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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Songs of Action
+by Arthur Conan Doyle
+(#30 in our series by Arthur Conan Doyle)
+
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+Title: Songs of Action
+
+Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+Release Date: July, 2003 [Etext #4295]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on December 31, 2001]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Songs of Action
+by Arthur Conan Doyle
+******This file should be named sgact10.txt or sgact10.zip******
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+Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk. From
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+
+
+
+SONGS OF ACTION
+
+
+
+
+Contents:
+
+
+The Song Of The Bow
+Cremona
+The Storming Party
+The Frontier Line
+Corporal Dick's Promotion
+A Forgotten Tale
+Pennarby Mine
+A Rover Chanty
+A Ballad Of The Ranks
+A Lay Of The Links
+The Dying Whip
+Master
+H.M.S. 'Foudroyant'
+The Farnshire Cup
+The Groom's Story
+With the Chiddingfolds
+A Hunting Morning
+The Old Gray Fox
+'Ware Holes
+The Home-coming of the 'Eurydice'
+The Inner Room
+The Irish Colonel
+The Blind Archer
+A Parable
+A Tragedy
+The Passing
+The Franklin's Maid
+The Old Huntsman
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF THE BOW
+
+
+
+What of the bow?
+ The bow was made in England:
+Of true wood, of yew-wood,
+ The wood of English bows;
+ So men who are free
+ Love the old yew-tree
+And the land where the yew-tree grows.
+
+What of the cord?
+ The cord was made in England:
+A rough cord, a tough cord,
+ A cord that bowmen love;
+ And so we will sing
+ Of the hempen string
+And the land where the cord was wove.
+
+What of the shaft?
+ The shaft was cut in England:
+A long shaft, a strong shaft,
+ Barbed and trim and true;
+ So we'll drink all together
+ To the grey goose-feather
+And the land where the grey goose flew.
+
+What of the mark?
+ Ah, seek it not in England,
+A bold mark, our old mark
+ Is waiting over-sea.
+ When the strings harp in chorus,
+ And the lion flag is o'er us,
+It is there that our mark will be.
+
+What of the men?
+ The men were bred in England:
+The bowmen--the yeomen,
+ The lads of dale and fell.
+ Here's to you--and to you!
+ To the hearts that are true
+And the land where the true hearts dwell.
+
+
+
+CREMONA
+
+
+
+[The French Army, including a part of the Irish Brigade, under
+Marshal Villeroy, held the fortified town of Cremona during the
+winter of 1702. Prince Eugene, with the Imperial Army, surprised it
+one morning, and, owing to the treachery of a priest, occupied the
+whole city before the alarm was given. Villeroy was captured,
+together with many of the French garrison. The Irish, however,
+consisting of the regiments of Dillon and of Burke, held a fort
+commanding the river gate, and defended themselves all day, in spite
+of Prince Eugene's efforts to win them over to his cause. Eventually
+Eugene, being unable to take the post, was compelled to withdraw from
+the city.]
+
+The Grenadiers of Austria are proper men and tall;
+The Grenadiers of Austria have scaled the city wall;
+ They have marched from far away
+ Ere the dawning of the day,
+And the morning saw them masters of Cremona.
+
+There's not a man to whisper, there's not a horse to neigh;
+Of the footmen of Lorraine and the riders of Dupres,
+ They have crept up every street,
+ In the market-place they meet,
+They are holding every vantage in Cremona.
+
+The Marshal Villeroy he has started from his bed;
+The Marshal Villeroy has no wig upon his head;
+ 'I have lost my men!' quoth he,
+ 'And my men they have lost me,
+And I sorely fear we both have lost Cremona.'
+
+Prince Eugene of Austria is in the market-place;
+Prince Eugene of Austria has smiles upon his face;
+ Says he, 'Our work is done,
+ For the Citadel is won,
+And the black and yellow flag flies o'er Cremona.'
+
+Major Dan O'Mahony is in the barrack square,
+And just six hundred Irish lads are waiting for him there;
+ Says he, 'Come in your shirt,
+ And you won't take any hurt,
+For the morning air is pleasant in Cremona.'
+
+Major Dan O'Mahony is at the barrack gate,
+And just six hundred Irish lads will neither stay nor wait;
+ There's Dillon and there's Burke,
+ And there'll be some bloody work
+Ere the Kaiserlics shall boast they hold Cremona.
+
+Major Dan O'Mahony has reached the river fort,
+And just six hundred Irish lads are joining in the sport;
+ 'Come, take a hand!' says he,
+ 'And if you will stand by me,
+Then it's glory to the man who takes Cremona!'
+
+Prince Eugene of Austria has frowns upon his face,
+And loud he calls his Galloper of Irish blood and race:
+ 'MacDonnell, ride, I pray,
+ To your countrymen, and say
+That only they are left in all Cremona!'
+
+MacDonnell he has reined his mare beside the river dyke,
+And he has tied the parley flag upon a sergeant's pike;
+ Six companies were there
+ From Limerick and Clare,
+The last of all the guardians of Cremona.
+
+'Now, Major Dan O'Mahony, give up the river gate,
+Or, Major Dan O'Mahony, you'll find it is too late;
+ For when I gallop back
+ 'Tis the signal for attack,
+And no quarter for the Irish in Cremona!'
+
+And Major Dan he laughed: 'Faith, if what you say be true,
+And if they will not come until they hear again from you,
+ Then there will be no attack,
+ For you're never going back,
+And we'll keep you snug and safely in Cremona.'
+
+All the weary day the German stormers came,
+All the weary day they were faced by fire and flame,
+ They have filled the ditch with dead,
+ And the river's running red;
+But they cannot win the gateway of Cremona.
+
+All the weary day, again, again, again,
+The horsemen of Dupres and the footmen of Lorraine,
+ Taafe and Herberstein,
+ And the riders of the Rhine;
+It's a mighty price they're paying for Cremona.
+
+Time and time they came with the deep-mouthed German roar,
+Time and time they broke like the wave upon the shore;
+ For better men were there
+ From Limerick and Clare,
+And who will take the gateway of Cremona?
+
+Prince Eugene has watched, and he gnaws his nether lip;
+Prince Eugene has cursed as he saw his chances slip:
+ 'Call off! Call off!' he cried,
+ 'It is nearing eventide,
+And I fear our work is finished in Cremona.'
+
+Says Wauchop to McAulliffe, 'Their fire is growing slack.'
+Says Major Dan O'Mahony, 'It is their last attack;
+ But who will stop the game
+ While there's light to play the same,
+And to walk a short way with them from Cremona?'
+
+And so they snarl behind them, and beg them turn and come,
+They have taken Neuberg's standard, they have taken Diak's drum;
+ And along the winding Po,
+ Beard on shoulder, stern and slow
+The Kaiserlics are riding from Cremona.
+
+Just two hundred Irish lads are shouting on the wall;
+Four hundred more are lying who can hear no slogan call;
+ But what's the odds of that,
+ For it's all the same to Pat
+If he pays his debt in Dublin or Cremona.
+
+Says General de Vaudray, 'You've done a soldier's work!
+And every tongue in France shall talk of Dillon and of Burke!
+ Ask what you will this day,
+ And be it what it may,
+It is granted to the heroes of Cremona.'
+
+'Why, then,' says Dan O'Mahony, 'one favour we entreat,
+We were called a little early, and our toilet's not complete.
+ We've no quarrel with the shirt,
+ But the breeches wouldn't hurt,
+For the evening air is chilly in Cremona.'
+
+
+
+THE STORMING PARTY
+
+
+
+Said Paul Leroy to Barrow,
+'Though the breach is steep and narrow,
+ If we only gain the summit
+ Then it's odds we hold the fort.
+I have ten and you have twenty,
+And the thirty should be plenty,
+With Henderson and Henty
+ And McDermott in support.'
+
+Said Barrow to Leroy,
+'It's a solid job, my boy,
+ For they've flanked it, and they've banked it,
+ And they've bored it with a mine.
+But it's only fifty paces
+Ere we look them in the faces;
+And the men are in their places,
+ With their toes upon the line.'
+
+Said Paul Leroy to Barrow,
+'See that first ray, like an arrow,
+ How it tinges all the fringes
+ Of the sullen drifting skies.
+They told me to begin it
+At five-thirty to the minute,
+And at thirty-one I'm in it,
+ Or my sub will get his rise.
+
+'So we'll wait the signal rocket,
+Till . . . Barrow, show that locket,
+That turquoise-studded locket,
+Which you slipped from out your pocket
+ And are pressing with a kiss!
+ Turquoise-studded, spiral-twisted,
+It is hers! And I had missed it
+From her chain; and you have kissed it:
+ Barrow, villain, what is this?'
+
+'Leroy, I had a warning,
+That my time has come this morning,
+So I speak with frankness, scorning
+ To deny the thing that's true.
