
+
+We heard beyond the desert night
+ The murmur of the fields we knew,
+And our swift souls with one delight
+ Like homing swallows Northward flew.
+
+We played again the immortal games,
+ And grappled with the fierce old friends,
+And cheered the dead undying names,
+ And sang the song that never ends;
+
+Till, when the hard, familiar bell
+ Told that the summer night was late,
+Where long ago we said farewell
+ We said farewell by the old gate.
+
+"O Captains unforgot," they cried,
+ "Come you again or come no more,
+Across the world you keep the pride,
+ Across the world we mark the score."
+
+
+
+
+
+By The Hearth-Stone
+
+By the hearth-stone
+She sits alone,
+ The long night bearing:
+With eyes that gleam
+Into the dream
+ Of the firelight staring.
+
+Low and more low
+The dying glow
+ Burns in the embers;
+She nothing heeds
+And nothing needs---
+ Only remembers.
+
+
+
+
+
+Peace
+
+No more to watch by Night's eternal shore,
+ With England's chivalry at dawn to ride;
+No more defeat, faith, victory---O! no more
+ A cause on earth for which we might have died.
+
+
+
+
+
+April On Waggon Hill
+
+Lad, and can you rest now,
+ There beneath your hill!
+Your hands are on your breast now,
+ But is your heart so still?
+'Twas the right death to die, lad,
+ A gift without regret,
+But unless truth's a lie, lad,
+ You dream of Devon yet.
+
+Ay, ay, the year's awaking,
+ The fire's among the ling,
+The beechen hedge is breaking,
+ The curlew's on the wing;
+Primroses are out, lad,
+ On the high banks of Lee,
+And the sun stirs the trout, lad;
+ From Brendon to the sea.
+
+I know what's in your heart, lad,---
+ The mare he used to hunt---
+And her blue market-cart, lad,
+ With posies tied in front---
+We miss them from the moor road,
+ They're getting old to roam,
+The road they're on's a sure road
+ And nearer, lad, to home.
+
+Your name, the name they cherish?
+ 'Twill fade, lad, 'tis true:
+But stone and all may perish
+ With little loss to you.
+While fame's fame you're Devon, lad,
+ The Glory of the West;
+Till the roll's called in heaven, lad,
+ You may well take your rest.
+
+
+
+
+
+Commemoration
+
+I sat by the granite pillar, and sunlight fell
+ Where the sunlight fell of old,
+And the hour was the hour my heart remembered well,
+ And the sermon rolled and rolled
+As it used to roll when the place was still unhaunted,
+And the strangest tale in the world was still untold.
+
+And I knew that of all this rushing of urgent sound
+ That I so clearly heard,
+The green young forest of saplings clustered round
+ Was heeding not one word:
+Their heads were bowed in a still serried patience
+Such as an angel's breath could never have stirred.
+
+For some were already away to the hazardous pitch,
+ Or lining the parapet wall,
+And some were in glorious battle, or great and rich,
+ Or throned in a college hall:
+And among the rest was one like my own young phantom,
+Dreaming for ever beyond my utmost call.
+
+"O Youth," the preacher was crying, "deem not thou
+ Thy life is thine alone;
+Thou bearest the will of the ages, seeing how
+ They built thee bone by bone,
+And within thy blood the Great Age sleeps sepulchred
+Till thou and thine shall roll away the stone.
+
+"Therefore the days are coming when thou shalt burn
+ With passion whitely hot;
+Rest shall be rest no more; thy feet shall spurn
+ All that thy hand hath got;
+And One that is stronger shall gird thee, and lead thee swiftly
+Whither, O heart of Youth, thou wouldest not."
+
+And the School passed; and I saw the living and dead
+ Set in their seats again,
+And I longed to hear them speak of the word that was said,
+ But I knew that I longed in vain.
+And they stretched forth their hands, and the wind of the spirit took them
+Lightly as drifted leaves on an endless plain.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Echo
+
+Of A Ballad Sung By H. Plunket Greene To His Old School
+
+Twice three hundred boys were we,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+Where the Downs look out to the Severn Sea.
+ Clifton for aye!
+We held by the game and hailed the team,
+For many could play where few could dream.
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+Some were for profit and some for pride,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+Some for the flag they lived and died.
+ Clifton for aye!
+The work of the world must still be done,
+And minds are many though truth be one.
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+But a lad there was to his fellows sang,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+And soon the world to his music rang.
+ Clifton for aye!
+Follow your Captains, crown your Kings,
+But what will ye give to the lad that sings?
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+For the voice ye hear is the voice of home,
+ Long ago, long ago,
+And the voice of Youth with the world to roam.
+ Clifton for aye!
+The voice of passion and human tears,
+And the voice of the vision that lights the years.
+ City of Song shall stand alway.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Best School of All
+
+It's good to see the school we knew,
+ The land of youth and dream.
+To greet again the rule we knew
+ Before we took the stream:
+Though long we've missed the sight of her,
+ Our hearts may not forget;
+We've lost the old delight of her,
+ We keep her honour yet.
+
+ We'll honour yet the school we knew,
+ The best school of all:
+ We'll honour yet the rule we knew,
+ Till the last bell call.
+ For working days or holidays,
+ And glad or melancholy days,
+ They were great days and jolly days
+ At the best school of all.
+
+The stars and sounding vanities
+ That half the crowd bewitch,
+What are they but inanities
+ To him that treads the pitch?
+And where's the welth I'm wondering,
+ Could buy the cheers that roll
+When the last charge goes thundering
+ Towards the twilight goal?
