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The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cornish Catches, by Bernard Moore

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: Cornish Catches
       and Other Verses

Author: Bernard Moore

Release Date: January 13, 2012 [EBook #38565]

Language: English

Character set encoding: ASCII

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CORNISH CATCHES ***




Produced by Chris Curnow, Stephanie McKee and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
by The Internet Archive)









    CORNISH CATCHES




AUTHOR'S NOTE.


The Author begs to thank the Editors of the following papers for their
courtesy in allowing him to reprint some of the poems in this book:--The
_Academy_, _Country Life_, _Fry's Magazine_, the _Grand Magazine_, the
_Sphere_, _T.P's Magazine_, the _Vineyard_, the _Windsor Magazine_, the
_Western Morning News_, and the _Westminster Gazette_.


_Hutton, Advertiser Press, Ormskirk._




    CORNISH CATCHES

    AND OTHER VERSES

    BY

    BERNARD MOORE

    [Illustration]

    LONDON

    ERSKINE MACDONALD

    1914




TO MY MOTHER.




CONTENTS


    PAGE

    Well, there 'tis                    9

    Gardens                            10

    Grocery                            12

    Eddication                         14

    Jenny                              16

    In the Kittereen                   17

    Maids                              18

    Cap'n John                         19

    Dolly Pentreath                    20

    Sunday                             22

    Granfer's Proverbs                 24

    Seining Song                       25

    How be'ee, me deear?               26

    What have'ee catched?              27

    A Mevagissey Haul                  28

    Dicky                              30

    The Old Fisherman's Lament         31

    A Looe Lay                         32

    On the Kay                         33

    Riches                             34

    A Fireside Spell                   35

    Cornish Comfort                    36

    I mind me                          37

    Sure 'nuff                         38

    The Garment of Time                40

    In a Garden                        41

    Sorrow's Courage                   42

    A Choosing                         43

    Star Signs                         44

    The Old Knight's Song              45

    Fealty                             47

    Treasure Trove                     48

    Roses and Rue                      49

    Definitions                        50

    Blue Sky                           51

    Shadows                            52

    When I was a Lad                   53

    A Call                             55

    The Return                         56

    In the Bay                         58

    Sea Foam                           59

    Echoes                             60

    A Ballade of Cornwall              61

    The Fisherman's Prayer             63




WELL, THERE 'TIS


    Well, there 'tis. You wakes up cryin' an' callin',
      You'm cold an' hungered, an' skeered o' the turble dark;
    It feels most like a gert black cloud's a fallin'
      To crunch you to nothin', an' leave you smuttered an' stark.
    But a kind hand comes when the gert black clouds would drownd you,
      An' a warm breast holds you tight to cuddle an' kiss,
    An' you know that the world o' Love be all around you.
                Well! there 'tis.

    Then you grows a bit, and you finds a mort o' pleasure
      In the rush o' the waves an' the roarin' wind in the sky;
    An' you plays your games at Pirates seekin' treasure,
      Or Penny-come-quick when the Breton Boys go by.
    An' you don't much trouble at difrent kinds o' weather,
      If 'tis sunny 'tis sunny, but rain won't make you miss
    The chance to trample away thro' the moorland heather;
                Well! there 'tis.

    But you keeps on growin', an' then you begin in a fashion
      To want some things you'd never a thought on before;
    An' you sees some eyes be blue, an' you gets a passion
      For jest a very perticlar cottage door.
    An' you don't feel tired at the end o' the day o' toilin'
      So long as it ends with the sound an' song of a kiss,
    So long as it ends with arms round you coilin';
                Well! there 'tis.

    Then you grows old, an' at last you falls on sleepin'.
      Do you count you'll be all alone in the turble dark?
    Do you think you'll be left to the sound o' wailin' an' weepin'
      Lonely an' cold in the cloam, unmothered an' stark?
    When you was a baby, helpless an' cryin' an' callin'
      Didn' the kind arms take, an' the warm lips kiss?
    An' won't there be Arms at last, to save you from fallin'?
                Well! there 'tis.




GARDENS


    Passun he've a garden, 'tis trim an' nate an' vitty,
      He'm mortal proud o' growin' things that's turble hard to grow;
    He'm mighty fond of orchises an' mazed for pellygomiuns,
      An' calls 'em all furrin' names us don't belong to know.

    Squire, he have a garden, a gert an' gorjus garden,
      With hollyhocks a standin' like soljers in the sun;
    He likes tremenjus peonies, an' roses crowdin' arches,
      An' thinks as what the passun grows the whishtest sort o' fun.

    Feyther have a garden, but don't run much to flowers,
      For he've to think o' tatties, an' useful sort o' things;
    His cabbages be famous, an' his collyflowers a wonder,
      An' you should see the runners when they'm scarlet on the strings!

    But I've a finer garden than the squire or the passun;
      'Tis all along the hedgerows, an' all about the lanes;
    It stretches up the hillside an' spreads acrost the moorland,
      'Tis sweet with Cornish sunshine an' green with Cornish rains.

    There's scent of honeysuckle shakin' sweet along the sunshine,
      An' ragged robins sprinklin' scarlet stars among the grass,
    An' foxgloves, with a peal o' bells a swingin' in the steeple,
      A ringin' fairy music to the breezes as they pass.

    An' where the lanes climb up along, an' break upon the moorland,
      The heather weaves a carpet all acrost the purple hills;
    An' gorse gleams in the sunshine like a thousand burnin' bushes,
      An' birds shout happy answers to the ripplin' o' the rills.

    So squire may keep his garden, an' his gardeners a diggin',
      An' passun's clanely welcome to the flowers he counts so fine,
    (I won't say nort o' feyther's, for his tatties be so mealy),
      But the bestest of all gardens is the garden that is mine.




GROCERY


    John Pengelly be a clever man,
      An' he keeps a grocery store;
    He've got a seat on the Burryin' Board,
      An' a sow as turns three score;
    On Sunday night he holds the plate
      An' on Thursday shuts at four.

    He talks to Passon on clover crops,
      An' Farmer Hain on Sin;
    An' keeps the Parish Register,
      An' a dog that isn' thin;
    An' wears a watch-chain on his chest,
      An' a Moses beard on his chin.

    He allays takes the rhubarb prize
      At the Flower Show every year;
    An' if 'ee mind to order it
      He'll get 'ee Bottled Beer;
    (Though some as don't agree with that)
      Besides it's rather dear.

    Two different kinds of lard he sells,
      But awnly one of tay;
    An' he've a yaller oilskin coat
      He hopes to sell some day,
    But the awnly man it might have fit
      Was drownded out to say.

    His matches hang in a cabbage net,
      An' his onions hang in strings;
    An' allays at the Church Bazaar
      He sells the Hooplar rings;
    An' if us get a concert up
      An' there's no one else, _he_ sings.

