Oxford Poetry : 1918

By T. W. Earp, Eleonne F. A. Geach, and Dorothy L. Sayers

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Title: Oxford Poetry
       1918

Editors: Thomas Wade Earp
         Eleonne F. A. Geach
         Dorothy L. Sayers

Authors: Basil Blackwell
C. Burchardt
M. St. Clare Byrne
J. E. A. Carver
E. P. Chase
Wilfred Childe
Gerald H. Crow
G. D. Desmond
E. C. Dickinson
T. W. Earp
E. F. A. Geach
D. E. A. Wallace
K. Gibberd
Russell Green
Reginald Harris
Mercy Harvey
H. C. Harwood
Luisa Hewitt
R. M. Hewitt
E. E. St. L. Hill
Aldous Huxley
C. R. Jury
Margaret Leigh
E. H. W. Meyerstein
Robert Nichols
L. Rice-Oxley
Dorothy L. Sayers
Helen Simpson
L. A. G. Strong
Sherard Vines
D. E. A. Wallace

Release Date: May 16, 2023 [eBook #70771]

Language: English

Produced by: Chuck Greif, MWS and the Online Distributed Proofreading
             Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
             images generously made available by The Internet
             Archive/Canadian Libraries)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OXFORD POETRY ***





                             OXFORD POETRY

                                 1918




                           NEW YORK AGENTS:
                        LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
                     FOURTH AVENUE AND 30TH STREET




                             OXFORD POETRY

                                 1918


                               EDITED BY

                  T. W. E., E. F. A. G., AND D. L. S.


                                OXFORD
                     B. H. BLACKWELL, BROAD STREET
                                 1918




CONTENTS


                                                                    PAGE

ANON (NON-COLL.)
BY PROXY                                                               1

BASIL BLACKWELL (MERTON)
AT THE PAUPER ASYLUM                                                   2

C. BURCHARDT (MAGDALEN)
COMPLAINT                                                              3

M. ST. CLARE BYRNE (SOMERVILLE)
“AND ONE FELL BY THE WAYSIDE...”                                       4

J. E. A. CARVER (MAGDALEN)
EVENING                                                                5

E. P. CHASE (MAGDALEN)
ON A BIRTHDAY                                                          6

WILFRED CHILDE (MAGDALEN)
SEA FAIRY                                                              7
AGE GOTHIQUE DORÉ                                                      8
ROSA INNOCENS                                                          9

GERALD H. CROW (HERTFORD)
TRENCH VISION                                                         10
MADHOUSE GARDEN                                                       11

G. D. DESMOND (SOMERVILLE)
HOME-COMING                                                           12
AGE                                                                   13

E. C. DICKINSON (NON-COLL.)
A TAVERN LILT                                                         14

T. W. EARP (EXETER)
OUR LADY OF LIGHT                                                     16

E. F. A. GEACH (HOME STUDENT)
ROMANCE                                                               18
RETROSPECT                                                            18

E. F. A. GEACH (HOME STUDENT) AND D. E. A. WALLACE
(SOMERVILLE)
BALLADE OF LADIES WHO DIED FOR LOVE                                   19

K. GIBBERD (ST. HILDA’S HALL)
WHEN I AM OLD                                                         20

RUSSELL GREEN (QUEEN’S)
FAITH                                                                 21
HILLS                                                                 22

REGINALD HARRIS (C.C.C.)
SONG                                                                  23
FRAGMENT FROM THE “LAMENT FOR BION”                                   24

MERCY HARVEY (ST. HILDA’S HALL)
SONG                                                                  25

H. C. HARWOOD (BALLIOL)
INCOMPATIBILITY                                                       26
DEDICATION OF AN UNWRITTEN MASTERPIECE TO A WOMAN
AS YET UNKNOWN                                                        27

LUISA HEWITT (HOME STUDENT)
“YOU LIT YOUR CIGARETTE FROM MINE”                                    28
AVE ATQUE VALE                                                        29

R. M. HEWITT (KEBLE)
ITER PERSICUM                                                         30
GAUDIUM IN CŒLO                                                       31

E. E. ST. L. HILL (KEBLE)
PARTING                                                               32

ALDOUS HUXLEY (BALLIOL)
TWO SONGS                                                             33
SONG OF POPLARS                                                       34

C. R. JURY (MAGDALEN)
A SONNET TO A FRIEND                                                  35
AN EPITAPH                                                            35

MARGARET LEIGH (SOMERVILLE)
TWO EPITAPHS                                                          36
SONNET: THE JOURNALIST                                                37