+
+Then men that tanned the hide of us,
+ Our daily foes and friends,
+They shall not lose their pride of us,
+ Howe'er the journey ends.
+Their voice to us who sing of it,
+ No more its message bears,
+But the round world shall ring of it,
+ And all we are be theirs.
+
+To speak of fame a venture is,
+ There's little here can bide,
+But we may face the centuries,
+ And dare the deepending tide:
+for though the dust that's part of us,
+ To dust again be gone,
+Yet here shall beat the heart of us---
+ The school we handed on!
+
+ We'll honour yet the school we knew,
+ The best school of all:
+ We'll honour yet the rule we knew,
+ Till the last bell call.
+ For working days or holidays,
+ And glad or melancholy days,
+ They were great days and jolly days
+ At the best school of all.
+
+
+
+
+
+England
+
+Praise thou with praise unending,
+ The Master of the Wine;
+To all their portions sending
+ Himself he mingled thine:
+
+The sea-born flush of morning,
+ The sea-born hush of night,
+The East wind comfort scorning,
+ And the North wind driving right:
+
+The world for gain and giving,
+ The game for man and boy,
+The life that joys in living,
+ The faith that lives in joy.
+
+
+
+
+
+Victoria Regina
+
+(June 21st, 1897*)
+
+A thousand years by sea and land
+ Our race hath served the island kings,
+But not by custom's dull command
+ To-day with song her Empire rings:
+
+Not all the glories of her birth,
+ Her armed renown and ancient throne,
+Could make her less the child of earth
+ Or give her hopes beyond our own:
+
+But stayed on faith more sternly proved
+ And pride than ours more pure and deep,
+She loves the land our fathers loved
+ And keeps the fame our sons shall keep.
+
+* These lines, with music by Dr. Lloyd, formed part of the Cycle of
+Song offered to Queen Victoria, of blessed and glorious memory,
+in celebration of her second Jubilee.
+
+
+
+
+
+The King Of England
+
+(June 24th, 1902)
+
+In that eclipse of noon when joy was hushed
+ Like the bird's song beneath unnatural night,
+And Terror's footfall in the darkness crushed
+ The rose imperial of our delight,
+Then, even then, though no man cried "He comes,"
+ And no man turned to greet him passing there,
+ With phantom heralds challenging renown
+ And silent-throbbing drums
+ I saw the King of England, hale and fair,
+ Ride out with a great train through London town.
+
+Unarmed he rode, but in his ruddy shield
+ The lions bore the dint of many a lance,
+And up and down his mantle's azure field
+ Were strewn the lilies plucked in famous France.
+Before him went with banner floating wide
+ The yeoman breed that served his honour best,
+ And mixed with these his knights of noble blood;
+ But in the place of pride
+ His admirals in billowy lines abreast
+ Convoyed him close like galleons on the flood.
+
+Full of a strength unbroken showed his face
+ And his brow calm with youth's unclouded dawn,
+But round his lips were lines of tenderer grace
+ Such as no hand but Time's hath ever drawn.
+Surely he knew his glory had no part
+ In dull decay, nor unto Death must bend,
+ Yet surely too of lengthening shadows dreamed
+ With sunset in his heart,
+ So brief his beauty now, so near the end,
+ And now so old and so immortal seemed.
+
+O King among the living, these shall hail
+ Sons of thy dust that shall inherit thee:
+O King of men that die, though we must fail
+ Thy life is breathed from thy triumphant sea.
+O man that servest men by right of birth,
+ Our hearts' content thy heart shall also keep,
+ Thou too with us shalt one day lay thee down
+ In our dear native earth,
+ Full sure the King of England, while we sleep,
+ For ever rides abroad, through London town.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Nile
+
+Out of the unknown South,
+Through the dark lands of drouth,
+ Far wanders ancient Nile in slumber gliding:
+Clear-mirrored in his dream
+The deeds that haunt his stream
+ Flash out and fade like stars in midnight sliding.
+Long since, before the life of man
+ Rose from among the lives that creep,
+With Time's own tide began
+ That still mysterious sleep,
+ Only to cease when Time shall reach the eternal deep.
+
+From out his vision vast
+The early gods have passed,
+ They waned and perished with the faith that made them;
+The long phantasmal line
+Of Pharaohs crowned divine
+ Are dust among the dust that once obeyed them.
+Their land is one mute burial mound,
+ Save when across the drifted years
+Some chant of hollow sound,
+ Some triumph blent with tears,
+ From Memnon's lips at dawn wakens the desert meres.
+
+O Nile, and can it be
+No memory dwells with thee
+ Of Grecian lore and the sweet Grecian singer?
+The legions' iron tramp,
+The Goths' wide-wandering camp,
+ Had these no fame that by thy shore might linger?
+Nay, then must all be lost indeed,
+ Lost too the swift pursuing might
+That cleft with passionate speed
+ Aboukir's tranquil night,
+ And shattered in mid-swoop the great world-eagle's flight.
+
+Yet have there been on earth
+Spirits of starry birth,
+ Whose splendour rushed to no eternal setting:
+They over all endure,
+Their course through all is sure,
+ The dark world's light is still of their begetting.
+Though the long past forgotten lies,
+ Nile! in thy dream remember him,
+Whose like no more shall rise
+ Above our twilight's rim,
+ Until the immortal dawn shall make all glories dim.