    So be you'm seekin' clever men,
      Come down along o' we;
    We'll show 'ee John Pengelly then
      Behind his grocery;
    An' when you taste his peppermints,
      Sure 'nuff, tis mazed you'll be.




EDDICATION


    Feyther sez as "Larnin' be the proper trade for boys,"
    An' so us have to go to school, an' dursn't make a noise,
    But jest sits on a form an' hears what schoolmaister do say,
    An' all the time we'm thinkin' how the boats go in the bay.

    There's different kinds o' larnin', an' there's some I can't abide,
    They'm worse than swimmin' round the Main at ebbin' o' the tide.
    I likes the tales o' travels an' at readin' do be praised,
    An' I'm dacent doin' Adders, but Goseinters send me mazed.

    The Bible stories baint so bad excep' the fat head calf,
    An' when schoolmaister tells of 'ee I allays wants to laugh;
    Our Kitty likes the donkeys as was found by Sunno Kish,
    But I likes best the tale about Ole Peter an' the fish.

    Schoolmaister knaws a mort o' things as baint a bit o' use;
    I've heered un tell the biggest boys about high potty mews;
    But if he had to earn his bread, the same as feyther do,
    I count he'd soon belong to know it wasn' much he knew.

    One day he gave a sum about a herrin' an' a half,
    An' sez as how the boys was rude when they began to laugh;
    He must a been a bufflehead to think as people bought
    _Half_ herrins, when we'm bringin' 'em by thousans into port.

    I'm allays sittin' thinkin' when he'm talkin' to the board,
    About the many things there be a boy can larn aboard;
    There's sheets to haul an' gear to staw an' reefs to take an' tie,
    An' wind to watch acomin' in the corner of your eye.

    Now if they larned us some o' these, or how to bend a hook,
    'Twould be a darned sight usefuller than rubbige in a book;
    But what's the good o' larnin' how to hold a scriggley pen,
    An' spell a lot of orkard words, an' say to ten times ten?

    'Tis little use to grumble when 'ee have to keep the rules,
    An' jest so long as there be boys, I count there must be schools;
    An' tho' they'm good for larnin' if 'ee awnly knaws the way,
    I'd sooner be a whifflin' arter mack'rel in the bay.




JENNY


    When Jenny goes a milkin' in the dewy time o' morn
    I allays be contrivin' to be callin' at the farm,
    For her cheeks be red as roses an' her hair like rippled corn,
    An' I be fairly mazed to kiss the dimple on her arm.

      Jenny, Jenny, won't 'ee let me love 'ee? You'm brighter far
      than any star That's shinin' up above 'ee. Sartin sure, you
      make me mazed, Iss, me deear, a whist an' crazed; Jenny, Jenny,
      won't 'ee let me love 'ee?

    When Jenny goes to Fairin' with blue ribbons in her hair,
    I count the Queen of England never looks a half as sweet,
    An' when she'm in the Country dance no other maids be there,
    For I never stops a glazin' at the twinkle of her feet.

      Jenny, Jenny, won't 'ee let me love 'ee?

        Aw----But!!!

    When Jenny goes to Mittin' House dressed in her Sunday clo'es
    She looks so like a hangell in her little pew apart,
    That when I try to sing the hymns my throttle seems to close,
    An' I cussn't hear the sermon for the beatin' of my heart.

     Jenny, Jenny, won't 'ee let me love 'ee? You'm brighter far
     than any star That's shinin' up above 'ee; Sartin sure, you
     make me mazed, Iss, me deear, a whisht an' crazed; Jenny,
     Jenny, won't 'ee let me love 'ee?




IN THE KITTEREEN (Kittereen: Cornish for a covered cart).


    Jenny an' me in the Kittereen
      Drove to Callington Fair;
    There wasn' much more than a foot between
    Jenny an' me in the Kittereen
    For both of us was just thirteen,
      An' of course us didn' care.

    Jenny an' me in the Kittereen
      Drove from Callington Fair;
    There wasn' much more than an inch between
    Jenny an' me in the Kittereen
    For both of us was just fifteen
      With a packet of pops to share.

    Jenny an' me in the Kittereen
      Drove to Callington Fair;
    There wasn' much less than a yard between
    Jenny an' me in the Kittereen
    For both of us was just seventeen
      An' both knew the other was there.

    Jenny an' me in the Kittereen
      Drove from Callington Fair;
    There was very much less than an inch between
    Jenny an' me in the Kittereen
    For wasn' we both of us turned nineteen?
      An' wasn' there Love to share?




MAIDS


    I've knawed a many o' Devon maids with cheeks merry an' red,
    They'm pleasant an' 'ansum single, an' homely an' cosy wed;
    But I shan't marry a Devon maid; I reckon I'd rather be dead.

    I've seed a many o' London maids abroad in London Town;
    They'm larky an' flittery single, but marryin' calms 'em down;
    But I shan't marry a London maid; I reckon I'd rather drown.

    For I have knawed the Cornish maids, an' like 'em best of any.
    So take the London an' Devon maids, they'm goin' at two a penny;
    An' I shan't marry nobody else, for I be tokened to Jenny.




CAP'N JOHN


    Cap'n John has been to Frisky,
      Injy an' Australy too;
    Now he runs a lug-an'-mizzen
      Arter Pilchers out o' Looe,
          Iss, he do.

    Cap'n John was braave an' slippey
      Till the say catched hold of he;
    Now he'm tanned an' tough an' wrinkled,
      Simming like mohogany.
          Iss, he be.

    Cap'n John baint smurt an' 'ansum,
      Like a claned up Sarvice Coor;
    Stiff hair all aroun' his niddick
      Makes him like a hedgaboor.
          Iss, be Gor!

    Cap'n John don't boast o' beauty,
      Beauty don't set down with tar;
    But he've got a pair o' patches
      Shows how dacent patches are.
          Iss, with tar.

    Cap'n John thinks books is rubbige;
      Sez that printin' spoils his eyes;
    But he reads the book o' weather
      Written in the say an' skies;
          Iss, he's wise.

    Cap'n John, us looks towards 'ee,
      Wish 'ee luck when shuttin' seine,
    Wish 'ee tummals at the jowstin',
      Wish 'ee out an' home again.
    Clink you'm cider at the call,
          "Cap'n John, an' One an' All."




DOLLY PENTREATH


    Dolly Pentreath is dead an' gone, her stone stands up to Paul;
    But Dolly Pentreath her still lives on in the hearts of One and All.
    Her smoked an' snuffed, an' the cusses her knowed was mortal hard to
        bate,
    But her carried her creel like a Mousehole maid, an' allays selled
        out her cate.

