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- BEWARE of those who slyly pilch
- In many cunning ways;
- Beware of little lyres that filch
- From undisputed bays!
- Beware the tumbler's beaded brim,
- The ass in fiercer fur;
- But most of all beware of him
- Who makes my pen to stir--
- THe Insecure
- And Amateur
- Implacable Photographer!
- Beware lest, thieving for your thirst,
- An earwig's in the plum!
- Beware of folly, gay at first,
- That later makes you glum!
- Beware of pits when stars are dim,
- The tooth of vagrant cur;
- But most of all beware of him
- That makes my pen to stir--
- The masterful
- Disasterful
- Implacable Photographer!
- Beware of angling in a stream
- Whose trout are not for you;
- Beware of trusting in a dream
- That's gone before the dew!
- Beware of truckling to a whim;
- Of folks that always purr;
- But most of all beware of him
- That makes my pen to stir--
- The premature
- And Amateur
- Implacable Photographer!
- Norman Rowland Gale

- I'M greedy by nature, and often in vain
- Have lingered too long o'er the succulent hare,
- Accepting the jelly, ignoring the pain,
- Intent on receiving far more than my share.
- I worship the plover's egg, tasty and rare,
- And idolize fanciful French fricasses;
- But what, darling dainties, with you can compare,
- Soused salmon and lamb and young ducks and green peas?
- I ask for real turtle, again and again--
- Observe the Lord Mayor's John Thomases*
stare! [flunkies]
- For kitchen-recitals to Susan and Jane,
- And powdered impertinence, what do I care?
- I sit down to eat, and I vow and declare,
- I'd honour a dish were it made of stewed bees,
- Though loyal to you, should you chance to be there,
- Soused salmon and lamb and young ducks and green peas.
- I cherish a chef, be he Grecian or Dane;
- I even can relish a collop of bear;
- I love ev'ry calf--if it boasts a fine brain--
- And melt at a pullet, or even a pair.
- Though gold's on the table and stately the fare,
- I greet a grand entree with almost a sneeze
- If you, dearest dainties, are sweet on the air--
- Soused salmon and lamb and young ducks and green peas.
- L'envoi:
- O Redcoats of England, who struggle and dare,
- Your glory's a morsel no glutton can please;
- My yearning is all for a soft-cushioned chair,
- Soused salmon and lamb and young ducks and green peas.
- Norman Rowland Gale

- THE kind-hearted angler was sadly pursuing
- His calling unhallowed of choking the fishes;
- He bitterly wept, for of course he was doing
- An action most strongly opposed to his wishes!
- His vertabra shook as he musingly planned
- How kindly to threadle the worm he'd begun--it
- Was plain had the reptile possessed a right hand
- The penitent angler would gladly have wrung it!
- He cast in his float filled with tearful emotion
- And murmured "How fearful, how terrible this is!"
- And just at that moment, amid some commotion,
- He jerked out a panting and rather small piscis!
- "Unfortunate fishlet, what dread impulse brought you
- To meddle with bait which I carelessly threw in?
- My dear little swimmer, I'm sorry I caught you,
- So please don't blame me for contriving your ruin!"
- "O barbel and salmon-trout, tench, dace and gugdeon,
- O ev'ry fat jack and each eel (not a conger)
- Why, why will you grieve me and stir up my dudgeon?
- Go, die on his hooks who has eyes that are stronger!"
- But, however, whilst moaning he pulled out a score,
- And continued his wonderful luck till at last--it
- Was plain that his soft heart could bear it no more,
- Too deep were his groans, and--too full was his basket!
- Norman Rowland Gale

- WHEN first sent to School (now the Station was
Rugby)
- I fancied my masters and took to the boys;
- I thought to myself--here 'tis plain I shall snug be
- Revolving at last in an orbit of joys:
- The Alphabet Grecian I quickly could stammer,
- Nor ran any risk of a jaw out of joint;
- I waddled sedately through Fatherland Grammar,
- But own I was floored by the Decimal Point!
- Le Roi de Montagnes was my Gallic translation,
- And soon I was praised by my master, who said:--
- "I certainly deem that, with good education,
- A Scholarship laurel should circle your head!"
- I revelled in idioms; I thrilled at the phrases;
- I knew how to render "avaunt" and "aroint,"
- But own that I shed many tears on the daisies
- Of Rugby when stumped by the Decimal Point!
- I mastered the building proceedings of Balbus,
- And rarely omitted a requisite cum;
- I never remarked that an equa was albus,
- And deftly supplied the subjunctive with quum!
- No canis to me was a dog in the manger--
- A classic by Fate I was clearly anoint!
- I own, though, I ran into desperate danger
- When fogged and be-fooled by the Decimal Point!
- Norman Rowland Gale