+
+For this man was not great
+By gold or kingly state,
+ Or the bright sword, or knowledge of earth's wonder;
+But more than all his race
+He saw life face to face,
+ And heard the still small voice above the thunder.
+O river, while thy waters roll
+ By yonder vast deserted tomb,
+There, where so clear a soul
+ So shone through gathering doom,
+ Thou and thy land shall keep the tale of lost Khartoum.
+
+
+
+
+
+Srahmandazi*
+
+Deep embowered beside the forest river,
+ Where the flame of sunset only falls,
+Lapped in silence lies the House of Dying,
+ House of them to whom the twilight calls.
+
+There within when day was near to ending,
+ By her lord a woman young and strong,
+By his chief a songman old and stricken
+ Watched together till the hour of song.
+
+"O my songman, now the bow is broken,
+ Now the arrows one by one are sped,
+Sing to me the song of Srahmandazi,
+ Srahmandazi, home of all the dead."
+
+Then the songman, flinging wide his songnet,
+ On the last token laid his master's hand,
+While he sang the song of Srahmandazi,
+ None but dying men can understand.
+
+"Yonder sun that fierce and fiery-hearted
+ Marches down the sky to vanish soon,
+At the self-same hour in Srahmandazi
+ Rises pallid like the rainy moon.
+
+"There he sees the heroes by their river,
+ Where the great fish daily upward swim;
+Yet they are but shadows hunting shadows,
+ Phantom fish in waters drear and dim.
+
+"There he sees the kings among their headmen,
+ Women weaving, children playing games;
+Yet they are but shadows ruling shadows,
+ Phantom folk with dim forgotten names.
+
+"Bid farewell to all that most thou lovest,
+ Tell thy heart thy living life is done;
+All the days and deeds of Srahmandazi
+ Are not worth an hour of yonder sun.
+
+Dreamily the chief from out the songnet
+ Drew his hand and touched the woman's head:
+"Know they not, then, love in Srahmandazi?
+ Has a king no bride among the dead?"
+
+Then the songman answered, "O my master,
+ Love they know, but none may learn it there;
+Only souls that reach that land together
+ Keep their troth and find the twilight fair.
+
+"Thou art still a king, and at thy passing
+ By thy latest word must all abide:
+If thou willest, here am I, thy songman;
+ If thou lovest, here is she, thy bride."
+
+Hushed and dreamy lay the House of Dying,
+ Dreamily the sunlight upward failed,
+Dreamily the chief on eyes that loved him
+ Looked with eyes the coming twilight veiled.
+
+Then he cried, "My songman, I am passing;
+ Let her live, her life is but begun;
+All the days and nights of Srahmandazi
+ Are not worth an hour of yonder sun."
+
+Yet, when there within the House of Dying
+ The last silence held the sunset air,
+Not alone he came to Srahmandazi,
+ Not alone she found the twilight fair:
+
+While the songman, far beneath the forest
+ Sang of Srahmandazi all night through,
+"Lovely be thy name, O Land of shadows,
+ Land of meeting, Land of all the true!"
+
+* This ballad is founded on materials given to the author by the
+late Miss Mary Kingsley on her return from her last visit to the
+Bantu peoples of West Africa.
+
+
+
+
+
+Outward Bound
+
+Dear Earth, near Earth, the clay that made us men,
+ The land we sowed,
+ The hearth that glowed---
+ O Mother, must we bid farewell to thee?
+Fast dawns the last dawn, and what shall comfort then
+ The lonely hearts that roam the outer sea?
+
+Gray wakes the daybreak, the shivering sails are set,
+ To misty deeps
+ The channel sweeps---
+ O Mother, think on us who think on thee!
+Earth-home, birth-home, with love remember yet
+ The sons in exile on the eternal sea.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hope The Hornblower
+
+"Hark ye, hark to the winding horn;
+Sluggards, awake, and front the morn!
+Hark ye, hark to the winding horn;
+ The sun's on meadow and mill.
+Follow me, hearts that love the chase;
+Follow me, feet that keep the pace:
+Stirrup to stirrup we ride, we ride,
+ We ride by moor and hill."
+
+Huntsman, huntsman, whither away?
+What is the quarry afoot to-day?
+Huntsman, huntsman, whither away,
+ And what the game ye kill?
+Is it the deer, that men may dine?
+Is it the wolf that tears the kine?
+What is the race ye ride, ye ride,
+ Ye ride by moor and hill?
+
+"Ask not yet till the day be dead
+What is the game that's forward fled,
+Ask not yet till the day be dead
+ The game we follow still.
+An echo it may be, floating past;
+A shadow it may be, fading fast:
+Shadow or echo, we ride, we ride,
+ We ride by moor and hill"
+
+
+
+
+
+O Pulchritudo
+
+O Saint whose thousand shrines our feet have trod
+ And our eyes loved thy lamp's eternal beam,
+Dim earthly radiance of the Unknown God,
+ Hope of the darkness, light of them that dream,
+Far off, far off and faint, O glimmer on
+Till we thy pilgrims from the road are gone.
+
+O Word whose meaning every sense hath sought,
+ Voice of the teeming field and grassy mound,
+Deep-whispering fountain of the wells of thought,
+ Will of the wind and soul of all sweet sound,
+Far off, far off and faint, O murmur on
+Till we thy pilgrims from the road are gone.
+
+
+
+
+
+In July
+
+His beauty bore no token,
+ No sign our gladness shook;
+With tender strength unbroken
+ The hand of Life he took:
+But the summer flowers were falling,
+ Falling and fading away,
+And mother birds were calling,
+ Crying and calling
+ For their loves that would not stay.
