Rhymes a la Mode. Lang Andrew

Rhymes a la Mode - Lang Andrew


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labour, nearer the Divine,

      And pure from fret, and smooth as sleep,

         And gentle as thy soul, is thine!

      So let it be!  But could I know

         That thou in this soft autumn eve,

      This hush of earth that pleased thee so,

         Hadst pleasure still, I might not grieve.

      RHYMES A LA MODE

      BALLADE OF MIDDLE AGE

      Our youth began with tears and sighs,

      With seeking what we could not find;

      Our verses all were threnodies,

      In elegiacs still we whined;

      Our ears were deaf, our eyes were blind,

      We sought and knew not what we sought.

      We marvel, now we look behind:

      Life’s more amusing than we thought!

      Oh, foolish youth, untimely wise!

      Oh, phantoms of the sickly mind!

      What? not content with seas and skies,

      With rainy clouds and southern wind,

      With common cares and faces kind,

      With pains and joys each morning brought?

      Ah, old, and worn, and tired we find

      Life’s more amusing than we thought!

      Though youth “turns spectre-thin and dies,”

      To mourn for youth we’re not inclined;

      We set our souls on salmon flies,

      We whistle where we once repined.

      Confound the woes of human-kind!

      By Heaven we’re “well deceived,” I wot;

      Who hum, contented or resigned,

      “Life’s more amusing than we thought!”

Envoy

      O nate mecum, worn and lined

      Our faces show, but that is naught;

      Our hearts are young ’neath wrinkled rind:

      Life’s more amusing than we thought!

      THE LAST CAST

THE ANGLER’S APOLOGY

      Just one cast more! how many a year

         Beside how many a pool and stream,

      Beneath the falling leaves and sere,

         I’ve sighed, reeled up, and dreamed my dream!

      Dreamed of the sport since April first

         Her hands fulfilled of flowers and snow,

      Adown the pastoral valleys burst

         Where Ettrick and where Teviot flow.

      Dreamed of the singing showers that break,

         And sting the lochs, or near or far,

      And rouse the trout, and stir “the take”

         From Urigil to Lochinvar.

      Dreamed of the kind propitious sky

         O’er Ari Innes brooding grey;

      The sea trout, rushing at the fly,

         Breaks the black wave with sudden spray!

* * * * *

      Brief are man’s days at best; perchance

         I waste my own, who have not seen

      The castled palaces of France

         Shine on the Loire in summer green.

      And clear and fleet Eurotas still,

         You tell me, laves his reedy shore,

      And flows beneath his fabled hill

         Where Dian drave the chase of yore.

      And “like a horse unbroken” yet

         The yellow stream with rush and foam,

      ’Neath tower, and bridge, and parapet,

         Girdles his ancient mistress, Rome!

      I may not see them, but I doubt

         If seen I’d find them half so fair

      As ripples of the rising trout

         That feed beneath the elms of Yair.

      Nay, Spring I’d meet by Tweed or Ail,

         And Summer by Loch Assynt’s deep,

      And Autumn in that lonely vale

         Where wedded Avons westward sweep,

      Or where, amid the empty fields,

         Among the bracken of the glen,

      Her yellow wreath October yields,

         To crown the crystal brows of Ken.

      Unseen, Eurotas, southward steal,

         Unknown, Alpheus, westward glide,

      You never heard the ringing reel,

         The music of the water side!

      Though Gods have walked your woods among,

         Though nymphs have fled your banks along;

      You speak not that familiar tongue

         Tweed murmurs like my cradle song.

      My cradle song, – nor other hymn

         I’d choose, nor gentler requiem dear

      Than Tweed’s, that through death’s twilight dim,

         Mourned in the latest Minstrel’s ear!

      TWILIGHT

SONNET(AFTER RICHEPIN.)

      Light has flown!

      Through the grey

      The wind’s way

      The sea’s moan

      Sound alone!

         For the day

         These repay

      And atone!

      Scarce I know,

      Listening so

         To the streams

            Of the sea,

         If old dreams

            Sing to me!

      BALLADE OF SUMMER

TO C. H. ARKCOLL

      When strawberry pottles are common and cheap,

      Ere elms be black, or limes be sere,

      When midnight dances are murdering sleep,

      Then comes in the sweet o’ the year!

      And far from Fleet Street, far from here,

      The Summer is Queen in the length of the land,

      And moonlit nights they are soft and clear,

      When fans for a penny are sold in the Strand!

      When clamour that doves in the lindens keep

      Mingles with musical plash of the weir,

      Where drowned green tresses of crowsfoot creep,

      Then comes in


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