+Yes, it's Amy's, is the trinket,
+Little turquoise-studded trinket,
+Not her gift--oh, never think it!
+ For her thoughts were all for you.
+
+'As we danced I gently drew it
+From her chain--she never knew it
+ But I love her--yes, I love her:
+ I am candid, I confess.
+But I never told her, never,
+For I knew 'twas vain endeavour,
+And she loved you--loved you ever,
+ Would to God she loved you less!'
+
+'Barrow, Barrow, you shall pay me!
+Me, your comrade, to betray me!
+ Well I know that little Amy
+ Is as true as wife can be.
+She to give this love-badged locket!
+She had rather . . . Ha, the rocket!
+Hi, McDougall! Sound the bugle!
+ Yorkshires, Yorkshires, follow me!'
+
+* * *
+
+Said Paul Leroy to Amy,
+'Well, wifie, you may blame me,
+For my passion overcame me,
+ When he told me of his shame;
+But when I saw him lying,
+Dead amid a ring of dying,
+Why, poor devil, I was trying
+ To forget, and not to blame.
+
+'And this locket, I unclasped it
+From the fingers that still grasped it:
+He told me how he got it,
+ How he stole it in a valse.'
+And she listened leaden-hearted:
+Oh, the weary day they parted!
+For she loved him--yes, she loved him -
+For his youth and for his truth,
+ And for those dying words, so false.
+
+
+
+THE FRONTIER LINE
+
+
+
+What marks the frontier line?
+ Thou man of India, say!
+Is it the Himalayas sheer,
+The rocks and valleys of Cashmere,
+Or Indus as she seeks the south
+From Attoch to the fivefold mouth?
+ 'Not that! Not that!'
+ Then answer me, I pray!
+What marks the frontier line?
+
+What marks the frontier line?
+ Thou man of Burmah, speak!
+Is it traced from Mandalay,
+And down the marches of Cathay,
+From Bhamo south to Kiang-mai,
+And where the buried rubies lie?
+ 'Not that! Not that!'
+ Then tell me what I seek:
+What marks the frontier line?
+
+What marks the frontier line?
+ Thou Africander, say!
+Is it shown by Zulu kraal,
+By Drakensberg or winding Vaal,
+Or where the Shire waters seek
+Their outlet east at Mozambique?
+ 'Not that! Not that!
+ There is a surer way
+To mark the frontier line.'
+
+What marks the frontier line?
+ Thou man of Egypt, tell!
+Is it traced on Luxor's sand,
+Where Karnak's painted pillars stand,
+Or where the river runs between
+The Ethiop and Bishareen?
+ 'Not that! Not that!
+ By neither stream nor well
+We mark the frontier line.
+
+'But be it east or west,
+ One common sign we bear,
+The tongue may change, the soil, the sky,
+But where your British brothers lie,
+The lonely cairn, the nameless grave,
+Still fringe the flowing Saxon wave.
+ 'Tis that! 'Tis where
+ THEY lie--the men who placed it there,
+That marks the frontier line.'
+
+
+
+CORPORAL DICK'S PROMOTION
+A BALLAD OF '82
+
+
+
+The Eastern day was well-nigh o'er
+When, parched with thirst and travel sore,
+Two of McPherson's flanking corps
+ Across the Desert were tramping.
+They had wandered off from the beaten track
+And now were wearily harking back,
+Ever staring round for the signal jack
+ That marked their comrades camping.
+
+The one was Corporal Robert Dick,
+Bearded and burly, short and thick,
+Rough of speech and in temper quick,
+ A hard-faced old rapscallion.
+The other, fresh from the barrack square,
+Was a raw recruit, smooth-cheeked and fair
+Half grown, half drilled, with the weedy air
+ Of a draft from the home battalion.
+
+Weary and parched and hunger-torn,
+They had wandered on from early morn,
+And the young boy-soldier limped forlorn,
+ Now stumbling and now falling.
+Around the orange sand-curves lay,
+Flecked with boulders, black or grey,
+Death-silent, save that far away
+ A kite was shrilly calling.
+
+A kite? Was THAT a kite? The yell
+That shrilly rose and faintly fell?
+No kite's, and yet the kite knows well
+ The long-drawn wild halloo.
+And right athwart the evening sky
+The yellow sand-spray spurtled high,
+And shrill and shriller swelled the cry
+ Of 'Allah! Allahu!'
+
+The Corporal peered at the crimson West,
+Hid his pipe in his khaki vest.
+Growled out an oath and onward pressed,
+ Still glancing over his shoulder.
+'Bedouins, mate!' he curtly said;
+'We'll find some work for steel and lead,
+And maybe sleep in a sandy bed,
+ Before we're one hour older.
+
+'But just one flutter before we're done.
+Stiffen your lip and stand, my son;
+We'll take this bloomin' circus on:
+ Ball-cartridge load! Now, steady!'
+With a curse and a prayer the two faced round,
+Dogged and grim they stood their ground,
+And their breech-blocks snapped with a crisp clean sound
+ As the rifles sprang to the 'ready.'
+
+Alas for the Emir Ali Khan!
+A hundred paces before his clan,
+That ebony steed of the prophet's breed
+ Is the foal of death and of danger.
+A spurt of fire, a gasp of pain,
+A blueish blurr on the yellow plain,
+The chief was down, and his bridle rein
+ Was in the grip of the stranger.
+
+With the light of hope on his rugged face,
+The Corporal sprang to the dead man's place,
+One prick with the steel, one thrust with the heel,
+ And where was the man to outride him?
+A grip of his knees, a toss of his rein,
+He was settling her down to her gallop again,
+When he stopped, for he heard just one faltering word
+ From the young recruit beside him.
+
+One faltering word from pal to pal,
+But it found the heart of the Corporal.
+He had sprung to the sand, he had lent him a hand,
+ 'Up, mate! They'll be 'ere in a minute;
+Off with you! No palaver! Go!
+I'll bide be'ind and run this show.
+Promotion has been cursed slow,
+ And this is my chance to win it.'
+
+Into the saddle he thrust him quick,
+Spurred the black mare with a bayonet prick.
+Watched her gallop with plunge and with kick
+ Away o'er the desert careering.
+Then he turned with a softened face,
+And loosened the strap of his cartridge-case,
+While his thoughts flew back to the dear old place
+ In the sunny Hampshire clearing.
+
+The young boy-private, glancing back,
+Saw the Bedouins' wild attack,
+And heard the sharp Martini crack.
+ But as he gazed, already
+The fierce fanatic Arab band
+Was closing in on every hand,
+Until one tawny swirl of sand,
+ Concealed them in its eddy.
+
+* * *
+
+A squadron of British horse that night,
+Galloping hard in the shadowy light,
+Came on the scene of that last stern fight,
+ And found the Corporal lying
+Silent and grim on the trampled sand,
+His rifle grasped in his stiffened hand,
+With the warrior pride of one who died
+ 'Mid a ring of the dead and the dying.
+
+And still when twilight shadows fall,
+After the evening bugle call,
+In bivouac or in barrack-hall,
+His comrades speak of the Corporal,
+ His death and his devotion.
+And there are some who like to say
+That perhaps a hidden meaning lay
+In the words he spoke, and that the day
+When his rough bold spirit passed away
+ WAS the day that he won promotion.
+
+
+
+A FORGOTTEN TALE
+
+
+
+[The scene of this ancient fight, recorded by Froissart, is still
+called 'Altura de los Inglesos.' Five hundred years later
+Wellington's soldiers were fighting on the same ground.]
+
+'Say, what saw you on the hill,
+ Campesino Garcia?'
+'I saw my brindled heifer there,
+A trail of bowmen, spent and bare,
+And a little man on a sorrel mare
+ Riding slow before them.'
+
+'Say, what saw you in the vale,
+ Campesino Garcia?'
+'There I saw my lambing ewe
+And an army riding through,
+Thick and brave the pennons flew
+ From the lances o'er them.'
+
+'Then what saw you on the hill,
+ Campesino Garcia?'
+'I saw beside the milking byre,
+White with want and black with mire,
+The little man with eyes afire
+ Marshalling his bowmen.'
+
+'Then what saw you in the vale,
+ Campesino Garcia?'
+'There I saw my bullocks twain,
+And amid my uncut grain
+All the hardy men of Spain
+ Spurring for their foemen.'
+
+'Nay, but there is more to tell,
+ Campesino Garcia!'
+'I could not bide the end to view;
+I had graver things to do
+Tending on the lambing ewe
+ Down among the clover.'
+
+'Ah, but tell me what you heard,
+ Campesino Garcia!'
+'Shouting from the mountain-side,
+Shouting until eventide;
+But it dwindled and it died
+ Ere milking time was over.'
+
+'Nay, but saw you nothing more,
+ Campesino Garcia?'
+'Yes, I saw them lying there,
+The little man and sorrel mare;
+And in their ranks the bowmen fair,
+ With their staves before them.'