- HAVE you seen the golfers airy
- Prancing forth to their vagary,
- Just as frisky in their gaiters
- As a flock of Grecian Satyrs,
- Looking everything heroic,
- And magnificently stoic,
- In a dress of such a pattern
- As would fright the good God Saturn?
- Have you heard them curse the sparrow
- Fit to freeze your inmost marrow,
- When the ball, that should be flitting,
- On the grass remaineth sitting?
- Have you watched their cheerful scrambles
- In the soft and soothing brambles
- While the foe, elate and sneering,
- Passes gradually from hearing?
- After blaming all the witches,
- After rending holes in breeches,
- After getting in a muddle
- With each rivulet and puddle,
- They return, a ll labour ended,
- To record their prowess splendid,
- And renew by dictionary
- Their fatigued vocabulary.
- Let these gentlemen ecstatic,
- In their costumes so emphatic,
- Crawl to find a rounded treasure
- In the horse-pond at their pleasure.
- What so good when time is sunny,
- And the air as sweet as honey,
- At the game of crease and wicket,
- England's proper pastime--Cricket?
- Norman Rowland Gale

- WHEN red-nosed Winter takes the road,
- An icicle his walking-stick,
- When frost is on the woodman's load,
- And snow is falling fast and thick,
- Come, lusty youth and sapless eld,
- Let's make a circle round the blaze
- And talk of stumps,
- Of nasty bumps,
- That flew and came in sunny days.
- For Cricket is played again, again,
- At freezing time in Hull or Bath;
- When summer's done the game's not gone--
- There's Cricket on the Hearth!
- Here's Jones from Rugby, Eton Jack,
- And Grandpapa who, long ago,
- Loved hitting when the Field was slack,
- And crumped the bowling, swift or slow!
- No more he's nimble on the green,
- But what a history he tells
- Of Surrey men
- And hits for ten,
- And heaps of most tremendous Swells!
- For Cricket is played again, again,
- At freezing time in Hull or Bath;
- When summer's done the game's not gone--
- There's Cricket on the Hearth!
- The girls may call to Hide-and-Seek,
- And lovely lasses take the floor;
- But we discuss the Lob and Sneak,
- The Canvas, Umpire, Over, Score!
- How great a game to fill July,
- May, June, and August with delights,
- Yet in the frost
- Be never lost,
- But stir the blood on nipping nights!
- For Cricket is played again, again,
- At freezing times in Hull or Bath;
- When summer's done the game's not gone--
- There's Cricket on the Hearth!
- Norman Rowland Gale

- TEND me my birds, and bring again
- The brotherhood of woodland life,
- So shall I wear the seasons round
- A friend to need, a foe to strife;
- Keep me my heritage of lawn,
- And grant me, Father, till I die
- The fine sincerity of light
- And luxury of open sky.
- So, learning always, may I find
- My heaven around me everywhere,
- And go in hope from this to Thee,
- The pupil of Thy country air.
- Norman Rowland Gale

- THE brook told the dove
- And the dove told me
- That Cicely's bathing at the pool
- With other virgins three.
- The brook told the dove
- And the dove told me
- That Cicely floating on the wave
- Woke music in the tree.
- The brook told the dove
- And the dove told me
- That Cicely's drying in the sun,
- A snowy sight to see.
- Norman Rowland Gale

- LAST night some yellow letters fell
- From out a scrip I found by chance;
- Among them was the silent ghost,
- The spirit of my first romance:
- And in a faint blue envelope
- A withered rose long lost to dew
- Bore witness to the dashing days
- When love was large and wits were few.
- Yet standing there all worn and grey
- The teardrops quivered in my eyes
- To think of Youth's unshaken front,
- The forehead lifted to the skies;
- How rough a hill my eager feet
- Flung backward when upon its crest
- I saw the flutter of the lace
- The wind awoke on Helen's breast!
- How thornless were the roses then
- When fresh young eyes and lips were kind
- When Cupid in our porches proved
- How true the tale that Love is blind!
- But Red-and-White and Poverty
- Would only mate while shone the May;
- Then came a Bag of Golden Crowns
- And jingled Red-and-White away.
- Grown old and niggard of romance
- I wince not much at aught askew,
- And often ask my favourite cat
- What else had Red-and-White to do?
- And here's the bud that rose and sank,
- A crimson island on her breast--
- Why should I burn it? Once again
- Hide, rose, and dream. God send me rest.
- Norman Rowland Gale