+
+He knew not Autumn's chillness,
+ Nor Winter's wind nor Spring's.
+He lived with Summer's stillness
+ And sun and sunlit things:
+But when the dusk was falling
+ He went the shadowy way,
+And one more heart is calling,
+ Crying and calling
+ For the love that would not stay.
+
+
+
+
+
+From Generation To Generation
+
+O Son of mine, when dusk shall find thee bending
+ Between a gravestone and a cradle's head---
+Between the love whose name is loss unending
+ And the young love whose thoughts are liker dread,---
+Thou too shalt groan at heart that all thy spending
+ Cannot repay the dead, the hungry dead.
+
+
+
+
+
+When I Remember
+
+When I remember that the day will come
+ For this our love to quit his land of birth,
+ And bid farewell to all the ways of earth
+With lips that must for evermore be dumb,
+
+Then creep I silent from the stirring hum,
+ And shut away the music and the mirth,
+ And reckon up what may be left of worth
+When hearts are cold and love's own body numb.
+
+Something there must be that I know not here,
+Or know too dimly through the symbol dear;
+ Some touch, some beauty, only guessed by this---
+If He that made us loves, it shall replace,
+Beloved, even the vision of thy face
+ And deep communion of thine inmost kiss.
+
+
+
+
+
+Rondel*
+
+Though I wander far-off ways,
+ Dearest, never doubt thou me:
+
+Mine is not the love that strays,
+Though I wander far-off ways:
+
+Faithfully for all my days
+ I have vowed myself to thee:
+Though I wander far-off ways,
+ Dearest, never doubt thou me.
+
+* This and the two following pieces are from
+the French of Wenceslas, Duke of Brabant and
+Luxembourg, who died in 1384.
+
+
+
+
+
+Rondel
+
+Long ago to thee I gave
+Body, soul, and all I have---
+ Nothing in the world I keep:
+
+All that in return I crave
+Is that thou accept the slave
+Long ago to thee I gave---
+Body, soul, and all I have.
+
+Had I more to share or save,
+I would give as give the brave,
+ Stooping not to part the heap;
+Long ago to thee I gave
+Body, soul, and all I have---
+ Nothing in the world I keep.
+
+
+
+
+
+Balade
+
+I cannot tell, of twain beneath this bond,
+Which one in grief the other goes beyond,---
+Narcissus, who to end the pain he bore
+Died of the love that could not help him more;
+Or I, that pine because I cannot see
+The lady who is queen and love to me.
+
+Nay--for Narcissus, in the forest pond
+Seeing his image, made entreaty fond,
+"Beloved, comfort on my longing pour":
+So for a while he soothed his passion sore;
+So cannot I, for all too far is she---
+The lady who is queen and love to me.
+
+But since that I have Love's true colours donned,
+I in his service will not now despond,
+For in extremes Love yet can all restore:
+So till her beauty walks the world no more
+All day remembered in my hope shall be
+The lady who is queen and love to me.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Last Word
+
+Before the April night was late
+A rider came to the castle gate;
+A rider breathing human breath,
+But the words he spoke were the words of Death.
+
+"Greet you well from the King our lord,
+He marches hot for the eastward ford;
+Living or dying, all or one,
+Ye must keep the ford till the race be run.
+
+Sir Alain rose with lips that smiled,
+He kissed his wife, he kissed his child:
+Before the April night was late
+Sir Alain rode from the castle gate.
+
+He called his men-at-arms by name,
+But one there was uncalled that came:
+He bade his troop behind him ride,
+But there was one that rode beside.
+
+ "Why will you spur so fast to die?
+ Be wiser ere the night go by.
+ A message late is a message lost;
+ For all your haste the foe had crossed.
+
+ "Are men such small unmeaning things
+ To strew the board of smiling Kings?
+ With life and death they play their game,
+ And life or death, the end's the same."
+
+Softly the April air above
+Rustled the woodland homes of love:
+Softly the April air below
+Carried the dream of buds that blow.
+
+ "Is he that bears a warrior's fame
+ To shun the pointless stroke of shame?
+ Will he that propped a trembling throne
+ Not stand for right when right's his own?
+
+ "Your oath on the four gospels sworn?
+ What oath can bind resolves unborn?
+ You lose that far eternal life?
+ Is it yours to lose? Is it child and wife?
+
+But now beyond the pathway's bend,
+Sir Alain saw the forest end,
+And winding wide beneath the hill,
+The glassy river lone and still.
+
+And now he saw with lifted eyes
+The East like a great chancel rise,
+And deep through all his senses drawn,
+Received the sacred wine of dawn.
+
+He set his face to the stream below,
+He drew his axe from the saddle bow:
+"Farewell, Messire, the night is sped;
+There lies the ford, when all is said"
+
+
+
+
+
+The Viking's Song
+
+When I thy lover first
+ Shook out my canvas free
+And like a pirate burst
+ Into that dreaming sea,
+The land knew no such thirst
+ As then tormented me.
+
+Now when at eve returned
+ I near that shore divine,
+Where once but watch-fires burned
+ I see thy beacon shine,
+And know the land hath learned
+ Desire that welcomes mine.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Sufi In The City
+
+I.
+
+When late I watched the arrows of the sleet
+Against the windows of the Tavern beat,
+ I heard a Rose that murmured from her Pot:
+"Why trudge thy fellows yonder in the Street?
+
+II.