+
+'And the hardy men of Spain,
+ Campesino Garcia?'
+'Hush! but we are Spanish too;
+More I may not say to you:
+May God's benison, like dew,
+ Gently settle o'er them.'
+
+
+
+PENNARBY MINE
+
+
+
+Pennarby shaft is dark and steep,
+Eight foot wide, eight hundred deep.
+Stout the bucket and tough the cord,
+Strong as the arm of Winchman Ford.
+ 'Never look down!
+ Stick to the line!'
+That was the saying at Pennarby mine.
+
+A stranger came to Pennarby shaft.
+Lord, to see how the miners laughed!
+White in the collar and stiff in the hat,
+With his patent boots and his silk cravat,
+ Picking his way,
+ Dainty and fine,
+Stepping on tiptoe to Pennarby mine.
+
+Touring from London, so he said.
+Was it copper they dug for? or gold? or lead?
+Where did they find it? How did it come?
+If he tried with a shovel might HE get some?
+ Stooping so much
+ Was bad for the spine;
+And wasn't it warmish in Pennarby mine?
+
+'Twas like two worlds that met that day -
+The world of work and the world of play;
+And the grimy lads from the reeking shaft
+Nudged each other and grinned and chaffed.
+ 'Got 'em all out!'
+ 'A cousin of mine!'
+So ran the banter at Pennarby mine.
+
+And Carnbrae Bob, the Pennarby wit,
+Told him the facts about the pit:
+How they bored the shaft till the brimstone smell
+Warned them off from tapping--well,
+ He wouldn't say what,
+ But they took it as sign
+To dig no deeper in Pennarby mine.
+
+Then leaning over and peering in,
+He was pointing out what he said was tin
+In the ten-foot lode--a crash! a jar!
+A grasping hand and a splintered bar.
+ Gone in his strength,
+ With the lips that laughed -
+Oh, the pale faces round Pennarby shaft!
+
+Far down on a narrow ledge,
+They saw him cling to the crumbling edge.
+'Wait for the bucket! Hi, man! Stay!
+That rope ain't safe! It's worn away!
+ He's taking his chance,
+ Slack out the line!
+Sweet Lord be with him!' cried Pennarby mine.
+
+'He's got him! He has him! Pull with a will!
+Thank God! He's over and breathing still.
+And he--Lord's sakes now! What's that? Well!
+Blowed if it ain't our London swell.
+ Your heart is right
+ If your coat IS fine:
+Give us your hand!' cried Pennarby mine.
+
+
+
+A ROVER CHANTY
+
+
+
+A trader sailed from Stepney town -
+Wake her up! Shake her up! Try her with the mainsail!
+A trader sailed from Stepney town
+With a keg full of gold and a velvet gown:
+ Ho, the bully rover Jack,
+ Waiting with his yard aback
+Out upon the Lowland sea!
+
+The trader he had a daughter fair -
+Wake her up! Shake her up! Try her with the foresail
+The trader he had a daughter fair,
+She had gold in her ears, and gold in her hair:
+ All for bully rover Jack,
+ Waiting with his yard aback,
+Out upon the Lowland sea!
+
+'Alas the day, oh daughter mine!' -
+Shake her up! Wake her up! Try her with the topsail!
+'Alas the day, oh daughter mine!
+Yon red, red flag is a fearsome sign!'
+ Ho, the bully rover Jack,
+ Reaching on the weather tack,
+Out upon the Lowland sea!
+
+'A fearsome flag!' the maiden cried -
+Wake her up! Shake her up! Try her with the jibsail!
+'A fearsome flag!' the maiden cried,
+But comelier men I never have spied!'
+ Ho, the bully rover Jack,
+ Reaching on the weather tack,
+Out upon the Lowland sea!
+
+There's a wooden path that the rovers know -
+Wake her up! Shake her up! Try her with the headsails!
+There's a wooden path that the rovers know,
+Where none come back, though many must go:
+ Ho, the bully rover Jack,
+ Lying with his yard aback,
+Out upon the Lowland sea!
+
+Where is the trader of Stepney town? -
+Wake her up! Shake her up! Every stick a-bending!
+Where is the trader of Stepney town?
+There's gold on the capstan, and blood on the gown:
+ Ho for bully rover Jack,
+ Waiting with his yard aback,
+Out upon the Lowland sea!
+
+Where is the maiden who knelt at his side? -
+Wake her up! Shake her up! Every stitch a-drawing!
+Where is the maiden who knelt at his side?
+We gowned her in scarlet, and chose her our bride:
+ Ho, the bully rover Jack,
+ Reaching on the weather tack,
+Right across the Lowland sea!
+
+So it's up and its over to Stornoway Bay,
+Pack it on! Crack it on! Try her with the stunsails!
+It's off on a bowline to Stornoway Bay,
+Where the liquor is good and the lasses are gay:
+ Waiting for their bully Jack,
+ Watching for him sailing back,
+Right across the Lowland sea.
+
+
+
+A BALLAD OF THE RANKS
+
+
+
+Who carries the gun?
+ A lad from over the Tweed.
+Then let him go, for well we know
+ He comes of a soldier breed.
+So drink together to rock and heather,
+ Out where the red deer run,
+And stand aside for Scotland's pride -
+ The man that carries the gun!
+ For the Colonel rides before,
+ The Major's on the flank,
+ The Captains and the Adjutant
+ Are in the foremost rank.
+ But when it's 'Action front!'
+ And fighting's to be done,
+ Come one, come all, you stand or fall
+ By the man who holds the gun.
+
+Who carries the gun?
+ A lad from a Yorkshire dale.
+Then let him go, for well we know
+ The heart that never will fail.
+Here's to the fire of Lancashire,
+ And here's to her soldier son!
+For the hard-bit north has sent him forth -
+ The lad that carries the gun.
+
+Who carries the gun?
+ A lad from a Midland shire.
+Then let him go, for well we know
+ He comes of an English sire.
+Here's a glass to a Midland lass,
+ And each can choose the one,
+But east and west we claim the best
+ For the man that carries the gun.
+
+Who carries the gun?
+ A lad from the hills of Wales.
+Then let him go, for well we know,
+ That Taffy is hard as nails.
+There are several ll's in the place where he dwells,
+ And of w's more than one,
+With a 'Llan' and a 'pen,' but it breeds good men,
+ And it's they who carry the gun.
+
+Who carries the gun?
+ A lad from the windy west.
+Then let him go, for well we know
+ That he is one of the best.
+There's Bristol rough, and Gloucester tough,
+ And Devon yields to none.
+Or you may get in Somerset
+ Your lad to carry the gun.
+
+Who carries the gun?
+ A lad from London town.
+Then let him go, for well we know
+ The stuff that never backs down.
+He has learned to joke at the powder smoke,
+ For he is the fog-smoke's son,
+And his heart is light and his pluck is right -
+ The man who carries the gun.
+
+Who carries the gun?
+ A lad from the Emerald Isle.
+Then let him go, for well we know,
+ We've tried him many a while.
+We've tried him east, we've tried him west,
+ We've tried him sea and land,
+But the man to beat old Erin's best
+ Has never yet been planned.
+
+Who carries the gun?
+ It's you, and you, and you;
+So let us go, and we won't say no
+ If they give us a job to do.
+Here we stand with a cross-linked hand,
+ Comrades every one;
+So one last cup, and drink it up
+ To the man who carries the gun!
+ For the Colonel rides before,
+ The Major's on the flank,
+ The Captains and the Adjutant
+ Are in the foremost rank.
+ And when it's 'Action front!'
+ And there's fighting to be done,
+ Come one, come all, you stand or fall
+ By the man who holds the gun.
+
+
+
+A LAY OF THE LINKS
+
+
+
+It's up and away from our work to-day,
+ For the breeze sweeps over the down;
+And it's hey for a game where the gorse blossoms flame,
+ And the bracken is bronzing to brown.
+With the turf 'neath our tread and the blue overhead,
+ And the song of the lark in the whin;
+There's the flag and the green, with the bunkers between -
+ Now will you be over or in?
+
+The doctor may come, and we'll teach him to know
+ A tee where no tannin can lurk;
+The soldier may come, and we'll promise to show
+ Some hazards a soldier may shirk;
+The statesman may joke, as he tops every stroke,
+ That at last he is high in his aims;
+And the clubman will stand with a club in his hand
+ That is worth every club in St. James'.
+
+The palm and the leather come rarely together,
+ Gripping the driver's haft,
+And it's good to feel the jar of the steel
+ And the spring of the hickory shaft.
+Why trouble or seek for the praise of a clique?
+ A cleek here is common to all;
+And the lie that might sting is a very small thing
+ When compared with the lie of the ball.
+
+Come youth and come age, from the study or stage,
+ From Bar or from Bench--high and low!
+A green you must use as a cure for the blues -
+ You drive them away as you go.