    Her wern't afeerd at livin' alone, an' many a tale is told,
    As shows as how her face was brass, but her heart was true as gold.
    One day a sailor had tooked his leave afore his leave was given,
    An' knowed if they catched him the yard arm rope would show him the
        way to Heaven,

    So he scatted to Dolly, an' jest in time her thought of the chimley
         wide,
    An' her collared him hold by the slack of his breeks an' shoved him
        up inside.
    Cussin' an' fussin' they searchers came, but awnly Dolly they sees,
    Washin' her feet in her old oak keeve, with her petticoat up to her
        knees.

    An' didn' her give them a tang o' tongue, an' didn' her cuss them
        sweet,
    For thinkin' her'd let a man bide there an' see her washin' her feet?
    But her called the loudest cusses of all, an' scraiched like a rat
        at a stoat,
    When the sailor gave a chokely cough for the fuzzen smoke in his
        throat.

    The storm her raised drove the buffleheads out a grumpling into the
        street,
    An' the sailor washed hisself in the keeve where Dolly had washed
        her feet.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Dolly Pentreath is dead an' gone, her stone stands up to Paul;
    But Dolly Pentreath her still lives on in the hearts of One and All.




SUNDAY IN THE CORNISH PORT


    There b'aint no fishin' in the bay,
    The boats be moored 'longside the kay,
    With sails reefed in an' stawed away,
      An' all so calm an' still--
    Excep' the ripple o' the tide,
    An' gulls awheelin' up 'longside
    The clifts, to where the Church do bide
      Atop the Flag-staff Hill.

    Above the Slip where boats be moored
    The cottage doors be set abroad,
    An' singin' voices praise the Lord
      For mercies which endure;
    An' happy childer in the street,
    Dressed all so vitty, clane, an' neat,
    Puts somethin' in the music sweet
      It didn' had before.

    Now every fisherman be dressed
    In shiny suit o' black for best,
    As fittin' to the Day o' Rest,
      An' sign o' Death to Sin;
    The jerseys in the lockers bide,
    For Sunday knaws its proper pride,
    An' likes to show a clane outside
      To match the heart within.

    Mid mornin', Church bell clangs a call.
    An' some don't take no heed at all,
    But some goes up the hill to Paul,
      An' some to Chapel goes;
    Whilst some strolls down upon the kay,
    An' sits an' spits into the say;
    But all the same, they knaws the Day,
      An' doesn' dirt their clo'es.

    But whether Church be right or b'aint,
    Or Mittin' Houses make'ee faint,
    Or whether you'm a solemn saint
      Or jest a cheerful sinner,
    For sartin, not so long by noon,
    You'll all be playin' the same tune
    Wi' knife an' fork an' mebbe spoon,
      Asettin' down to dinner.

    Then mos'ly us do strawl away
    Along the clifts that line the bay,
    Though some prefers a dish o' tay
      An' snooze along the settle;
    But whether we'm been far or near,
    We'm never losted, don't 'ee fear.
    We'm allays home in time to hear
      The singin' o' the kettle.

    An' when the Sun, a lantern red
    Asinkin' at the World's mast-head,
    Goes down, then us goes home to bed:
      An' so us ends the Sunday.
    For Sunday 'tis the Day o' days,
    When all the fish do as 'em plaise,
    While in the little port we prays
      A banger catch for Monday.




GRANFER'S PROVERBS


    Granfer sits in the winder an' looks acrost the bay;
    Sure 'nuff he thinks a mort o' things tho' 'tis little he has to say.
    'Tis time he came to his moorin's an' heaved his gear ashore,
    For the sea is a bit too chancy for a man gone eighty-four.

    He've catched a plenty of wisdom in the net inside his head,
    An' often us be tellin' of the clever things he've said.
    They'm cleverer nor things you read in books an' papers too,
    Because he dosn' make 'em up, but awnly knaws they'm true.

    He've good advice for sailor lads who musn't come to grief:
    "Don't try to shine you'm centrebit by cuts acrost the reef.
    Don't make you'm mainsail fast an' look for mermaids on the lew,
    An' don't take cider kegs aboard because they spile the view."

    He've good advice for all the maids whom lookin' arter lads:
    "If you baint catchin' mackerel then be content with skads;
    An' if you've tried the seinin' an' the fishes won't be took,
    Just get a dacent bit o' bait, an' drop a line an' hook."

    He've good advice for husbands, which he tells them all alone:
    "Go suant comin' into port an' watch the weather cone;
    Jest keep your hellum stiddy if there's tokens of a squall--
    Cross words is nigh as useless as a porpus in the trawl."

    He've good advice for housewives but he keeps it to hisself:
    For he knows they awnly puts it with the jowds upon the shelf;
    His wisest words to women be the words he doesn' say,
    For he jest sits in the winder an' looks acrost the bay.




A CORNISH SEINING SONG


    The Huer is up on the cliff, me deears,
      Glazing out to say;
    Slip youm moorin's and ship youm gears,
      There's Pilchers in the Bay;
    Lift youm faistins on muggoty pie.
      Down along an' away.

    'Tisn the time for maids, me deears,
      Don't 'ee be duffed by they;
    There's lashins o' time to taise their ears
      An' maze 'em wi' fal-de-lay.
    They'll wait till arter the Pilcher's catched,
      Down along an' away.

    Us'll be shuttin' soon, me deears,
      There's purple on the say,
    An' jowstin' this arternoon, me deears,
      When us comes back to kay.
    Who's for a banger, a bender haul
      Down along an' away?

    Pilchers is budiful fried, me deears,
      Or baked in a bussa o' clay,
    So sterry away wi' the tide, me deears,
      For Pilchers in the Bay.
    Slip youm moorin's an' ship youm gears,
      Down along an' away!




"HOW BE'EE, ME DEEAR?"

(The Cornish Greeting).


    "How be'ee, me deear?" I heard her say,
    But I was foached to be far away,
    For the breeze was braave an' the boat in the bay,
      An' Granny was old an' grey.

    I didn' turn back to say "Good-bye,"
    For slottery weather was in the sky,
    The anchor was up an' the punt stood by,
      Yet Granny was old an' grey!

    Far I sailed, an' didn' I cast
    Many a look at the old times past?
    The lil' grey port as I saw it last?
      An' Granny old an' grey?

    At last I came from the yowlin' main,
    Guessin' to see the place again
    Jest as it was, as nate an' plain,
      An' Granny old an' grey.

    Why didn' I seed the end was nigh?
    Why didn' I bide to say "Good-bye?"
    It's too late now to make reply,
      Granny is gone away.

    But someday beyond the farthest tide,
    At last I shall safely at anchor ride,
    An' I shall be hailed as I come 'longside,
      "How be'ee, me deear?"




"WHAT HAVE'EE CATCHED?"


    "What have'ee catched, lil' lad on the shore?"
    "Shrimps an' a crayfish out o' the pool,
    An' a tinful o' lugworms, a tidy score,
    To scrig on the night lines after school."