+
+"Before the phantom of False Morning dies,
+Choked in the bitter Net that binds the skies,
+ Their feet, bemired with Yesterday, set out
+For the dark alleys where To-morrow lies.
+
+III.
+
+"Think you, when all their petals they have bruised,
+And all the fragrances of Life confused,
+ That Night with sweeter rest will comfort these
+Than us, who still within the Garden mused?
+
+IV.
+
+"Think you the Gold they fight for all day long
+Is worth the frugal Peace their clamours wrong?
+ Their Titles, and the Name they toil to build---
+Will they outlast the echoes of our Song?"
+
+V.
+
+O Sons of Omar, what shall be the close
+Seek not to know, for no man living knows:
+ But while within your hands the Wine is set
+Drink ye--to Omar and the Dreaming Rose!
+
+
+
+
+
+Yattendon
+
+Among the woods and tillage
+ That fringe the topmost downs,
+All lonely lies the village,
+ Far off from seas and towns.
+Yet when her own folk slumbered
+ I heard within her street
+Murmur of men unnumbered
+ And march of myriad feet.
+
+For all she lies so lonely,
+ Far off from towns and seas,
+The village holds not only
+ The roofs beneath her trees:
+While Life is sweet and tragic
+ And Death is veiled and dumb,
+Hither, by singer's magic,
+ The pilgrim world must come.
+
+
+
+
+
+Among The Tombs
+
+She is a lady fair and wise,
+ Her heart her counsel keeps,
+And well she knows of time that flies
+ And tide that onward sweeps;
+But still she sits with restless eyes
+ Where Memory sleeps---
+ Where Memory sleeps.
+
+Ye that have heard the whispering dead
+ In every wind that creeps,
+Or felt the stir that strains the lead
+ Beneath the mounded heaps,
+Tread softly, ah! more softly tread
+ Where Memory sleeps---
+ Where Memory sleeps.
+
+
+
+
+
+A Sower
+
+With sanguine looks
+ And rolling walk
+Among the rooks
+ He loved to stalk,
+
+While on the land
+ With gusty laugh
+From a full hand
+ He scattered chaff.
+
+Now that within
+ His spirit sleeps
+A harvest thin
+ The sickle reaps;
+
+But the dumb fields
+ Desire his tread,
+And no earth yields
+ A wheat more red.
+
+
+
+
+
+A Song Of Exmoor
+
+The Forest above and the Combe below,
+ On a bright September morn!
+He's the soul of a clod who thanks not God
+ That ever his body was born!
+So hurry along, the stag's afoot,
+ The Master's up and away!
+Halloo! Halloo! we'll follow it through
+From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+ So hurry along, the stag's afoot,
+ The Master's up and away!
+ Halloo! Halloo! we'll follow it through
+ From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+Hark to the tufters' challenge true,
+ 'Tis a note that the red-deer knows!
+His courage awakes, his covert he breaks,
+ And up for the moor he goes!
+He's all his rights and seven on top,
+ His eye's the eye of a king,
+And he'll beggar the pride of some that ride
+ Before he leaves the ling!
+
+Here comes Antony bringing the pack,
+ Steady! he's laying them on!
+By the sound of their chime you may tell that it's time
+ To harden your heart and be gone.
+Nightacott, Narracott, Hunnacott's passed,
+ Right for the North they race:
+He's leading them straight for Blackmoor Gate,
+ And he's setting a pounding pace!
+
+We're running him now on a breast-high scent,
+ But he leaves us standing still;
+When we swing round by Westland Pound
+ He's far up Challacombe Hill.
+The pack are a string of struggling ants,
+ The quarry's a dancing midge,
+They're trying their reins on the edge of the Chains
+ While he's on Cheriton Ridge.
+
+He's gone by Kittuck and Lucott Moor,
+ He's gone by Woodcock's Ley;
+By the little white town he's turned him down,
+ And he's soiling in open sea.
+So hurry along, we'll both be in,
+ The crowd are a parish away!
+We're a field of two, and we've followed it through
+From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+ So hurry along, we'll both be in,
+ The crowd are a parish away!
+ We're a field of two, and we've followed it through
+ From Bratton to Porlock Bay!
+
+
+
+
+
+Fidele's Grassy Tomb
+
+The Squire sat propped in a pillowed chair,
+His eyes were alive and clear of care,
+But well he knew that the hour was come
+To bid good-bye to his ancient home.
+
+He looked on garden, wood, and hill,
+He looked on the lake, sunny and still:
+The last of earth that his eyes could see
+Was the island church of Orchardleigh.
+
+The last that his heart could understand
+Was the touch of the tongue that licked his hand:
+"Bury the dog at my feet," he said,
+And his voice dropped, and the Squire was dead.
+
+Now the dog was a hound of the Danish breed,
+Staunch to love and strong at need:
+He had dragged his master safe to shore
+When the tide was ebbing at Elsinore.
+
+From that day forth, as reason would,
+He was named "Fidele," and made it good:
+When the last of the mourners left the door
+Fidele was dead on the chantry floor.
+
+They buried him there at his master's feet,
+And all that heard of it deemed it meet:
+The story went the round for years,
+Till it came at last to the Bishop's ears.
+
+Bishop of Bath and Wells was he,
+Lord of the lords of Orchardleigh;
+And he wrote to the Parson the strongest screed
+That Bishop may write or Parson read.
+
+The sum of it was that a soulless hound
+Was known to be buried in hallowed ground:
+From scandal sore the Church to save
+They must take the dog from his masters grave.