+We're outward bound on a long, long round,
+ And it's time to be up and away:
+If worry and sorrow come back with the morrow,
+ At least we'll be happy to-day.
+
+
+
+THE DYING WHIP
+
+
+
+It came from gettin' 'eated, that was 'ow the thing begun,
+And 'ackin' back to kennels from a ninety-minute run;
+'I guess I've copped brownchitis,' says I to brother Jack,
+An' then afore I knowed it I was down upon my back.
+
+At night there came a sweatin' as left me deadly weak,
+And my throat was sort of tickly an' it 'urt me for to speak;
+An' then there came an 'ackin' cough as wouldn't leave alone,
+An' then afore I knowed it I was only skin and bone
+
+I never was a 'eavy weight. I scaled at seven four,
+An' rode at eight, or maybe at just a trifle more;
+And now I'll stake my davy I wouldn't scale at five,
+And I'd 'old my own at catch-weights with the skinniest jock alive.
+
+And the doctor says the reason why I sit an' cough an wheeze
+Is all along o' varmint, like the cheese-mites in the cheese;
+The smallest kind o' varmint, but varmint all the same,
+Microscopes or somethin'--I forget the varmints' name.
+
+But I knows as I'm a goner. They never said as much,
+But I reads the people's faces, and I knows as I am such;
+Well, there's 'Urst to mind the 'orses and the 'ounds can look to
+Jack,
+Though 'e never was a patch on me in 'andlin' of a pack.
+
+You'll maybe think I'm boastin', but you'll find they all agree
+That there's not a whip in Surrey as can 'andle 'ounds like me;
+For I knew 'em all from puppies, and I'd tell 'em without fail -
+If I seed a tail a-waggin', I could tell who wagged the tail.
+
+And voices--why, Lor' love you, it's more than I can 'elp,
+It just comes kind of natural to know each whine an' yelp;
+You might take them twenty couple where you will and let 'em run,
+An' I'd listen by the coverside and name 'em one by one.
+
+I say it's kind of natural, for since I was a brat
+I never cared for readin' books, or fancy things like that;
+But give me 'ounds and 'orses an' I was quite content,
+An' I loved to ear 'em talkin' and to wonder what they meant.
+
+And when the 'ydrophoby came five year ago next May,
+When Nailer was be'avin' in a most owdacious way,
+I fixed 'im so's 'e couldn't bite, my 'ands on neck an' back,
+An' I 'eaved 'im from the kennels, and they say I saved the pack.
+
+An' when the Master 'eard of it, 'e up an' says, says 'e,
+'If that chap were a soldier man, they'd give 'im the V.C.'
+Which is some kind a' medal what they give to soldier men;
+An' Master said if I were such I would 'a' got it then.
+
+Parson brought 'is Bible and come to read to me;
+''Ave what you like, there's everythink within this Book,' says 'e.
+Says I, 'They've left the 'orses out!' Says 'e, 'You are mistook;'
+An' 'e up an' read a 'eap of things about them from the Book.
+
+And some of it amazin' fine; although I'm fit to swear
+No 'orse would ever say 'Ah, ah!' same as they said it there.
+Per'aps it was an 'Ebrew 'orse the chap 'ad in his mind,
+But I never 'eard an English 'orse say nothin' of the kind.
+
+Parson is a good 'un. I've known 'im from a lad;
+'Twas me as taught 'im ridin', an' 'e rides uncommon bad;
+And he says--But 'ark an' listen! There's an 'orn! I 'eard it blow;
+Pull the blind from off the winder! Prop me up, and 'old me so.
+
+They're drawin' the black 'anger, just aside the Squire's grounds.
+'Ark and listen! 'Ark and listen! There's the yappin' of the
+'ounds:
+There's Fanny and Beltinker, and I 'ear old Boxer call;
+You see I wasn't boastin' when I said I knew 'em all.
+
+Let me sit an' 'old the bedrail! Now I see 'em as they pass:
+There's Squire upon the Midland mare, a good 'un on the grass;
+But this is closish country, and you wants a clever 'orse
+When 'alf the time you're in the woods an' 'alf among the gorse.
+
+'Ark to Jack a'ollering--a-bleatin' like a lamb.
+You wouldn't think it now, perhaps, to see the thing I am;
+But there was a time the ladies used to linger at the meet
+Just to 'ear me callin' in the woods: my callin' was so sweet.
+
+I see the crossroads corner, with the field awaitin' there,
+There's Purcell on 'is piebald 'orse, an' Doctor on the mare,
+And the Master on 'is iron grey; she isn't much to look,
+But I seed 'er do clean twenty foot across the 'eathly brook.
+
+There's Captain Kane an' McIntyre an' 'alf a dozen more,
+And two or three are 'untin' whom I never seed afore;
+Likely-lookin' chaps they be, well groomed and 'orsed and dressed -
+I wish they could 'a seen the pack when it was at its best.
+
+It's a check, and they are drawin' down the coppice for a scent,
+You can see as they've been runnin', for the 'orses they are spent;
+I'll lay the fox will break this way, downwind as sure as fate,
+An' if he does you'll see the field come poundin' through our gate.
+
+But, Maggie, what's that slinkin' beside the cover?--See!
+Now it's in the clover field, and goin' fast an' free,
+It's 'im, and they don't see 'im. It's 'im! 'Alloo! 'Alloo!
+My broken wind won't run to it--I'll leave the job to you.
+
+There now I 'ear the music, and I know they're on his track;
+Oh, watch 'em, Maggie, watch 'em! Ain't they just a lovely pack!
+I've nursed 'em through distemper, an' I've trained an' broke 'em in,
+An' my 'eart it just goes out to them as if they was my kin.
+
+Well, all things 'as an endin', as I've 'eard the parson say,
+The 'orse is cast, an' the 'ound is past, an' the 'unter 'as 'is day;
+But my day was yesterday, so lay me down again.
+You can draw the curtain, Maggie, right across the winder pane.
+
+
+
+MASTER
+
+
+
+ Master went a-hunting,
+ When the leaves were falling;
+ We saw him on the bridle path,
+ We heard him gaily calling.
+'Oh master, master, come you back,
+For I have dreamed a dream so black!'
+ A glint of steel from bit and heel,
+ The chestnut cantered faster;
+ A red flash seen amid the green,
+ And so good-bye to master.
+
+ Master came from hunting,
+ Two silent comrades bore him;
+ His eyes were dim, his face was white,
+ The mare was led before him.
+'Oh, master, master, is it thus
+That you have come again to us?'
+ I held my lady's ice-cold hand,
+ They bore the hurdle past her;
+ Why should they go so soft and slow?
+ It matters not to master.
+
+
+
+H.M.S. 'FOUDROYANT'
+
+
+
+[Being an humble address to Her Majesty's Naval advisers, who sold
+Nelson's old flagship to the Germans for a thousand pounds.]
+
+Who says the Nation's purse is lean,
+ Who fears for claim or bond or debt,
+When all the glories that have been
+ Are scheduled as a cash asset?
+If times are black and trade is slack,
+ If coal and cotton fail at last,
+We've something left to barter yet -
+ Our glorious past.
+
+There's many a crypt in which lies hid
+ The dust of statesman or of king;
+There's Shakespeare's home to raise a bid,
+ And Milton's house its price would bring.
+What for the sword that Cromwell drew?
+ What for Prince Edward's coat of mail?
+What for our Saxon Alfred's tomb?
+ They're all for sale!
+
+And stone and marble may be sold
+ Which serve no present daily need;
+There's Edward's Windsor, labelled old,
+ And Wolsey's palace, guaranteed.
+St. Clement Danes and fifty fanes,
+ The Tower and the Temple grounds;
+How much for these? Just price them, please,
+ In British pounds.
+
+You hucksters, have you still to learn,
+ The things which money will not buy?
+Can you not read that, cold and stern
+ As we may be, there still does lie
+Deep in our hearts a hungry love
+ For what concerns our island story?
+We sell our work--perchance our lives,
+ But not our glory.
+
+Go barter to the knacker's yard
+ The steed that has outlived its time!
+Send hungry to the pauper ward
+ The man who served you in his prime!
+But when you touch the Nation's store,
+ Be broad your mind and tight your grip.
+Take heed! And bring us back once more
+ Our Nelson's ship.
+
+And if no mooring can be found
+ In all our harbours near or far,
+Then tow the old three-decker round
+ To where the deep-sea soundings are;
+There, with her pennon flying clear,
+ And with her ensign lashed peak high,
+Sink her a thousand fathoms sheer.
+ There let her lie!
+
+
+
+THE FARNSHIRE CUP
+
+
+
+Christopher Davis was up upon Mavis
+ And Sammy MacGregor on Flo,
+Jo Chauncy rode Spider, the rankest outsider,
+ But HE'D make a wooden horse go.
+There was Robin and Leah and Boadicea,
+ And Chesterfield's Son of the Sea;
+And Irish Nuneaton, who never was beaten,
+ They backed her at seven to three.