    "What have'ee catched, lil' maid in the lane?"
    "The scent o' the thyme an' the cheep of a bird,
    An' the sound of a song that is joy an' pain,
    But the sweetest song as ever I heard."

    "What have'ee catched, strong man from the say?"
    "A seineful o' pilchers, a sailful o' foam,
    An' a twenty-knot breeze from the nor'rard away,
    That drove me a-scuddin' an' rollickin' home."

    "What have'ee catched, good dame by the door?"
    "A lil' brown sail comin' with the tide,
    That's bringin' back peace to my heart once more,
    An' my man again to the chimley side."




A MEVAGISSEY HAUL

(A million pilchards, August 6th, 1912).


    A Sou' Sou' West was blowin' up to more than half a gale,
      An' a prutty bit o' billow talked ashore,
    But there baint no use for seiners as be afeared to sail,
      When the catches have been runnin' light an' poor,
              So we plugged out oar to oar.
        Out along from old Mevagissey,--
        Beatin' out from old Mevagissey,--
        With a sky full o' scud blowin' over us,
        An' a stiddy brazzle plonkin' at the bow.

    We shut the seine, an' watched the lights a dancin' green an' red,
      An' wallowed first to starboard, then to port,
    Until the dimsey touched the West, an' we was slowin' dead,
      An' then we knawed 'twas tummals we had caught,
              For the corks was bobbin' short.
        Out along from old Mevagissey,--
        Low lay old Mevagissey,--
        When the grey dawn showed the shadows over us,
        An' the brazzle came alippin' at the bow.

    We lugged the silver net aboard until the bilge was hid,
      For crates was little use for such a haul,
    An' then we let the main-sheet go, an' home along we slid,
      With the hellum nearly buried in a squall,
              But we didn' care at all.
        For it was home along to old Mevagissey,
        Back along to old Mevagissey,
        With the dangers of the night blown over us,
        An' A MILLION PILCHERS slitherin' below.

    We tacked into the harbour with the ground-say grindin' hard,
      An' we bumped to berth at last 'longside the quay,
    Which was chockered up with barrels so you couldn' step a yard,
      When we brought our shinin' harvest from the say:--
            Now 'tis salt an' stawed away.
        An' we'm home along in old Mevagissey,
          Home again in old Mevagissey,
        With the cloud o' winter care blown over us,
          Whatever winter winds may blow.




DICKY


    A year agone, a year agone, our Dicky sailed away;
    A blue light danced about his eyes like sunshine on the bay,
    He whissled passin' down along, his heart was glad an' gay,
    A year agone, a year agone, when Dicky sailed away.

    A year agone! a year agone! The time do speed so fast,
    It scairce do seem a year agone we saw our Dicky last;
    It seems as if his steps must come aclatterin' to the door,
    An' he be claimin' payment with his breakfast for the score.

    He loved the lanes in springtime an' he loved them at the fall,
    But when the honeysuckle bloomed he loved them best of all;
    I mind me how he had a sprig stuck in his cap that day,
    A year agone, a year agone, when Dicky sailed away.

    There wasn' lad was handier at stawin' of a sail,
    There wasn' lad was cheerfuller at stemmin' through a gale,
    There wasn' lad was heartier at fishin' or at play,
    A year agone, a year agone, when Dicky sailed away.

    A many ships come into port along the flowin' tide,
    A many lads come home again an' safe in harbour ride,
    But all in vain we watch for one, an' all in vain we pray.

           *       *       *       *       *

    A year agone, a year agone, our Dicky sailed away!




THE OLD FISHERMAN'S LAMENT


    'Tis well an' fine for the steam-trawler to sweep the floor of the say,
    But 'tis turble hard for the fisherman as awnly sails the Bay,
    For the fish gets scaircer an' scaircer an' hardly ait at all,
    An' what's to be catched with the seinin' be barely wuth the haul.

    Us used to count on the herrin's to buy us Chris'mus cheer,
    But the catch runs lighter an' lighter, an' pervisions be allays dear,
    An' what us gets in the crab-pots that don't take long to sell,
    Especial when most of the pots be gone on a long ground swell.

    'Tis a whisht poor life for a lad to lead, an' mos'ly they wont abide,
    But sterry away to the furrin' ports athurt a keenly tide,
    An' us be left, all lone an' long, to moil as best us may,
    While the clankin' trawler steams along, an' sweeps the floor of
        the say.




A LOOE LAY


    Ole Sammy took fish from Downderry to Looe;
    Jest the darnedest thing that Ole Sammy could do;
    An' nobody knawed what Ole Sammy was thinkin'
    For when he got there the fish was a stinkin'.

    He cried them in stores an' he cried them in housen,
    But no one would have them at tuppence a thousan';
    He cried them in Fore Street an' then on the Pier,
    But folks said as "Nothin' was tuppence too dear."

    Sure awnly a saftie would ever be carin'
    To pay for the fish when they'd had such a airin'!
    An' any regreater deserve to be stranded
    For carryin' fish to the port where they'm landed!

    So Sammy went homeways from Looe to Downderry,
    An' on to Torpoint an' acrost by the ferry,
    An' up along Plymouth, remarkable flish,
    He selled out to wance all his basket of fish.

    'Tis sartin that 'tis, an' can't be no 'tisser,
    Us knaws fish an' fish from the Rame to the Lizzer;
    What's hansun for Devon for us doesn' do,
    So don't 'ee be carryin' fish into Looe.




ON THE KAY (QUAY).


    As I was bendin' a hook one day
    A furriner* strawled along the kay.

    His cheeks was white as gannet's wing,
    An' he looked a whisht an' wakely thing.

    His clo'es was nate an' spickety span,
    But I sez to meself "Now there's a man!"

    An' I sez to meself "Now look at his legs,
    They'm like a couple o' crabpot pegs."

    An' I sez to meself "A bit of a squall
    Would blow his bones to the end of all."

    An' I sez--but I didn' had time to say
    For a scraitch went up from the end o' the kay,

    Where a cheeld was aswingin' jest afore,
    An' now there wasn' no cheeld no more,

    Then a'most afore I could see him go,
    That furriner sprang in the say below.

    He couldn' swim much, but he keeped afloat
    Jest while I tumbled into the boat,

    An' I hooked him up an' lugged him aboard,
    An' he had that cheeld clipped tight as cord.

    He trembled an' shook, he was wake an' white,
    But he awnly sez "Is the kid alright?"

    Sure 'nuff, an' he simmed to understand
    When I gived him a hearty shake o' the hand.

    I started abendin' the hook agen,
    An' I sez "There's different looks to men,

    Braave hearts in whisht poor bodies bide,
    An' looks don't count to what's inside."

        [Footnote *: To Cornishmen, non-Cornish are "furriners."]