+
+The heir was far in a foreign land,
+The Parson was wax to my Lord's command:
+He sent for the Sexton and bade him make
+A lonely grave by the shore of the lake.
+
+The Sexton sat by the water's brink
+Where he used to sit when he used to think:
+He reasoned slow, but he reasoned it out,
+And his argument left him free from doubt.
+
+"A Bishop," he said, "is the top of his trade:
+But there's others can give him a start with the spade:
+Yon dog, he carried the Squire ashore,
+And a Christian couldn't ha' done no more.
+
+The grave was dug; the mason came
+And carved on stone Fidele's name;
+But the dog that the Sexton laid inside
+Was a dog that never had lived or died.
+
+So the Parson was praised,and the scandal stayed,
+Till, a long time after, the church decayed,
+And, laying the floor anew, they found
+In the tomb of the Squire the bones of a hound.
+
+As for the Bishop of Bath and Wells
+No more of him the story tells;
+Doubtless he lived as a Prelate and Prince,
+And died and was buried a century since.
+
+And whether his view was right or wrong
+Has little to do with this my song;
+Something we owe him, you must allow;
+And perhaps he has changed his mind by now.
+
+The Squire in the family chantry sleeps,
+The marble still his memory keeps:
+Remember, when the name you spell,
+There rest Fidele's bones as well.
+
+For the Sexton's grave you need not search,
+'Tis a nameless mound by the island church:
+An ignorant fellow, of humble lot---
+But. he knew one thing that a Bishop did not.
+
+
+
+
+
+Moonset
+
+Past seven o'clock: time to be gone;
+Twelfth-night's over and dawn shivering up:
+A hasty cut of the loaf, a steaming cup,
+Down to the door, and there is Coachman John.
+
+Ruddy of cheek is John and bright of eye;
+But John it appears has none of your grins and winks;
+Civil enough, but short: perhaps he thinks:
+Words come once in a mile, and always dry.
+
+Has he a mind or not? I wonder; but soon
+We turn through a leafless wood, and there to the right,
+Like a sun bewitched in alien realms of night,
+Mellow and yellow and rounded hangs the moon.
+
+Strangely near she seems, and terribly great:
+The world is dead: why are we travelling still?
+Nightmare silence grips my struggling will;
+We are driving for ever and ever to find a gate.
+
+"When you come to consider the moon," says John at last,
+And stops, to feel his footing and take his stand;
+"And then there's some will say there's never a hand
+That made the world!"
+ A flick, and the gates are passed.
+
+Out of the dim magical moonlit park,
+Out to the workday road and wider skies:
+There's a warm flush in the East where day's to rise,
+And I'm feeling the better for Coachman John's remark.
+
+
+
+
+
+Master And Man
+
+Do ye ken hoo to fush for the salmon?
+ If ye'll listen I'll tell ye.
+Dinna trust to the books and their gammon,
+ They're but trying to sell ye.
+Leave professors to read their ain cackle
+ And fush their ain style;
+Come awa', sir, we'll oot wi' oor tackle
+ And be busy the while.
+
+'Tis a wee bit ower bright, ye were thinkin'?
+ Aw, ye'll no be the loser;
+'Tis better ten baskin' and blinkin'
+ Than ane that's a cruiser.
+If ye're bent, as I tak it, on slatter,
+ Ye should pray for the droot,
+For the salmon's her ain when there's watter,
+ But she's oors when it's oot.
+
+Ye may just put your flee-book behind ye,
+ Ane hook wull be plenty;
+If they'll no come for this, my man, mind ye,
+ They'll no come for twenty.
+Ay, a rod; but the shorter the stranger
+ And the nearer to strike;
+For myself I prefare it nae langer
+ Than a yard or the like.
+
+Noo, ye'll stand awa' back while I'm creepin'
+ Wi' my snoot i' the gowans;
+There's a bonny twalve-poonder a-sleepin'
+ I' the shade o' yon rowans.
+Man, man! I was fearin' I'd stirred her,
+ But I've got her the noo!
+Hoot! fushin's as easy as murrder
+ When ye ken what to do.
+
+Na, na, sir, I doot na ye're willin'
+ But I canna permit ye;
+For I'm thinkin' that yon kind o' killin'
+ Wad hardly befit ye.
+And some work is deefficult hushin',
+ There'd be havers and chaff:
+'Twull be best, sir, for you to be fushin'
+ And me wi' the gaff.
+
+
+
+
+
+Gavotte
+
+(Old French)
+
+Memories long in music sleeping,
+ No more sleeping,
+ No more dumb;
+Delicate phantoms softly creeping
+ Softly back from the old-world come.
+
+Faintest odours around them straying,
+ Suddenly straying
+ In chambers dim;
+Whispering silks in order swaying,
+ Glimmering gems on shoulders slim:
+
+Courage advancing strong and tender,
+ Grace untender
+ Fanning desire;
+Suppliant conquest, proud surrender,
+ Courtesy cold of hearts on fire---
+
+Willowy billowy now they're bending,
+ Low they're bending
+ Down-dropt eyes;
+Stately measure and stately ending,
+ Music sobbing, and a dream that dies.
+
+
+
+
+
+Imogen
+
+(A Lady of Tender Age)
+
+Ladies, where were your bright eyes glancing,
+ Where were they glancing yester-night?
+Saw ye Imogen dancing, dancing,
+ Imogen dancing all in white?
+ Laughed she not with a pure delight,
+ Laughed she not with a joy serene,
+Stepped she not with a grace entrancing,
+ Slenderly girt in silken sheen?