+
+The course was the devil! A start on the level,
+ And then a stiff breather uphill;
+A bank at the top with a four-foot drop,
+ And a bullfinch down by the mill.
+A stretch of straight from the Whittlesea gate,
+ Then up and down and up;
+And the mounts that stay through Farnshire clay
+ May bid for the Farnshire Cup.
+
+The tipsters were touting, the bookies were shouting
+ 'Bar one, bar one, bar one!'
+With a glint and a glimmer of silken shimmer
+ The field shone bright in the sun,
+When Farmer Brown came riding down:
+ 'I hain't much time to spare,
+But I've entered her name, so I'll play out the game,
+ On the back o' my old gray mare.
+
+'You never would think 'er a thoroughbred clinker,
+ There's never a judge that would;
+Each leg be'ind 'as a splint, you'll find,
+ And the fore are none too good.
+She roars a bit, and she don't look fit,
+ She's moulted 'alf 'er 'air;
+But--' He smiled in a way that seemed to say,
+ That he knew that old gray mare.
+
+And the bookies laughed and the bookies chaffed,
+ 'Who backs the mare?' cried they.
+'A hundred to one!' 'It's done--and done!'
+ 'We'll take that price all day.'
+'What if the mare is shedding hair!
+ What if her eye is wild!
+We read her worth and her pedigree birth
+ In the smile that her owner smiled.'
+
+And the whisper grew and the whisper flew
+ That she came of Isonomy stock.
+'Fifty to one!' 'It's done--and done!
+ Look at her haunch and hock!
+Ill-groomed! Why yes, but one may guess
+ That that is her owner's guile.'
+Ah, Farmer Brown, the sharps from town,
+ Have read your simple smile!
+
+They've weighed him in. 'Now lose or win,
+ I've money at stake this day;
+Gee-long, my sweet, and if we're beat,
+ We'll both do all we may!'
+He joins the rest, they line abreast,
+ 'Back Leah! Mavis up!'
+The flag is dipped and the field is slipped,
+ Full split for the Farnshire Cup.
+
+Christopher Davis is leading on Mavis,
+ Spider is waiting on Flo;
+Boadicea is gaining on Leah,
+ Irish Nuneaton lies low;
+Robin is tailing, his wind has been failing,
+ Son of the Sea's going fast:
+So crack on the pace for it's anyone's race,
+ And the winner's the horse that can last.
+
+Chestnut and bay, and sorrel and gray,
+ See how they glimmer and gleam!
+Bending and straining, and losing and gaining,
+ Silk jackets flutter and stream;
+They are over the grass as the cloud shadows pass,
+ They are up to the fence at the top;
+It's 'hey then!' and over, and into the clover,
+ There wasn't one slip at the drop.
+
+They are all going still; they are round by the mill,
+ They are down by the Whittlesea gate;
+Leah's complaining, and Mavis is gaining,
+ And Flo's catching up in the straight.
+Robin's gone wrong, but the Spider runs strong,
+ He sticks to the leader like wax;
+An utter outsider, but look at his rider -
+ Jo Chauncy, the pick of the cracks!
+
+Robin was tailing and pecked at a paling,
+ Leah's gone weak in her feet;
+Boadicea came down at the railing,
+ Son of the Sea is dead beat.
+Leather to leather, they're pounding together,
+ Three of them all in a row;
+And Irish Nuneaton, who never was beaten,
+ Is level with Spider and Flo.
+
+It's into the straight from the Whittlesea gate,
+ Clean galloping over the green,
+But four foot high the hurdles lie
+ With a sunken ditch between.
+'Tis a bit of a test for a beast at its best,
+ And the devil and all at its worst;
+But it's clear run in with the Cup to win
+ For the horse that is over it first.
+
+So try it, my beauties, and fly it, my beauties,
+ Spider, Nuneaton, and Flo;
+With a trip and a blunder there's one of them under,
+ Hark to it crashing below!
+Is it the brown or the sorrel that's down?
+ The brown! It is Flo who is in!
+And Spider with Chauncy, the pick of the fancy,
+ Is going full split for a win.
+
+'Spider is winning!' 'Jo Chauncy is winning!'
+ 'He's winning! He's winning! Bravo!'
+The bookies are raving, the ladies are waving,
+ The Stand is all shouting for Jo.
+The horse is clean done, but the race may be won
+ By the Newmarket lad on his back;
+For the fire of the rider may bring an outsider
+ Ahead of a thoroughbred crack.
+
+'Spider is winning!' 'Jo Chauncy is winning!'
+ It swells like the roar of the sea;
+But Jo hears the drumming of somebody coming,
+ And sees a lean head by his knee.
+'Nuneaton! Nuneaton! The Spider is beaten!'
+ It is but a spurt at the most;
+For lose it or win it, they have but a minute
+ Before they are up with the post.
+
+Nuneaton is straining, Nuneaton is gaining,
+ Neither will falter nor flinch;
+Whips they are plying and jackets are flying,
+ They're fairly abreast to an inch.
+'Crack em up! Let 'em go! Well ridden! Bravo!'
+ Gamer ones never were bred;
+Jo Chauncy has done it! He's spurted! He's won it!'
+ The favourite's beat by a head!
+
+Don't tell me of luck, for its judgment and pluck
+ And a courage that never will shirk;
+To give your mind to it and know how to do it
+ And put all your heart in your work.
+So here's to the Spider, the winning outsider,
+ With little Jo Chauncy up;
+May they stay life's course, both jockey and horse,
+ As they stayed in the Farnshire Cup.
+
+But it's possible that you are wondering what
+ May have happened to Farmer Brown,
+And the old gray crock of Isonomy stock
+ Who was backed by the sharps from town.
+She blew and she sneezed, she coughed and she wheezed,
+ She ran till her knees gave way.
+But never a grumble at trip or at stumble
+ Was heard from her jock that day.
+
+For somebody laid AGAINST the gray,
+ And somebody made a pile;
+And Brown says he can make farming pay,
+ And he smiles a simple smile.
+'Them sharps from town were riled,' says Brown;
+ 'But I can't see why--can you?
+For I said quite fair as I knew that mare,
+ And I proved my words was true.'
+
+
+
+THE GROOM'S STORY
+
+
+
+Ten mile in twenty minutes! 'E done it, sir. That's true.
+The big bay 'orse in the further stall--the one wot's next to you.
+I've seen some better 'orses; I've seldom seen a wuss,
+But 'e 'olds the bloomin' record, an' that's good enough for us.
+
+We knew as it wa's in 'im. 'E's thoroughbred, three part,
+We bought 'im for to race 'im, but we found 'e 'ad no 'eart;
+For 'e was sad and thoughtful, and amazin' dignified,
+It seemed a kind o' liberty to drive 'im or to ride;
+
+For 'e never seemed a-thinkin' of what 'e 'ad to do,
+But 'is thoughts was set on 'igher things, admirin' of the view.
+'E looked a puffeck pictur, and a pictur 'e would stay,
+'E wouldn't even switch 'is tail to drive the flies away.
+
+And yet we knew 'twas in 'im, we knew as 'e could fly;
+But what we couldn't git at was 'ow to make 'im try.
+We'd almost turned the job up, until at last one day
+We got the last yard out of 'im in a most amazin' way.
+
+It was all along o' master; which master 'as the name
+Of a reg'lar true blue sportman, an' always acts the same;
+But we all 'as weaker moments, which master 'e 'ad one,
+An' 'e went and bought a motor-car when motor-cars begun.
+
+I seed it in the stable yard--it fairly turned me sick -
+A greasy, wheezy engine as can neither buck nor kick.
+You've a screw to drive it forrard, and a screw to make it stop,
+For it was foaled in a smithy stove an' bred in a blacksmith shop.
+
+It didn't want no stable, it didn't ask no groom,
+It didn't need no nothin' but a bit o' standin' room.
+Just fill it up with paraffin an' it would go all day,
+Which the same should be agin the law if I could 'ave my way.
+
+Well, master took 'is motor-car, an' moted 'ere an' there,
+A frightenin' the 'orses an' a poisonin' the air.
+'E wore a bloomin' yachtin' cap, but Lor'! wot DID 'e know,
+Excep' that if you turn a screw the thing would stop or go?
+
+An' then one day it wouldn't go. 'E screwed and screwed again,
+But somethin' jammed, an' there 'e stuck in the mud of a country
+lane.
+It 'urt 'is pride most cruel, but what was 'e to do?
+So at last 'e bade me fetch a 'orse to pull the motor through.
+
+This was the 'orse we fetched 'im; an' when we reached the car,
+We braced 'im tight and proper to the middle of the bar,
+And buckled up 'is traces and lashed them to each side,
+While 'e 'eld 'is 'ead so 'aughtily, an' looked most dignified.