RICHES


    Miss Tregear be a whisht poor woman,
      With her big fine house an' her carriage an' pair;
    Her keeps four maids, not countin' the tweeny,
      An' another especial to do her hair.

    Ruth Penwarne be a braave rich woman;
      Her lives in a cottage with a warpley door;
    Her've got four childer, not countin' the baby,
      An' there baint no tellin' but her might have more.

    Miss Tregear have a room for dinin',
      An' a room for drawin', where her doesn' draw,
    An' a room where books be shut in cupboards,
      An' others us don't knaw what they'm for.

    Ruth Penwarne have a little linhay,
      An' there her washes when the rain be nigh,
    But when 'tis sunny her goes in the garden,
      An' spreads her clo'es on the fuzzen to dry.

    Miss Tregear have a pile o' carpets;
      Her be frit of a moth or a speck o' dust;
    Her be feared that the sun will spile her curtains,
      An' the damp will make her fire-irons rust.

    Ruth Penwarne have a fine stone kitchen;
      An' two rooms aloft as be crammed with beds;
    Her don't have carpets, so they can't get dirty,
      An' her soon clanes up where the childer treads.

    Miss Tregear have a face that's lonely;
      Her be often sad, tho' her can't tell why;
    Her be allays asayin there's nothin' doin',
      An' thinks how slow all the days go by.

    Ruth Penwarne haven't time for thinkin',
      With makin' an' mendin' an' scrubbin' too,
    An' sartin sure, she'm a braave rich woman,
      With childer an' home an' her work to do.




A FIRESIDE SPELL


    "I've spanked young Tom an' sent him to bed, an' I reckon it sarves
        him right;
    For 'tisn no use asayin' things when the rope's end baint in sight,
    An' he shouldn' go steerin' out along when the tide is runnin' away,
    I've telled him afore; I cussn't keep on atellin' him every day."

    "Now when I was a boy--" "Iss, when you was a boy, you was jest
        such a scalliant too,
    All'ays athinkin' o' darin' things as you didn' belong to do.
    Climbin' they clifts for saygulls' eggs or clambering ower the crags
    An' heavin' tuffs at the cormorants, an' shyin' stones at the shags."

    "But when I was a boy--" "Iss, when you was a boy you worried you'm
        mother a mort,
    I mind how'ee tried to swim out to the Point, an' how in the race'ee
        was caught;
    I know they had dared'ee at doin' their dags, but dags didn' keep'ee
        afloat,
    An' the say 'ud have catched'ee that mornin', sure 'nuff, if they
        hadn' raced out with the boat."

    "Well, mebbe I was jest sich a limb, as'ee says, an' all'ays full
        sail for a game,
    An' I reckon as boys will be boys when they'm boys, but grows into
        men what are tame,
    An' when Tom is a feyther alarnin' _his_ son to feel the weight of
        _his_ hand,
    Mebbe he'll fergive me for spankin' him now, an' remember, an'
        understand."




CORNISH COMFORT


    "Don't 'ee cry, lil' maid, 'tis awnly a broken bussa;
    The jowds won't mend, best lave the attle abide.
    There's tummals o' bussas left, an' it might be wusser."
                But the lil' maid cried.

    "Don't 'ee cry, li'l maid. If fellows gets changy and chancy,
    Tomorrow a braaver will come than the totle who stepped.
    Floshed milk baint no use, an' it isn' wuth scrowlin', I fancy."
                Still the lil' maid wept.

    "Don't 'ee cry, li'l maid--Iss, the Say be a terrible net,
    An' 'tis wearisome waitin' a meetin' beyont the Big Tide;
    Jest try to catch sleep on you'm pellaw, mebbe you'll forget."
                Still the lil' maid cried.

    "Don't 'ee cry did un say? Well, youm feyther jest wanted to cheer'ee,
    But men doesn' knaw where the best cup o' comfort is kept.
    Cuddle down; cry it out on you'm own mother's bosom, me dearie."
                Then the lil' maid slept.




"I MIND ME"


    I mind me of the cottage where I used to bide
    Just above the harbour on the steep hill-side;
    Cobbled was the cause'y to the jasmined door
    That looked into the kitchen with the grey stone floor.

    I mind me of the dresser with the chainy white,
    An' the gurt big Bible as was read aSunday night;
    An' the old cloam tay-pot with the broken spout
    As wanted suant dealin' at the pourin' out.

    I mind the quiet mornin's an' the tickin' o' the clock,
    An' the brath upon the brandiss in the steamin' crock;
    An' the goin' of the shadows an' the comin' of the day,
    An' the startin' in the dimsey for the fishin' in the bay.

    I mind me of the night-times an' wind whisslin' drear,
    An' the scraitchin' o' the shingle when I couldn' slape for fear;
    An' the groanin' gropin' darkness with norra gleam nor star,
    An' the boom of the billows on the harbour bar.

    But the cosy chimley corner, I mind it best of all,
    With the smell of tatie pasties from the oven in the wall,
    An' the crackle of the fuzzen with the billies on the blow,
    An' the ring o' ruddy faces in the hearth-fire glow.

    The cottage still is lookin' from the hill across the bay;
    Above the cobbled cause'y swings the jasmine spray;
    But the gleam o' ruddy faces an' the hearth-fire glow
    Went out in the darkness long long ago.




"SURE 'NUFF"


    Sure 'nuff, 'twas good when I was a lad
      To be in a boat in the bay;
    To whiffle the mack'rel, hook the chad,
      And haul at the nets away;
    'Twas good to feel the wind in my face,
      An' scud through a tumble o' foam,
    An' see far off the twinklin' lights
      Of the lil' grey port, an' home.
    An' 'twas good to climb in the craggy clifts
      Where the guillemot raired her brood,
    An' go with a laugh in the heart all day;
      Sure 'nuff, 'twas good!

    Sure 'nuff, 'twas good when I wandered away,
      An' saw that the world was wide,
    In the wunnerful lands beyont the say,
      An' the ports where the big ships ride.
    'Twas good to meet men who could strive an' seek,
      An' didn' knaw nort o' fear,
    An' hail 'em a word in passin' by,
      An' answer 'em back with a cheer.
    'Twas good to be sailin' the way o' the world,
      An' standin' where strong men stood,
    An' counted awhile as a man among men;
      Sure 'nuff, 'twas good!

    Sure 'nuff, 'tis good, with voyagin' done,
      To be anchored in port at last,
    An' watch the boys go, one by one,
      As I did in days long past;
    'Tis good to set in the cottage door,
      An' gaze at the sky an' say,
    An' knaw that I fared on the flood tide once,
      Now 'tis fallin' away;
    An' 'tis good to have time to make ready to sail
      On the voyage that leads to rest;
    An' I trust a Pilot Who will not fail.
      Sure 'nuff, 'tis best!