+
+All through the night from dusk to daytime
+ Under her feet the hours were swift,
+Under her feet the hours of play-time
+ Rose and fell with a rhythmic lift:
+ Music set her adrift, adrift,
+ Music eddying towards the day
+Swept her along as brooks in May-time
+ Carry the freshly falling May.
+
+Ladies, life is a changing measure,
+ Youth is a lilt that endeth soon;
+Pluck ye never so fast at pleasure
+ Twilight follows the longest noon.
+ Nay, but here is a lasting boon,
+ Life for hearts that are old and chill,
+Youth undying for hearts that treasure
+ Imogen dancing, dancing still.
+
+
+
+
+
+Nel Mezzo Del Cammin
+
+Whisper it not that late in years
+Sorrow shall fade and the world be brighter,
+Life be freed of tremor and tears,
+Heads be wiser and hearts be lighter.
+Ah! but the dream that all endears,
+The dream we sell for your pottage of truth---
+Give us again the passion of youth,
+Sorrow shall fade and the world be brighter.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Invasion
+
+Spring, they say, with his greenery
+ Northward marches at last,
+ Mustering thorn and elm;
+Breezes rumour him conquering,
+ Tell how Victory sits
+ High on his glancing helm.
+
+Smit with sting of his archery,
+ Hardest ashes and oaks
+ Burn at the root below:
+Primrose, violet, daffodil,
+ Start like blood where the shafts
+ Light from his golden bow.
+
+Here where winter oppresses us
+ Still we listen and doubt,
+ Dreading a hope betrayed:
+Sore we long to be greeting him,
+ Still we linger and doubt
+ "What if his march be stayed?"
+
+Folk in thrall to the enemy,
+ Vanquished, tilling a soil
+ Hateful and hostile grown;
+Always wearily, warily,
+ Feeding deep in the heart
+ Passion they dare not own---
+
+So we wait the deliverer;
+ Surely soon shall he come,
+ Soon shall his hour be due:
+Spring shall come with his greenery,
+ Life be lovely again,
+ Earth be the home we knew.
+
+
+
+
+
+Pereunt Et Imputantur
+
+(After Martial)
+
+Bernard, if to you and me
+ Fortune all at once should give
+Years to spend secure and free,
+ With the choice of how to live,
+Tell me, what should we proclaim
+Life deserving of the name?
+
+Winning some one else's case?
+ Saving some one else's seat?
+Hearing with a solemn face
+ People of importance bleat?
+No, I think we should not still
+Waste our time at others' will.
+
+Summer noons beneath the limes,
+ Summer rides at evening cool,
+Winter's tales and home-made rhymes,
+ Figures on the frozen pool---
+These would we for labours take,
+And of these our business make.
+
+Ah! but neither you nor I
+ Dare in earnest venture so;
+Still we let the good days die
+ And to swell the reckoning go.
+What are those that know the way,
+Yet to walk therein delay?
+
+
+
+
+
+Felix Antonius
+
+(After Martial)
+
+To-day, my friend is seventy-five;
+ He tells his tale with no regret;
+ His brave old eyes are steadfast yet,
+His heart the .lightest heart alive.
+
+He sees behind him green and wide
+ The pathway of his pilgrim years;
+ He sees the shore, and dreadless hears
+The whisper of the creeping tide.
+
+For out of all his days, not one
+ Has passed and left its unlaid ghost
+ To seek a light for ever lost,
+Or wail a deed for ever done.
+
+So for reward of life-long truth
+ He lives again, as good men can,
+ Redoubling his allotted span
+With memories of a stainless youth.
+
+
+
+
+
+Ireland, Ireland
+
+Down thy valleys, Ireland, Ireland,
+ Down thy valleys green and sad,
+Still thy spirit wanders wailing,
+ Wanders wailing, wanders mad.
+
+Long ago that anguish took thee,
+ Ireland, Ireland, green and fair,
+Spoilers strong in darkness took thee,
+ Broke thy heart and left thee there.
+
+Down thy valleys, Ireland, Ireland,
+ Still thy spirit wanders mad;
+All too late they love that wronged thee,
+ Ireland, Ireland, green and sad.
+
+
+
+
+
+Hymn
+
+In The Time Of War And Tumults
+
+O Lord Almighty, Thou whose hands
+ Despair and victory give;
+In whom, though tyrants tread their lands,
+ The souls of nations live;
+
+Thou wilt not turn Thy face away
+ From those who work Thy will,
+But send Thy peace on hearts that pray,
+ And guard Thy people still.
+
+Remember not the days of shame,
+ The hands with rapine dyed,
+The wavering will, the baser aim,
+ The brute material pride:
+
+Remember, Lord, the years of faith,
+ The spirits humbly brave,
+The strength that died defying death,
+ The love that loved the slave:
+
+The race that strove to rule Thine earth
+ With equal laws unbought: .
+Who bore for Truth the pangs of birth,
+ And brake the bonds of Thought.
+
+Remember how, since time began,
+ Thy dark eternal mind
+Through lives of men that fear not man
+ ls light for all mankind.
+
+Thou wilt not turn Thy face away
+ From those who work Thy will,
+But send Thy strength on hearts that pray
+ For strength to serve Thee still.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Building Of The Temple
+
+(An Anthem Heard In Canterbury Cathedral)
+
+[The Organ]
+
+O Lord our God, we are strangers before Thee, and sojourners, as were
+all our fathers: our days on the earth are as a shadow, and there is
+none abiding.