+
+Not bad tempered, mind you, but kind of pained and vexed,
+And 'e seemed to say, 'Well, bli' me! wot WILL they ask me next?
+I've put up with some liberties, but this caps all by far,
+To be assistant engine to a crocky motor-car!'
+
+Well, master 'e was in the car, a-fiddlin' with the gear,
+And the 'orse was meditatin', an' I was standin' near,
+When master 'e touched somethin'--what it was we'll never know -
+But it sort o' spurred the boiler up and made the engine go.
+
+''Old 'ard, old gal!' says master, and 'Gently then!' says I,
+But an engine won't 'eed coaxin' an' it ain't no use to try;
+So first 'e pulled a lever, an' then 'e turned a screw,
+But the thing kept crawlin' forrard spite of all that 'e could do.
+
+And first it went quite slowly and the 'orse went also slow,
+But 'e 'ad to buck up faster when the wheels began to go;
+For the car kept crowdin' on 'im and buttin' 'im along,
+And in less than 'alf a minute, sir, that 'orse was goin' strong.
+
+At first 'e walked quite dignified, an' then 'e 'ad to trot,
+And then 'e tried a canter when the pace became too 'ot.
+'E looked 'is very 'aughtiest, as if 'e didn't 'e mind,
+And all the time the motor-car was pushin' 'im be'ind.
+
+Now, master lost 'is 'ead when 'e found 'e couldn't stop,
+And 'e pulled a valve or somethin' an' somethin' else went pop,
+An' somethin' else went fizzywiz, and in a flash, or less,
+That blessed car was goin' like a limited express.
+
+Master 'eld the steerin' gear, an' kept the road all right,
+And away they whizzed and clattered--my aunt! it was a sight.
+'E seemed the finest draught 'orse as ever lived by far,
+For all the country Juggins thought 'twas 'im wot pulled the car.
+
+'E was stretchin' like a grey'ound, 'e was goin' all 'e knew;
+But it bumped an' shoved be'ind 'im, for all that 'e could do;
+It butted 'im an' boosted 'im an' spanked 'im on a'ead,
+Till 'e broke the ten-mile record, same as I already said.
+
+Ten mile in twenty minutes! 'E done it, sir. That's true.
+The only time we ever found what that 'ere 'orse could do.
+Some say it wasn't 'ardly fair, and the papers made a fuss,
+But 'e broke the ten-mile record, and that's good enough for us.
+
+You see that 'orse's tail, sir? You don't! No more do we,
+Which really ain't surprisin', for 'e 'as no tail to see;
+That engine wore it off 'im before master made it stop,
+And all the road was littered like a bloomin' barber's shop.
+
+And master? Well, it cured 'im. 'E altered from that day,
+And come back to 'is 'orses in the good old-fashioned way.
+And if you wants to git the sack, the quickest way by far
+Is to 'int as 'ow you think 'e ought to keep a motor-car.
+
+
+
+WITH THE CHIDDINGFOLDS
+
+
+
+ The horse is bedded down
+ Where the straw lies deep.
+ The hound is in the kennel;
+ Let the poor hound sleep!
+ And the fox is in the spinney
+ By the run which he is haunting,
+ And I'll lay an even guinea
+ That a goose or two is wanting
+When the farmer comes to count them in the morning.
+
+ The horse is up and saddled;
+ Girth the old horse tight!
+ The hounds are out and drawing
+ In the morning light.
+ Now it's 'Yoick!' among the heather,
+ And it's 'Yoick!' across the clover,
+ And it's 'To him, all together!'
+ 'Hyke a Bertha! Hyke a Rover!'
+And the woodlands smell so sweetly in the morning.
+
+ 'There's Termagant a-whimpering;
+ She whimpers so.'
+ 'There's a young hound yapping!'
+ Let the young hound go!
+ But the old hound is cunning,
+ And it's him we mean to follow,
+ 'They are running! They are running!
+ And it's 'Forrard to the hollo!'
+For the scent is lying strongly in the morning.
+
+ 'Who's the fool that heads him?'
+ Hold hard, and let him pass!
+ He's out among the oziers
+ He's clear upon the grass.
+ You grip his flanks and settle,
+ For the horse is stretched and straining,
+ Here's a game to test your mettle,
+ And a sport to try your training,
+When the Chiddingfolds are running in the morning.
+
+ We're up by the Coppice
+ And we're down by the Mill,
+ We're out upon the Common,
+ And the hounds are running still.
+ You must tighten on the leather,
+ For we blunder through the bracken;
+ Though you're over hocks in heather
+ Still the pace must never slacken
+As we race through Thursley Common in the morning.
+
+ We are breaking from the tangle
+ We are out upon the green,
+ There's a bank and a hurdle
+ With a quickset between.
+ You must steady him and try it,
+ You are over with a scramble.
+ Here's a wattle! You must fly it,
+ And you land among the bramble,
+For it's roughish, toughish going in the morning.
+
+ 'Ware the bog by the Grove
+ As you pound through the slush.
+ See the whip! See the huntsman!
+ We are close upon his brush.
+ 'Ware the root that lies before you!
+ It will trip you if you blunder.
+ 'Ware the branch that's drooping o'er you!
+ You must dip and swerve from under
+As you gallop through the woodland in the morning.
+
+ There were fifty at the find,
+ There were forty at the mill,
+ There were twenty on the heath,
+ And ten are going still.
+ Some are pounded, some are shirking,
+ And they dwindle and diminish
+ Till a weary pair are working,
+ Spent and blowing, to the finish,
+And we hear the shrill whoo-ooping in the morning.
+
+ The horse is bedded down
+ Where the straw lies deep,
+ The hound is in the kennel,
+ He is yapping in his sleep.
+ But the fox is in the spinney
+ Lying snug in earth and burrow.
+ And I'll lay an even guinea
+ We could find again to-morrow,
+If we chose to go a-hunting in the morning.
+
+
+
+A HUNTING MORNING
+
+
+
+Put the saddle on the mare,
+ For the wet winds blow;
+There's winter in the air,
+ And autumn all below.
+For the red leaves are flying
+And the red bracken dying,
+And the red fox lying
+ Where the oziers grow.
+
+Put the bridle on the mare,
+ For my blood runs chill;
+And my heart, it is there,
+ On the heather-tufted hill,
+With the gray skies o'er us,
+And the long-drawn chorus
+Of a running pack before us
+ From the find to the kill.
+
+Then lead round the mare,
+ For it's time that we began,
+And away with thought and care,
+ Save to live and be a man,
+While the keen air is blowing,
+And the huntsman holloing,
+And the black mare going
+ As the black mare can.
+
+
+
+THE OLD GRAY FOX
+
+
+
+We started from the Valley Pride,
+ And Farnham way we went.
+We waited at the cover-side,
+ But never found a scent.
+Then we tried the withy beds
+ Which grow by Frensham town,
+And there we found the old gray fox,
+ The same old fox,
+ The game old fox;
+Yes, there we found the old gray fox,
+ Which lives on Hankley Down.
+ So here's to the master,
+ And here's to the man!
+ And here's to twenty couple
+ Of the white and black and tan!
+ Here's a find without a wait!
+ Here's a hedge without a gate!
+ Here's the man who follows straight,
+ Where the old fox ran.
+
+The Member rode his thoroughbred,
+ Doctor had the gray,
+The Soldier led on a roan red,
+ The Sailor rode the bay.
+Squire was there on his Irish mare,
+ And Parson on the brown;
+And so we chased the old gray fox,
+ The same old fox,
+ The game old fox,
+And so we chased the old gray fox
+ Across the Hankley Down.
+ So here's to the master,
+ And here's to the man!
+ &c. &c. &c.
+
+The Doctor's gray was going strong
+ Until she slipped and fell;
+He had to keep his bed so long
+ His patients all got well.
+The Member he had lost his seat,
+ 'Twas carried by his horse;
+And so we chased the old gray fox,
+ The same old fox,
+ The game old fox;
+And so we chased the old gray fox
+ That earthed in Hankley Gorse.
+ So here's to the master,
+ And here's to the man!
+ &c. &c. &c.
+
+The Parson sadly fell away,
+ And in the furze did lie;
+The words we heard that Parson say
+ Made all the horses shy!
+The Sailor he was seen no more
+ Upon that stormy bay;
+But still we chased the old gray fox,
+ The same old fox,
+ The game old fox;
+Still we chased the old gray fox
+ Through all the winter day.
+ So here's to the master,
+ And here's to the man!
+ &c. &c. &c.
+
+And when we found him gone to ground,
+ They sent for spade and man;
+But Squire said 'Shame! The beast was game!
+ A gamer never ran!
+His wind and pace have gained the race,
+ His life is fairly won.
+But may we meet the old gray fox,
+ The same old fox,
+ The game old fox;
+May we meet the old gray fox
+ Before the year is done.
+ So here's to the master,
+ And here's to the man!