II.




THE GARMENT OF TIME


    The giant Image of Eternal Time
      Sits throned amidst the Infinite of Space;
    And through the aeons, passing chime by chime,
              Heeds not our Race.

    Meanwhile we weave upon his robes' array
      Embroideries of doubts and hopes and fears,
    The golden threads of laughter by the way,
              Grey threads of tears.

    Careless sits Time of garment grey or gold,
      Although our passionate labours never cease
    Till weaving hands are weary and we grow old.
              And pass to peace.

    And who that gazes on that garb of Time
      Shall in the far light of a distant day
    Catch aught of colour of song or rune of rhyme?
              Shall all be grey?

    Yet till the end fall--and the day close,
      Let me weave in the web of pain and the woof of tears
    The colour of sun-bright seas and the red of the rose,
              In my Loom of Years.




IN A GARDEN


    A twilight peace droops tenderly,
    The discords of the day depart,
    And through the hush there comes to be
    A harmony within the heart;
      And waking to the quivering strings
      Spirits are touched to finer things.

    Sweet hand-fast silences of eve,
    When love's supremest note is heard
    In symphonies the spirits weave
    Beyond the need of mortal word,
      O! may we keep your music when
      We pace the noisy haunts of men.

    Give us the strength for daily stress
    Of toil about the busy world;
    Give us a balm to bitterness
    From wounds when cruel shafts are hurled;
      And give us courage in a sense
      Of Love's divine omnipotence.

    For Life can never lonely be
    Since Love has broken all the bars
    That stayed the soul from unity
    With Heaven and its ten thousand stars,
      Whose music falls sublimely grand
      Through silences of hand in hand.




SORROW'S COURAGE


    I have loved Beauty. I have seen the sun
      Flash snowy mountain tops to shimmer of gold;
    I have heard songs where little waters run
      Chiming with music that the stars have rolled.

    I have loved Beauty. I have seen the sea
      Fringe with its silver all the golden shore;
    Have heard it crooning music ceaselessly
      To ancient tunes frayed from the tempest's roar.

    I have loved Beauty. I have seen a smile
      Shine from sweet eyes, fair as the sea's own blue,
    Whose magic lashes seemed to lift awhile
      To send a kindly comrade spirit through.

    I have loved Beauty. But nor sun nor sea
      Nor stars have charactered God's chiefest grace;
    Beyond all other things there beacons me
      The star-led pilgrim courage of your face.




A CHOOSING


    Under the turf the blind mole creeps,
      And moulds the mounds of molehill kind.
    Above, the skylark soars and sweeps,
      The song is swept upon the wind.

    To-morrow's eyes the mounds may see;
      To-morrow they will mark the plain.
    But none shall hear the ecstasy
      Of song, that cannot be again.

    Well built, old mole! A little heap
      To linger to a later day!
    Something to show you once did creep
      In darkness through your earthy way.

    Yet with the lark's glad song of Love
      May mine on wandering winds be hurled,
    In happy regions far above
      The dull mad molehills of the world.

    Still let my song be all in all,
      Though Earth-born discords soon destroy,
    And on no mortal ear may fall
      The music of immortal joy.

    Break, Spirit, break to boundless things
      Beyond the molehill and the clod,
    And catch the glory of the strings
      That tune the harmonies of God.




STAR SIGNS


    Primal swirl of the Chaos, out of your nebulous Night
      Eddied the primal tides, as the Mind of God decreed,
    And the Word of the ultimate Source spake forth "Let there be Light,"
      And all the Firmament blazed with the dust of the star-sown seed.

    Strong and stately and splendid, thronging the limitless spaces.
      Ye are the silver signs to a House not made with hands;
    Ye are the Mystic Scroll, where the Mighty Maker traces
      Thoughts that the passionate poet dimly understands.

    Day, with its drouth and drosses, shrivels our fragile souls,
      And, witched with its transient gauds, to the perilous earth we
          cling,
    But ever the tender night its infinite page unrolls,
      And the star-led mind aspires to the Throne of the star-robed King.




THE OLD KNIGHT'S SONG


    My lady lives afar in the fair white tower
      Hid, like a nest, high among branches swaying.
    "Peaceful thoughts be her portion, dreams her dower,"
          Here am I on my knees, praying.

    To the Winds of the World from the hills and the sea far blowing,
      That they carry their strength to her heart for sorrow's staying,
    That they bring clear hopes and the gladness of freedom flowing,
          Here am I on my knees, praying.

    To the Lamp of Day, that the aureate beauty breaking
      Find answering smiles in her eyes for the fair displaying
    Of colour of gold on the way my Lady is taking,
          Here am I on my knees, praying.

    To the sentinel Stars through the infinite spaces sweeping,
      Guarding the night, and terrors of darkness slaying,
    That they bring sweet Peace to the dreams of my Lady sleeping,
          Here am I, on my knees praying.

    But my casque is rusted with Time, and my breastplate battered,
      My hauberk worn with ancient fighting and fraying;
    Dull is my shield, my banner faded and tattered.
          Here am I on my knees, praying.

    Here at an outpost, here is my patrol duty:
      My Lady's train is for Knights of a fair arraying;
    Only from far may I guard her, loving her beauty:
          Here am I on my knees, praying.

    Wandering lights have I followed, the one Light questing,
      I have wearied through difficult paths and long delaying;
    Perilous peaks have I scaled with feet unresting;
          Here I am on my knees, praying.

    Star-like my Lady shines in her fair white tower.
      "Let nothing come nigh her to lead to her joy's betraying,
    No cloud dull aught of the golden dreams, her dower."
          Here am I on my knees, praying.




FEALTY


    When my Lady hath Pleasure and friends to spare,
      And riot of roses strewed in her path of days,
    And laughter ringing carillons into the air,
      She needs not me; I travel the lonely ways.

    When my Lady hath Youth uplifting a song
      Like the twitter of birds in a springtime hawthorn bough,
    And round her the notes of a merry-mad music throng,
      She needs not me; my music is sad and low.

    But when my Lady hath Sorrow to stress her heart,
      And Pain brings up to her eyes the ghosts of fear,
    And the music of Youth, and Laughter and Joy depart,
      Then she will need me: and lo! am I not here?

    Here I stand at the gateway and vigil keep,
      Waiting the summoning sob or the calling sigh;
    Swift to assuage her tears should my Lady weep;
      Happy if sorrow for ever may pass her by.




TREASURE TROVE


    You did not know that, gazing on your face,
      I took its Beauty to my heart for ever,
    Where it illumines every day with grace,
        Though Time and tides may sever.

    You did not know that, looking in your eyes,
      I found their Truth, beyond all need for speaking,
    And knew their gentleness a paradise
        Worth all a wide world's seeking.