+
+O Lord God of our fathers, keep this for ever in the imagination of
+the thoughts of Thy people, and prepare their heart unto Thee.
+
+And give unto Solomon my son a perfect heart to keep Thy commandments,
+and to build the palace for the which I have made provision.
+
+[Boys' voices.]
+
+O come to the Palace of Life,
+Let us build it again.
+It was founded on terror and strife,
+It was laid in the curse of the womb,
+And pillared on toil and pain,
+And hung with veils of doom,
+And vaulted with the darkness of the tomb.
+
+[Men's voices.]
+
+O Lord our God, we are sojourners here for a day,
+ Strangers and sojourners, as all our fathers were:
+Our years on the earth are a shadow that fadeth away;
+ Grant us light for our labour, and a time for prayer.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+But now with endless song,
+And joy fulfilling the Law;
+Of passion as pure as strong
+And pleasure undimmed of awe;
+With garners of wine and grain
+Laid up for the ages long,
+Let us build the Palace again
+And enter with endless song,
+Enter and dwell secure, forgetting the years of wrong.
+
+[Men.]
+
+O Lord our God, we are strangers and sojourners here,
+ Our beginning was night, and our end is hid in Thee:
+Our labour on the earth is hope redeeming fear,
+ In sorrow we build for the days we shall not see.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Great is the name
+Of the strong and skilled,
+Lasting the fame
+Of them that build:
+The tongues of many nations
+Shall speak of our praise,
+And far generations
+Be glad for our days.
+
+[Men.]
+
+We are sojourners here as all our fathers were,
+ As all our children shall be, forgetting and forgot:
+The fame of man is a murmur that passeth on the air,
+ We perish indeed if Thou remember not.
+
+We are sojourners here as all our fathers were,
+ Strangers travelling down to the land of death:
+There is neither work nor device nor knowledge there,
+ O grant us might for our labour, and to rest in faith.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+In joy, in the joy of the light to be,
+
+[Men.]
+
+ O Father of Lights, unvarying and true,
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Let us build the Palace of Life anew.
+
+[Men.]
+
+ Let us build for the years we shall not see.
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Lofty of line and glorious of hue,
+With gold and pearl and with the cedar tree,
+
+[Men.]
+
+ With silence due
+ And with service free,
+
+[Boys.]
+
+Let us build it for ever in splendour new.
+
+[Men.]
+
+ Let us build in hope and in sorrow, and rest in Thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTES
+
+
+Drake's Drum.
+
+A state drum, painted with the arms of Sir Francis
+Drake, is preserved among other relics at Buckland Abbey, the seat of
+the Drake family in Devon.
+
+
+The Fighting Temeraire.
+
+The two last stanzas have been misunderstood.
+It seems, therefore, necessary to state that they are intended to
+refer to Turner's picture in the National Gallery of "The Fighting
+_Temeraire_ Tugged to her Last Berth."
+
+
+San Stefano.
+
+Sir Peter Parker was the son of Admiral Christopher
+Parker, grandson of Admiral Sir Peter Parker (the life-long friend and
+chief mourner of Nelson), and great-grandson of Admiral Sir William
+Parker. On his mother's side he was grandson of Admiral Byron, and
+first cousin of Lord Byron, the poet. He was killed in action near
+Baltimore in 1814, and buried in St. Margaret's, Westminster,
+where may be seen the monument erected to his memory by the officers
+of the _Menelaus_.
+
+
+The Quarter-Gunner's Yarn.
+
+This ballad is founded on fragmentary lines
+communicated to the author by Admiral Sir Windham Hornby, K.C.B., who
+served under Sir Thomas Hardy in 1827.
+
+
+Vae Victis.
+
+See _Livy_, XXX.,43, _Diodorus Siculus_, XIX., 106.
+
+
+Seringapatam.
+
+In 1780, while attempting to relieve Arcot, a British
+force of three thousand men was cut to pieces by Hyder Ali. Baird,
+then a young captain in the 73rd, was left for dead on the field. He
+was afterwards, with forty-nine other officers, kept in prison at
+Seringapatam, and treated with Oriental barbarity and treachery by
+Hyder Ali and his son Tippoo Sahib, Sultans of Mysore. Twenty-three of
+the prisoners died by poison, torture, and fever; the rest were
+surrendered in 1784. In 1799, at the siege of Seringapatam,
+Major-General Baird commanded the first European brigade, and
+volunteered to lead the storming column. Tippoo Sahib, with eight
+thousand of his men, fell in the assault, but the victor spared the
+lives of his sons and forbade a general sack of the city.
+
+
+Clifton Chapel.
+
+Clifton is one of the schools from which the largest
+number of boys pass direct into the R.M.A., Woolwich, and R.M.C.,
+Sandhurst. Thirty-five Old Cliftonian officers served in the campaign
+of 1897 on the Indian Frontier, of whom twenty-two were mentioned in
+despatches and six recommended for the Distinguished Service Order. Of
+the three hundred Cliftonians who served in the war in South Africa,
+thirty were killed in action and fourteen died of wounds or fever.
+
+ Clifton, remember these thy sons who fell
+ Fighting far oversea;
+ For they in a dark hour remembered well
+ Their warfare learned of thee.
+
+
+The Echo.
+
+The ballad was "The Twa Sisters of Binnorie," as set by
+Arthur Somervell.
+
+
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Collected Poems 1897 - 1907, by Henry Newbolt
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLLECTED POEMS 1897 - 1907 ***
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