Rhymes a la Mode. Lang Andrew

Rhymes a la Mode - Lang Andrew


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each poor man should be a squire,

      Each with his competence a year,

      Each with sufficient beef and beer,

         And all things matched to his desire,

      While all the Middle Classes should

         With every vile Capitalist

      Be clean reformed away for good,

         And vanish like a morning mist!

      “Ah splendid Vision, golden time,

      An end of hunger, cold, and crime.

      An end of Rent, an end of Rank,

      An end of balance at the Bank,

      An end of everything that’s meant

      To bring Investors five per cent!”

      How fair doth Justice seem, I cried,

         Yet oh, how strong the embattled powers

      That war against on every side

         Justice, and this great dream of ours,

      And what have we to plead our cause

      ’Gainst Masters, Capital, and laws,

      What but a big red box indeed,

      With copies of a weekly screed,

         That’s slowly jolted, up and down,

      Behind an old velocipede

         To clamour Justice through the town:

      How touchingly inadequate

      These arms wherewith we’d vanquish Fate!

      Nay, the old Order shall endure

         And little change the years shall know,

      And still the Many shall be poor,

         And still the Poor shall dwell in woe;

      Firm in the iron Law of things

         The strong shall be the wealthy still,

      And (called Capitalists or Kings)

         Shall seize and hoard the fruits of skill.

      Leaving the weaker for their gain,

         Leaving the gentler for their prize

      Such dens and husks as beasts disdain, —

         Till slowly from the wrinkled skies

      The fireless frozen Sun shall wane,

      Nor Summer come with golden grain;

         Till men be glad, mid frost and snow

      To live such equal lives of pain

         As now the hutted Eskimo!

      Then none shall plough nor garner seed,

         Then, on some last sad human shore,

      Equality shall reign indeed,

         The Rich shall be with us no more,

      Thus, and not otherwise, shall come

      The new, the true Millennium!

      ALMAE MATRES

(ST. ANDREWS, 1862. OXFORD, 1865)

      St. Andrews by the Northern sea,

         A haunted town it is to me!

      A little city, worn and grey,

         The grey North Ocean girds it round.

      And o’er the rocks, and up the bay,

         The long sea-rollers surge and sound.

      And still the thin and biting spray

         Drives down the melancholy street,

      And still endure, and still decay,

         Towers that the salt winds vainly beat.

      Ghost-like and shadowy they stand

      Dim mirrored in the wet sea-sand.

      St. Leonard’s chapel, long ago

         We loitered idly where the tall

      Fresh budded mountain ashes blow

         Within thy desecrated wall:

      The tough roots rent the tomb below,

         The April birds sang clamorous,

      We did not dream, we could not know

         How hardly Fate would deal with us!

      O, broken minster, looking forth

         Beyond the bay, above the town,

      O, winter of the kindly North,

         O, college of the scarlet gown,

      And shining sands beside the sea,

         And stretch of links beyond the sand,

      Once more I watch you, and to me

         It is as if I touched his hand!

      And therefore art thou yet more dear,

         O, little city, grey and sere,

      Though shrunken from thine ancient pride

         And lonely by thy lonely sea,

      Than these fair halls on Isis’ side,

         Where Youth an hour came back to me!

      A land of waters green and clear,

         Of willows and of poplars tall,

      And, in the spring time of the year,

         The white may breaking over all,

      And Pleasure quick to come at call.

         And summer rides by marsh and wold,

      And Autumn with her crimson pall

         About the towers of Magdalen rolled;

      And strange enchantments from the past,

         And memories of the friends of old,

      And strong Tradition, binding fast

         The “flying terms” with bands of gold, —

      All these hath Oxford: all are dear,

         But dearer far the little town,

      The drifting surf, the wintry year,

         The college of the scarlet gown,

            St. Andrews by the Northern sea,

            That is a haunted town to me!

      DESIDERIUM

IN MEMORIAM S. F. A

      The call of homing rooks, the shrill

         Song of some bird that watches late,

      The cries of children break the still

         Sad twilight by the churchyard gate.

      And o’er your far-off tomb the grey

         Sad twilight broods, and from the trees

      The rooks call on their homeward way,

         And are you heedless quite of these?

      The clustered rowan berries red

         And Autumn’s may, the clematis,

      They droop above your dreaming head,

         And these, and all things must you miss?

      Ah, you that loved the twilight air,

         The dim lit hour of quiet best,

      At last, at last you have your share

         Of what life gave so seldom, rest!

      Yes,


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