E. H. W. MEYERSTEIN (MAGDALEN)
THE INCANTATION                                                       38

ROBERT NICHOLS (TRINITY)
CLOSING LINES FROM “POLYPHEMUS HIS PASSION”                           41

L. RICE-OXLEY (KEBLE)
THE OPENING OF THE GRAVE OF ARTHUR AND GUINEVERE
AT GLASTONBURY                                                        45

DOROTHY L. SAYERS (SOMERVILLE)
PYGMALION                                                             46

HELEN SIMPSON (HOME STUDENT)
THE HEAD OF THE TABLE                                                 49
AEROPLANE, JUNE 6TH                                                   50

L. A. G. STRONG (WADHAM)
RUFUS PRAYS                                                           51
IN THE GARDEN                                                         52

SHERARD VINES (NEW COLLEGE)
PERMISSION                                                            53
SUMMER                                                                54

D. E. A. WALLACE (SOMERVILLE)
RIVER-POOLS                                                           55
LIFE AND I                                                            56




_ANON_

(_NON-COLL._)


BY PROXY

    You will not lure me with your charms
        Or win me back again
    Because you held me in your arms
        And I forgot my pain.

    ’Twas not for you my spirit yearned
        That night of fierce desire;
    The flame in which we met and burned
        Drew from an alien fire.

    I shall not win my lady’s grace,
        Her eyes are still and cold;
    I may not find a resting-place
        Before my life grows old.

    One thought alone rejoicing stirs
        And shall, when all is done--
    That in your arms my soul met hers
        And we became as one.




_BASIL BLACKWELL_

(_MERTON_)


AT THE PAUPER ASYLUM

    With naked turf-plots three by six in symmetric precision spread
    You see, between its walls of red, the graveyard of the lunatics.

    No cenotaph or obelisk holds memory in graven speech;
    Sole epitaph accorded each a number on a painted disk.

    In nameless uniformity, with few to know and none to weep,
    While space allows, their freehold keep the men that God has made awry.

    And these within their straitened fold, who nothing owned,
      were owned of none,
    Possess of all beneath the Sun what God and man could not withhold.

    So close they lie, a skeleton might give his rotting friend a nudge
    And say, “If you or I were judge, we should not moulder here alone.

    “Lest we might harm our fellow-men, they prisoned us, and now exhaust,
    To speed a cosmic holocaust, the blood and gold they grudged us then.

    “The world had seen less misery with us for prince and presbyter,
    Who sometimes knew the fools we were, and in our folly could not lie.

    “But happier we who lived in scorn, and dying, passed from human thought
    Than they whose sophistry has bought the curses of a race unborn.”




_C. BURCHARDT_

(_MAGDALEN_)


COMPLAINT

    My love has left me. Let my heart forget
    The happy days and moments of our past
    That in the future I shall not regret
    The worship of a love that could not last.

    Make me remember there are things apart
    From dreamy love and visionary truth
    And teach me to forget how once my heart
    Did love with all the tenderness of youth.

    Yes, teach me to forget--and how to live
    Without the joy of hope. For I have seen
    How every single pleasure life can give
    Must needs sow seeds of misery between.

    No more of love. Since at such heavy cost
    It must be bought and even then be lost.




_M. ST. CLARE BYRNE_

(_SOMERVILLE_)


“AND ONE FELL BY THE WAYSIDE ...”

    Scholar, and man of letters, and daintily nurtured,
    You were one with your peers,
    Leaving the half-told story,
    Throwing away the dear things of this life-time--
    All you found was the steady, silent effort,
    Only the toilsome moulding, the shaping the weapon,
    None of the keen sword-glory.

    Not for you the crown and the consummation,
    Not the battle-death, sharp, swift, and kindly;
    Only the early plodding on, half blindly,
    Only seeing the end by the faith of the spirit,
    Only the hardest of all, the preparation,
    All the heart-breaking spadework,
    Formulas, initiation;
    Only the snows of December ...

    Under the snow the quiet brown land lies sleeping,
    Waiting the breath of Spring--
    God will remember.




_J. E. A. CARVER_

(_MAGDALEN_)


EVENING

    The children play, and the old folk talk
    In the silent village square,
    While the wagons jolt, and the belfry’s note
    Comes floating through the air.

    The white owl hoots from his lofty seat;
    In the fields the rabbits play;
    The weazel squeaks, and the red fox sneaks
    From his lair at close of day.

    The final signs of departing day
    Burst out in its changing hues,
    While the stars pearl out in the azure sky,
    And silent fall the dews.