+ And here's to twenty couple
+ Of the white and black and tan!
+ Here's a find without await!
+ Here's a hedge without a gate!
+ Here's the man who follows straight,
+ Where the old fox ran.
+
+
+
+'WARE HOLES
+
+
+
+[''Ware Holes!' is the expression used in the hunting-field to warn
+those behind against rabbit-burrows or other suck dangers.]
+
+A sportin' death! My word it was!
+ An' taken in a sportin' way.
+Mind you, I wasn't there to see;
+ I only tell you what they say.
+
+They found that day at Shillinglee,
+ An' ran 'im down to Chillinghurst;
+The fox was goin' straight an' free
+ For ninety minutes at a burst.
+
+They 'ad a check at Ebernoe
+ An' made a cast across the Down,
+Until they got a view 'ullo
+ An' chased 'im up to Kirdford town.
+
+From Kirdford 'e run Bramber way,
+ An' took 'em over 'alf the Weald.
+If you 'ave tried the Sussex clay,
+ You'll guess it weeded out the field.
+
+Until at last I don't suppose
+ As 'arf a dozen, at the most,
+Came safe to where the grassland goes
+ Switchbackin' southwards to the coast.
+
+Young Captain 'Eadley, 'e was there,
+ And Jim the whip an' Percy Day;
+The Purcells an' Sir Charles Adair,
+ An' this 'ere gent from London way.
+
+For 'e 'ad gone amazin' fine,
+ Two 'undred pounds between 'is knees;
+Eight stone he was, an' rode at nine,
+ As light an' limber as you please.
+
+'E was a stranger to the 'Unt,
+ There weren't a person as 'e knew there;
+But 'e could ride, that London gent -
+ 'E sat 'is mare as if 'e grew there.
+
+They seed the 'ounds upon the scent,
+ But found a fence across their track,
+And 'ad to fly it; else it meant
+ A turnin' and a 'arkin' back.
+
+'E was the foremost at the fence,
+ And as 'is mare just cleared the rail
+He turned to them that rode be'ind,
+ For three was at 'is very tail.
+
+''Ware 'oles!' says 'e, an' with the word,
+ Still sittin' easy on his mare,
+Down, down 'e went, an' down an' down,
+ Into the quarry yawnin' there.
+
+Some say it was two 'undred foot;
+ The bottom lay as black as ink.
+I guess they 'ad some ugly dreams,
+ Who reined their 'orses on the brink.
+
+'E'd only time for that one cry;
+ ''Ware 'oles!' says 'e, an' saves all three.
+There may be better deaths to die,
+ But that one's good enough for me.
+
+For mind you, 'twas a sportin' end,
+ Upon a right good sportin' day;
+They think a deal of 'im down 'ere,
+ That gent what came from London way.
+
+
+
+THE HOME-COMING OF THE 'EURYDICE'
+
+
+
+[Lost, with her crew of three hundred boys, on the last day of her
+voyage, March 23, 1876. She foundered off Portsmouth, from which
+town many of the boys came.]
+
+Up with the royals that top the white spread of her!
+ Press her and dress her, and drive through the foam;
+The Island's to port, and the mainland ahead of her,
+ Hey for the Warner and Hayling and Home!
+
+Bo'sun, O Bo'sun, just look at the green of it!
+ Look at the red cattle down by the hedge!
+Look at the farmsteading--all that is seen of it,
+ One little gable end over the edge!'
+
+'Lord! the tongues of them clattering, clattering,
+ All growing wild at a peep of the Wight;
+Aye, sir, aye, it has set them all chattering,
+ Thinking of home and their mothers to-night.'
+
+Spread the topgallants--oh, lay them out lustily!
+ What though it darken o'er Netherby Combe?
+'Tis but the valley wind, puffing so gustily -
+ On for the Warner and Hayling and Home!
+
+'Bo'sun, O Bo'sun, just see the long slope of it!
+ Culver is there, with the cliff and the light.
+Tell us, oh tell us, now is there a hope of it?
+ Shall we have leave for our homes for to-night?'
+
+'Tut, the clack of them! Steadily! Steadily!
+ Aye, as you say, sir, they're little ones still;
+One long reach should open it readily,
+ Round by St. Helens and under the hill.
+
+'The Spit and the Nab are the gates of the promise,
+ Their mothers to them--and to us it's our wives.
+I've sailed forty years, and--By God it's upon us!
+ Down royals, Down top'sles, down, down, for your lives!'
+
+A grey swirl of snow with the squall at the back of it,
+ Heeling her, reeling her, beating her down!
+A gleam of her bends in the thick of the wrack of it,
+ A flutter of white in the eddies of brown.
+
+It broke in one moment of blizzard and blindness;
+ The next, like a foul bat, it flapped on its way.
+But our ship and our boys! Gracious Lord, in your kindness,
+ Give help to the mothers who need it to-day!
+
+Give help to the women who wait by the water,
+ Who stand on the Hard with their eyes past the Wight.
+Ah! whisper it gently, you sister or daughter,
+ 'Our boys are all gathered at home for to-night.'
+
+
+
+THE INNER ROOM
+
+
+
+It is mine--the little chamber,
+ Mine alone.
+I had it from my forbears
+ Years agone.
+Yet within its walls I see
+A most motley company,
+And they one and all claim me
+ As their own.
+
+There's one who is a soldier
+ Bluff and keen;
+Single-minded, heavy-fisted,
+ Rude of mien.
+He would gain a purse or stake it,
+He would win a heart or break it,
+He would give a life or take it,
+ Conscience-clean.
+
+And near him is a priest
+ Still schism-whole;
+He loves the censer-reek
+ And organ-roll.
+He has leanings to the mystic,
+Sacramental, eucharistic;
+And dim yearnings altruistic
+ Thrill his soul.
+
+There's another who with doubts
+ Is overcast;
+I think him younger brother
+ To the last.
+Walking wary stride by stride,
+Peering forwards anxious-eyed,
+Since he learned to doubt his guide
+ In the past.
+
+And 'mid them all, alert,
+ But somewhat cowed,
+There sits a stark-faced fellow,
+ Beetle-browed,
+Whose black soul shrinks away
+From a lawyer-ridden day,
+And has thoughts he dare not say
+ Half avowed.
+
+There are others who are sitting,
+ Grim as doom,
+In the dim ill-boding shadow
+ Of my room.
+Darkling figures, stern or quaint,
+Now a savage, now a saint,
+ Showing fitfully and faint
+ Through the gloom.
+
+And those shadows are so dense,
+ There may be
+Many--very many--more
+ Than I see.
+They are sitting day and night
+Soldier, rogue, and anchorite;
+And they wrangle and they fight
+ Over me.
+
+If the stark-faced fellow win,
+ All is o'er!
+If the priest should gain his will
+ I doubt no more!
+But if each shall have his day,
+I shall swing and I shall sway
+In the same old weary way
+ As before.
+
+
+
+THE IRISH COLONEL
+
+
+
+Said the king to the colonel,
+'The complaints are eternal,
+ That you Irish give more trouble
+ Than any other corps.'
+
+Said the colonel to the king,
+'This complaint is no new thing,
+ For your foemen, sire, have made it
+ A hundred times before.'
+
+
+
+THE BLIND ARCHER
+
+
+
+Little boy Love drew his bow at a chance,
+ Shooting down at the ballroom floor;
+He hit an old chaperone watching the dance,
+ And oh! but he wounded her sore.
+ 'Hey, Love, you couldn't mean that!
+ Hi, Love, what would you be at?'
+ No word would he say,
+ But he flew on his way,
+For the little boy's busy, and how could he stay?
+
+Little boy Love drew a shaft just for sport
+ At the soberest club in Pall Mall;
+He winged an old veteran drinking his port,
+ And down that old veteran fell.
+ 'Hey, Love, you mustn't do that!
+ Hi, Love, what would you be at?
+ This cannot be right!
+ It's ludicrous quite!'
+But it's no use to argue, for Love's out of sight.
+
+A sad-faced young clerk in a cell all apart
+ Was planning a celibate vow;
+But the boy's random arrow has sunk in his heart,
+ And the cell is an empty one now.
+ 'Hey, Love, you mustn't do that!
+ Hi, Love, what would you be at?
+ He is not for you,
+ He has duties to do.'
+'But I AM his duty,' quoth Love as he flew.
+
+The king sought a bride, and the nation had hoped
+ For a queen without rival or peer.
+But the little boy shot, and the king has eloped
+ With Miss No-one on Nothing a year.
+ 'Hey, Love, you couldn't mean that!
+ Hi, Love, what would you be at?
+ What an impudent thing
+ To make game of a king!'
+'But I'M a king also,' cried Love on the wing.
+
+Little boy Love grew pettish one day;
+ 'If you keep on complaining,' he swore,
+'I'll pack both my bow and my quiver away,
+ And so I shall plague you no more.'
+ 'Hey, Love, you mustn't do that!