- YOU voluble,
- Velvety
- Vehement fellows
- That play on your
- Flying and
- Musical cellos,
- All goldenly
- Girdled you
- Senerade clover,
- Each artist in
- Bass but a
- Bibulous rover!
- You passionate,
- Powdery
- Pastoral bandits,
- Who gave you your
- Roaming and
- Rollicking mandates?
- Come out of my
- Foxglove; come
- Out of my roses
- You bees with the
- Plushy and
- Plausible noses!
- Norman Rowland Gale

- THIS peach is pink with such a pink
- As suits the peach divinely;
- The cunning colour rarely spread
- Fades to the yellow finely;
- But where to spy the truest pink
- Is in my Love's soft cheek, I think.
- The snowdrop, child of windy March,
- Doth glory in her whiteness;
- Her golden neighbours, crocuses,
- Unenvious praise her brightness!
- But I do know where, out of sight,
- My sweetheart keeps a warmer white.
- Norman Rowland Gale

- IF you passed her in your city
- You would call her badly dressed,
- But the faded homespun covers
- Such a heart in such a breast!
- True, her rosy face is freckled
- By the sun's abundant flame,
- But she's mine with all her failings,
- And I love her just the same.
- If her hands are red they grapple
- To my hands with splendid strength,
- For she's mine, all mine's the beauty
- Of her straight and lovely length!
- True, her hose be think and homely
- And her speech is homely, too;
- But she's mine! her rarest charm is
- She's for me, and not for you!
- Norman Rowland Gale

- SHY maids have haunts of still delight,
- The lover glades he never tells;
- And one is mine where mass the bright
- And odoured chimes of foxglove-bells.
- A dewy, covert, silent place
- Where surely long ago God walked
- Close to His creature's blinded face,
- And for his finer moulding talked.
- There hawthorn glows as if, white-hot,
- God present, it were sacred found
- To preach a creed too oft forgot--
- That all we tread is holy ground.
- Ah, could we but remember this,
- Our thoughts would spring as purely up
- To labour for our fellows' bliss
- As doth to heaven a snowdrop's cup!
- Norman Rowland Gale

- O MIGHT I leave this grassy place
- For spreading foam about my feet!
- The splendid spray upon my face,
- The flying brine itself were sweet
- If I might hear on Cromer beach
- The freedom of Old Neptune's speech!
- Ah, never language like to this
- For those whose ears can understand!
- Sometimes the coming of a kiss
- To mate the ocean with the strand;
- Sometimes the nameless oath is heard
- The sea-god thunders through his beard!
- I have a sea of blue on high,
- I have a sea of green beneath;
- For me sweet inland birds do cry
- Until with joy I hold my breath;
- But Ocean's harp of wave and stone
- Is bird and leaf and stream in one!
- Upon my dancing apple-sprays
- The blackbird whistles melodies;
- Half through a mellow run he stays
- And flashes to a neighbour's trees:
- He's rare, but rarer now would be
- The strident pebbles of the sea.
- And is it strange that round the shore
- The lyric water should rejoice?
- Ah no! for ever more and more
- The happy dead are in its voice.
- Majestic poet! might I be
- As full of song, as finely free!
- Norman Rowland Gale

- ADAM and Eve together stood
- Amid the crop they both were tending,
- While far away the feathery wood
- Of Eden in the wind was bending.
- And Adam, feeling in his veins
- The better for his splendid tussle,
- Laughed at his body for its pains,
- And showed to Eve his hardening muscle.
- Fine was the bread his sweat had earned,
- Despite the fields of rock and thistle,
- While daily wounds and baulkings turned
- His olden softness into gristle.
- So, thinking deeply of the life
- Of chartered idleness and blisses,
- Suddenly he seized his comely wife
- And took her mouth by storm with kisses.
- "Dear heart!" he cried, "we fare the best
- When earth and labour roughly grapple.
- Who could have thought the only rest
- Worth having, centred in an apple!"
- Norman Rowland Gale

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