    You did not know that every word you spoke
      Told me the Courage in your heart abiding,
    And bade me watch, where through the cloud-rifts broke
        One steady star for guiding.

    You did not know. But in my heart I know,
      The Beauty, Truth, and Courage that enfold you:
    And when we part I do not let you go:
        Thus in my heart I hold you.




ROSES AND RUE


    You gave me roses, you have given me Rue.
      Yet to the Roses memoried fragrance clings,
    And in their faded petals I renew
      The first fresh grace of unforgotten things.

    God give you Roses all along the way.
      So will I wear contentedly the Rue;
    And when I greet you with a smile, I pray
      Shade of my sorrow never fall on you.




DOGMA


    Reason's unreasoned castle of defence
      With turrets towering into far-off skies,
    Whose superstructure, solid and immense,
      Is built on shadows and on mysteries.




CREED


    Not with light straws, swift swept upon the stream,
      Not with light foam, blown up along the shore,
    In calm unmeasured deeps my jewels gleam,
      Hid in my heart of hearts for evermore.




RELIGION


    The one cool joy of all life's broiling day;
      The one sweet star that gleams where saints have trod;
    The one clear stream beside the dusty way
                      That leads to God.




PIETY


    A quiet garment for eternal wear,
      Designed above frail fashion's mortal dress,
    Worked with a web of faith, a woof of prayer,
      Coloured with love and fair with gentleness.




BLUE SKY

(From the French of Marcel Doran).


    O! weary waste of shoreless blue
      Where weary wing may never rest!
    O! awful brightness burning through
      The barrier of the gate of rest!
        My spirit longs to reach the strand
        Of sorrow-soothing shadowland.

    But what can this poor spirit wear
      To hide the naked wounds, pain-kissed
    Beneath the searching, ceaseless glare
      Of cloudless burning amethyst?
        Where can the sad grey spirit fly
        The unrelenting agony?

    O! for some shadow-haunted stream
      Where tired eyes might fall asleep,
    And in the peace of darkling dream
      See Sorrow's pageant homeward creep,
        Feel angel hands with white caress
        Soothe eyelids dark with heaviness!

    O! for some minster where the balm
      Of cooling touch my wounds might heal;
    Where always dwells a Sabbath calm,
      Made sweeter by the solemn peal
        Of bells, that trembling fill the air
        With noble notes of perfect prayer!




SHADOWS


    Shadows, the pale grey wings of night,
          Sweep over the sky,
      And low in the west the lingering light
          Wanes--like a sigh
      From the fervent heart of the day
          Passing away:
              Then afar
              Shineth a star.

    Shadows, the pale grey wings of Death,
          Sweep over my heart;
      And far in the dark a voice calleth,
          "Come ye, depart."
      There lingers no light from the day
          Passing away,
              But afar
              Shineth a Star!




WHEN I WAS A LAD


    When I was a lad in Petherick
      I often lay me down
    And built a beautiful city
      And called it London Town.
    I filled its streets with heroes
      Beautiful strong and wise,
    Men who were kings and princes,
      Women with kindly eyes.
    I spent the gold of the charlock
      For paving the city street;
    I saw bright flags awaving
      Over the billowing wheat;
    And loud in the brown bee's buzzing
      I heard the far-off hum
    Of the mart and the busy merchants,
      And the wharves where the big ships come.
    When I was a lad in Petherick
      I often lay me down,
    And built this wonderful city,
      And called it London Town.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Now I'm a man in London--
      Golden dreams I had
    Of a golden city of London
      Long since when I was a lad.
    Here on the long grey pavement
      I seek that city still
    But there isn't much gold in Fleet Street,
      Or glamour on Ludgate Hill.
    For the hurrying men look haggard,
      And the women have weary eyes,
    And the voices of pale-faced children
      Mingle in fretful cries.

    There's gold in the field of charlock,
      There's gold on the billowing wheat,
    And the bee sucks golden honey
      In lanes where the flowers are sweet.
    And small ships sail in the distance
      To a golden bourne in the west,
    And the gentle peace of twilight
      Is the purest gold of rest.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Dreams of the man in London!
      Useless dreams and sad,
    Of the far-off village of Petherick
      And the far-off Cornish lad.




A CALL


    Let us go out to the Garden of Pan, and hear what the Pipes are
        playing;
    Let us go out where the ancient hills mother the rivers that run to
        the sea;
    Let us go out where the wind wanders, tuning amid the trees
        swaying,
    Let us go out to the wider world where the thoughts of men are free.

    There on the hills the eye may see the changeless Beauty changing
    On sun-splashed grass and wavering corn, verdant valley and rolling
        down,
    Clouds steal up from a far-off tryst, like Titans into battalions
        ranging,
    And the splendid Sun-god marching on to crown the world with a
        golden crown.

    Here in the City the voices are hoarse. Here is calling and crying,
    Lust and longing for pride of place, vanity, pomp, and the strain of
         strife;
    Here in the City sobs arise from the battered hosts of the falling
        and dying,
    Who know not Peace, nor the End of Peace; who know not Life, nor the
         End of Life.

    Let us away from the webbed town-tangle, where monstrous Mammon is
        reigning
    Over the small cheap souls of slaves, sudden to cringe and swift to
        serve;
    Let us go out from the clanging Gates, the squalour of strife and the
        sordid straining,
    Let us go out by the open road with feet that falter not nor swerve.

    Come! and away to the Garden of Pan, and hear what the Pipes are
        playing!
    Hark to the Voice of a splendid Peace calling from hill and river
        and sea!
    Come! and away to the old Earth Mother, giver of gifts without the
        praying,
    There, in the hills Her throne is set, and the thoughts of men are
        free.




THE RETURN


    I must go down to the little grey port that watches the western sea,
    And wander again in the winding street that climbs the windy hill,
    There I shall find in a jasmined porch a door set wide for me,
            There I shall have my will.

    For a little window looks out by day on a blue unsleeping tide,
    Where brown-sailed boats sweep up and down for the harvest of the deep;
    And nightly beacons a twinkling light to wanderers scattered wide,
            And guides them home to sleep.

    And the flowing tide comes flooding in and chants around the quay
    A roaring song from the Ocean's heart of the lands that are fair and
        far;
    And the ebbing tide goes sobbing out, murmuring wistfully
            Over the harbour bar.

    There I shall stand among men who are strong with the strength of
        the wind and the wave,
    And hold simple talk with men who are wise with the wisdom of sky
        and sea;
    There I shall find in a patient endurance the sure-set faith of the
        brave,
            There shall my heart be free.




IN THE BAY


    The schooner swells its sails for the far-off seas,
      The steamer pounds proudly far away,
    But I'd sooner be ascudding in a ten-knot breeze
      In my little lug and mizzen in the bay.