+ Hi, Love, what would you be at?
+ You may ruin our ease,
+ You may do what you please,
+But we can't do without you, you dear little tease!'
+
+
+
+A PARABLE
+
+
+
+The cheese-mites asked how the cheese got there,
+ And warmly debated the matter;
+The Orthodox said that it came from the air,
+ And the Heretics said from the platter.
+They argued it long and they argued it strong,
+ And I hear they are arguing now;
+But of all the choice spirits who lived in the cheese,
+ Not one of them thought of a cow,
+
+
+
+A TRAGEDY
+
+
+
+Who's that walking on the moorland?
+ Who's that moving on the hill?
+They are passing 'mid the bracken,
+But the shadows grow and blacken
+ And I cannot see them clearly on the hill.
+
+Who's that calling on the moorland?
+ Who's that crying on the hill?
+Was it bird or was it human,
+Was it child, or man, or woman,
+ Who was calling so sadly on the hill?
+
+Who's that running on the moorland?
+ Who's that flying on the hill?
+He is there--and there again,
+But you cannot see him plain,
+ For the shadow lies so darkly on the hill.
+
+What's that lying in the heather?
+ What's that lurking on the hill?
+My horse will go no nearer,
+And I cannot see it clearer,
+ But there's something that is lying on the hill.
+
+
+
+THE PASSING
+
+
+
+It was the hour of dawn,
+ When the heart beats thin and small,
+The window glimmered grey,
+ Framed in a shadow wall.
+
+And in the cold sad light
+ Of the early morningtide,
+The dear dead girl came back
+ And stood by his bedside.
+
+The girl he lost came back:
+ He saw her flowing hair;
+It flickered and it waved
+ Like a breath in frosty air.
+
+As in a steamy glass,
+ Her face was dim and blurred;
+Her voice was sweet and thin,
+ Like the calling of a bird.
+
+'You said that you would come,
+ You promised not to stay;
+And I have waited here,
+ To help you on the way.
+
+'I have waited on,
+ But still you bide below;
+You said that you would come,
+ And oh, I want you so!
+
+'For half my soul is here,
+ And half my soul is there,
+When you are on the earth
+ And I am in the air.
+
+'But on your dressing-stand
+ There lies a triple key;
+Unlock the little gate
+ Which fences you from me.
+
+'Just one little pang,
+ Just one throb of pain,
+And then your weary head
+ Between my breasts again.'
+
+In the dim unhomely light
+ Of the early morningtide,
+He took the triple key
+ And he laid it by his side.
+
+A pistol, silver chased,
+ An open hunting knife,
+A phial of the drug
+ Which cures the ill of life.
+
+He looked upon the three,
+ And sharply drew his breath:
+'Now help me, oh my love,
+ For I fear this cold grey death.'
+
+She bent her face above,
+ She kissed him and she smiled;
+She soothed him as a mother
+ May sooth a frightened child.
+
+'Just that little pang, love,
+ Just a throb of pain,
+And then your weary head
+ Between my breasts again.'
+
+He snatched the pistol up,
+ He pressed it to his ear;
+But a sudden sound broke in,
+ And his skin was raw with fear.
+
+He took the hunting knife,
+ He tried to raise the blade;
+It glimmered cold and white,
+ And he was sore afraid.
+
+He poured the potion out,
+ But it was thick and brown;
+His throat was sealed against it,
+ And he could not drain it down.
+
+He looked to her for help,
+ And when he looked--behold!
+His love was there before him
+ As in the days of old.
+
+He saw the drooping head,
+ He saw the gentle eyes;
+He saw the same shy grace of hers
+ He had been wont to prize.
+
+She pointed and she smiled,
+ And lo! he was aware
+Of a half-lit bedroom chamber
+ And a silent figure there.
+
+A silent figure lying
+ A-sprawl upon a bed,
+With a silver-mounted pistol
+ Still clotted to his head.
+
+And as he downward gazed,
+ Her voice came full and clear,
+The homely tender voice
+ Which he had loved to hear:
+
+'The key is very certain,
+ The door is sealed to none.
+You did it, oh, my darling!
+ And you never knew it done.
+
+'When the net was broken,
+ You thought you felt its mesh;
+You carried to the spirit
+ The troubles of the flesh.
+
+'And are you trembling still, dear?
+ Then let me take your hand;
+And I will lead you outward
+ To a sweet and restful land.
+
+'You know how once in London
+ I put my griefs on you;
+But I can carry yours now -
+ Most sweet it is to do!
+
+'Most sweet it is to do, love,
+ And very sweet to plan
+How I, the helpless woman,
+ Can help the helpful man.
+
+'But let me see you smiling
+ With the smile I know so well;
+Forget the world of shadows,
+ And the empty broken shell.
+
+'It is the worn-out garment
+ In which you tore a rent;
+You tossed it down, and carelessly
+ Upon your way you went.
+
+'It is not YOU, my sweetheart,
+ For you are here with me.
+That frame was but the promise of
+ The thing that was to be -
+
+'A tuning of the choir
+ Ere the harmonies begin;
+And yet it is the image
+ Of the subtle thing within.
+
+'There's not a trick of body,
+ There's not a trait of mind,
+But you bring it over with you,
+ Ethereal, refined,
+
+'But still the same; for surely
+ If we alter as we die,
+You would be you no longer,
+ And I would not be I.
+
+'I might be an angel,
+ But not the girl you knew;
+You might be immaculate,
+ But that would not be you.
+
+'And now I see you smiling,
+ So, darling, take my hand;
+And I will lead you outward
+ To a sweet and pleasant land,
+
+'Where thought is clear and nimble,
+ Where life is pure and fresh,
+Where the soul comes back rejoicing
+ From the mud-bath of the flesh
+
+'But still that soul is human,
+ With human ways, and so
+I love my love in spirit,
+ As I loved him long ago.'
+
+So with hands together
+ And fingers twining tight,
+The two dead lovers drifted
+ In the golden morning light.
+
+But a grey-haired man was lying
+ Beneath them on a bed,
+With a silver-mounted pistol
+ Still clotted to his head.
+
+
+
+THE FRANKLIN'S MAID
+(From 'The White Company')
+
+
+
+The franklin he hath gone to roam,
+The franklin's maid she bides at home;
+But she is cold, and coy, and staid,
+And who may win the franklin's maid?
+
+There came a knight of high renown
+In bassinet and ciclatoun;
+On bended knee full long he prayed -
+He might not win the franklin's maid.
+
+There came a squire so debonair,
+His dress was rich, his words were fair.
+He sweetly sang, he deftly played -
+He could not win the franklin's maid.
+
+There came a mercer wonder-fine,
+With velvet cap and gaberdine;
+For all his ships, for all his trade,
+He could not buy the franklin's maid.
+
+There came an archer bold and true,
+With bracer guard and stave of yew;
+His purse was light, his jerkin frayed -
+Haro, alas! the franklin's maid!
+
+Oh, some have laughed and some have cried,
+And some have scoured the countryside;
+But off they ride through wood and glade,
+The bowman and the franklin's maid.
+
+
+
+THE OLD HUNTSMAN
+
+
+
+There's a keen and grim old huntsman
+ On a horse as white as snow;
+Sometimes he is very swift
+ And sometimes he is slow.
+But he never is at fault,
+ For he always hunts at view
+And he rides without a halt
+ After you.
+
+The huntsman's name is Death,
+ His horse's name is Time;
+He is coming, he is coming
+ As I sit and write this rhyme;
+He is coming, he is coming,
+ As you read the rhyme I write;
+You can hear the hoofs' low drumming
+ Day and night.
+
+You can hear the distant drumming
+ As the clock goes tick-a-tack,
+And the chiming of the hours
+ Is the music of his pack.
+You may hardly note their growling
+ Underneath the noonday sun,
+But at night you hear them howling
+ As they run.
+
+And they never check or falter
+ For they never miss their kill;
+Seasons change and systems alter,
+ But the hunt is running still.
+Hark! the evening chime is playing,
+ O'er the long grey town it peals;
+Don't you hear the death-hound baying
+ At your heels?
+
+Where is there an earth or burrow?
+ Where a cover left for you?
+A year, a week, perhaps to-morrow
+ Brings the Huntsman's death halloo!
+Day by day he gains upon us,
+ And the most that we can claim
+Is that when the hounds are on us
+ We die game.
+
+And somewhere dwells the Master,
+ By whom it was decreed;
+He sent the savage huntsman,
+ He bred the snow-white steed.
+These hounds which run for ever,
+ He set them on your track;
+He hears you scream, but never
+ Calls them back.
+
+He does not heed our suing,
+ We never see his face;
+He hunts to our undoing,
+ We thank him for the chase.
+We thank him and we flatter,
+ We hope--because we must -
+But have we cause? No matter!
+ Let us trust!
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Songs of Action
+by Arthur Conan Doyle
+
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