    The schooner sings the wind's song from Bristol to Brazil,
      The steamer knows the whole World's way,
    But I can see a cottage on a windy hill
      From my little lug and mizzen in the bay.

    The schooner's up to hatches with her pig-iron, coal, and mud,
      The steamer, plugged with cargo, heaves away,
    But I can whiffle mackerel as through the waves I scud
      In my little lug and mizzen in the bay.

    O! living in a schooner is like living in a tree,
      And a steamer's like a big hotel to-day,
    If I had my choice of sailing, I know I'd soonest be
      In my little lug and mizzen in the bay.




SEA-FOAM


    The once-flashed beauty borne on a breaking wave
      Dies to a requiem sung on the sounding shore;
    Beyond all reach of mortal power to save
      In spray-crowned glory it passes for evermore.

    Would that the heart could capture and hold and keep
      The glory of beauty, sped in a moment's space!
    Could fix for ever the splendour and strength and sweep
      Of the wind-wild wave, in its riotous rapturous race!

    Brave brief hopes, are you not sped as the wave--
      Sped to a requiem sighed on a wreck-strewn shore?
    While memory murmurs in dreams that you once were brave,
      And sadness softly sighs that you are no more.




ECHOES


    By the way of blowing roses, in the laughter-laden years,
      Happy lads and lightsome lasses tripped the song-sweet lanes with me;
    Gladness woke the hillside echoes in the sound of ringing cheers,
      Rapture rippled on the breezes sweeping from the rippled sea.

    Happy lads have left the hillside for a bourne beyond the bay,
      Lightsome lasses know not laughter hid beneath enduring stone;
    Echoes of a strangled sorrow in the sea mist far away,
      Haunt the lanes where song is silent and the roses all are blown.




A BALLADE OF CORNWALL


    Westward where the latest sunbeam lingers on the brow of night,
      Lies a land of old romance enshrined in amethystine sea,
    Where from cairn and cromlech come, to eyes illumed by subtle sight,
      Fays and pixies, sprites and gnomes, in pomp of faery pageantry.
      Shining forms of ghostly knights, and dream-like dames of chivalry
    Gleam among the gorse and furze, and pace the reedy valleys low,
    Moving through a magic mist amid the days of long ago--
      Knights and ladies living still in trusted legendary lore
    Lilt their lovelorn lays or speed their clamorous challenge to the foe
      In the land where ceaseless surges smite the crag-crowned
         rock-strewn shore.

    Gauntly glooms Tintagel Castle from its frowning, dizzy height,
      Where the fair Iseult is crooning happy songs in thoughtless glee;
    Softly falls the creeping footstep, sudden flash the sparks of spite,
      Lifeless lies the love-led Tristram lowly at his lady's knee,
      Past the stress of wandering sorrow, past the philtred esctasy.
    Then there breaks the sound of slaughter, clanging blow on clanging
        blow,
    Clash of brand and crash of axe, while shrieks shrill up from deeps
        below,
      Where the sea's majestic music mixes with the mortal roar.
    Still the ghostly field engages, still the tides of battle flow
      In the land where ceaseless surges smite the crag-crowned
        rock-strewn shore.

    Down the rugged slopes of Rough Tor ancient heroes armour dight,
      Charge across the bridge of slaughter where the mist hangs heavily.
    There the brand Excalibur goes flashing through the last dim fight
      Wielded by the stainless king who fighting falls his wierd to dree.
      Then across the mere there come a silent, shadowy, queenly, three,
    Golden crowned, who bear him off with bitter tears of quenchless woe
    Unto valleyed Avilon, where falls not rain, nor hail, nor snow,
      Nor the faith unfaithful brings a dolorous doom for ever-more.
    Still across the dream lit waters moves the stately shadow show
      In the land where ceaseless surges smite the crag-crowned
        rock-strewn shore.


_ENVOI_


    Friend, these smiling buds of fancy you may gather as you go.
    Still the fairy bells are ringing in the evening's afterglow;
    Still the questing knights adventure over mountain, stream, and moor;
    All the ancient splendid beauty understanding hearts may know
    In the land where ceaseless surges smite the crag-crowned
        rock-strewn shore.




THE FISHERMAN'S PRAYER


    Pray God, hear our prayer;
    Keep us in Thy calm of care;
    Lead us where the haul be good,
    So our fishing find us food;
    Give us strength our nets to haul
    And safe to harbour bring us all.

    Pray God, Whose Son did know
    Fishermen and sea below,
    And Who calmed the tempest when
    Terror came to fishermen,
    Hear us when for help we call,
    And safe to harbour bring us all.

    Pray God, Who made the sea,
    Hear the fishers' prayer to Thee.
    Steer us clear of shoal and reef,
    So our boat may bear no grief;
    Bear us up through storm and squall,
    And safe to harbour bring us all.

    Pray God, Who shines afar
    Like a friendly pilot star,
    Help us set our course aright
    By Thy Holy Beacon Light,
    For the Port where live the blest,
    And in Thy Harbour give us rest.




DISTINCTIVE NEW POETRY

The notable nature of the Erskine Macdonald books may be gauged from the
following current list:


Cor Cordium

     A Book of Love Poems. By Alfred Williams. Large 8vo, cloth, 3s.
     6d. net.


Nature and other Poems

     By Alfred Williams (Author of "Songs in Wiltshire.") Large 8vo,
     cloth, 5s. net.

_The price of "Songs in Wiltshire," (published at 5s.) has been advanced
to 7s. 6d. net. "Poems in Wiltshire" has gone out of print._

_The Times._--"Wonder and astonishment are great words with great
associations. But there are few men living in England today of whom they
can be more fairly used, in their most exact and literal sense, than of
Mr. Alfred Williams...."

_The Observer._--"Those who love poetry look out for the work of Alfred
Williams. His poems have the fragrance and simplicity that come from a
strong, sincere mind that is in close touch with nature."


Enchantments

     By John Gurdon (Author of "Erinna," "Dramatic Lyrics," etc.)
     Large crown 8vo, cloth, 2s. 6d. net.

_The Times._--"Finely-coloured nature pictures or eloquent expressions
of passionate emotion, with a recurrent note of melancholy."

_Manchester Guardian._--"Mr. Gurdon's verses are always accomplished,
their rhythm is extremely sensitive and well sustained, their imagery
vivid and harmonious."

_The Outlook._--"There is no mistaking who are Mr. Gurdon's masters. He
has spent his days and nights with Swinburne and Keats, and learnt from
them the intoxication of fine rhythms and passionate phrases.... Through
all the verses in this little volume there is that thing which only the
real poets have--a sense of freedom in verse and a great joy in writing
it."


ERSKINE MACDONALD, London, W.C.




Transcriber's Note:

Punctuation has been normalized. Italics have been denoted using
underscores, and small capitals have been replaced by capitals in this
text version.

This book contains dialect.






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