_E. P. CHASE_

(_MAGDALEN_)


ON A BIRTHDAY

    Am I a man at last? I feared to think
      Not long ago, that I could ever be
      Older than twenty-one. Eternity
    Is not more vast if one lean o’er its brink
    Than are the cool sane draughts of years we drink
      After the brilliance and the ecstasy
      Of a decisive year. Majority
    We hail; past commoner birthdays we slink.

    We love all action that is glorious
      It matters little whether, in our aim
    We seem to fail or are victorious.
      But in the lesser things and lesser hours
    We must--how can we?--spend our treasured powers
    For duties that can never bring us fame.




_WILFRED CHILDE_

(_MAGDALEN_)


SEA FAIRY

    All day long the waves wander and the winds cry,
    And there are blue stones sparkling by the shores;
    But with evening there cometh a silence over the void sky
    And the sea is hushed along her coral corridors.

    Then the mer-girls fall asleep, their singing is over,
    Their golden limbs lie stretched along the sands;
    And wearily nods the Sun like a giant lover,
    In a blood-red bath of dreams, with lilies in his hands.

    On white wings screaming come the elvish gulls
    But lo! where a glint of turquoise divides the cliffs,
    Where the Halcyon Birds whom the rest of the world thinks fools
    Are crossing the Ocean becalmed on their amorous skiffs.


AGE GOTHIQUE DORÉ

TO G. C.

    King Richard in his garden walks royal,
    His mantle green being wrought with scarlet flowers,
    His hand holding a coloured book of hours.
    His coat all gold, gilden his feet withal.

    King Richard walks in his garden by Thames-side,
    Hearing the bells of high Westminster ring,
    And the sound of the chaunt of the monks echoing,
    Singing each in his stall to God Crucified.

    Golden the sun descends beyond Thames-water,
    Golden flash out London steeples and spires,
    Their vanes burn and turn in the day’s last fires.

    About the King the flowers of the garden fade,
    And in star-light he walks on, yet lonelier,
    His heart being filled with the peace of the Mother Maid.


ROSA INNOCENS

    O young fresh rose, O tender rose,
    O rose so young, so newly born,
    Whose petals fair do now unclose
    To the radiant kisses of the air,
    And the shell-soft lips of the morn,
    To the heavens holy and bare!
    Lovely, young, fresh rose,
    Frail-framed and lapped in dew,
    O born like a virgin anew
    After a time of bale and scorn,
    Storm-wind shattering the boughs
    Of the tall trees turn by turn:
    But thou art still abiding
    Amid the slender veins of thy house,
    Like an immaculate lady,
    Very beautiful and causing the eyes of the beholders
    To weep strange tears of joy!




_GERALD H. CROW_

(_HERTFORD_)


TRENCH VISION

    A great bee pottered round the room
    And gossipped like a child to itself,
    Investigating bloom by bloom
    The lilac on the window-shelf.

    Outside among the garden beds
    The wind went like a laughing boy,
    And caught the poppies by the heads,
    And chased the honey-bees for joy.

    The slanting patch of sunlight crept
    Along the floor, across the wall,
    And I was there and laughed and wept,
    And laughed again to see it all.


MADHOUSE GARDEN

    Aloof he heareth yet the vulgar urge
    And throng his realm, and groweth glad of bars.
    It is a gentle kingly thaumaturge
    Hath made a net of little silver stars,
    And snared contentment, that great golden carp,
    The moon contentment, that shall never die,
    And charmeth him upon a tender harp,
    And hath him in a net of lazuli.
    Thus I shall hear you crying presently,
    And shall look forth with questioning dream-dimmed eyes
    Upon your turmoil and perplexity,
    Out of whatever hell or paradise
    The maker of nets is come to, bye and bye;
    And shall not understand or sympathize.




_G. D. DESMOND_

(_SOMERVILLE_)


HOME-COMING

    I come back to my garment of hills
      Now my soul is laid bare.
    For I gave him my lips and my limbs
      And my hands, and long hair--
    I gave him all things that were mine,
      This my garment of clay.
    So have need of my garment of hills,
      To hide me away--

    O high hills, O loved hills, O hills
      That are healing and strength,
    I have grown to your measure at last,
      I can wear you at length.

    I have loved, so my soul is upgrown,
      Adult in its nakedness
    And I, as the naked, cry.

           *       *       *       *       *

      And the wild, kind hills are my dress.


AGE

    I think that I am old. Silent I am with sorrow
    At the beauteous sky that holds the new morrow.
    I think that I am old. The lark sings words to me,
    Who erst sung but Music. And in the ancient sea,
    I can see old colours that I have seen elsewhere....
    Purple orchids hurt me: and everything that’s fair--
    Buttercups and distance and smoke, and people’s bodies.
    O, I cannot get away from the places where my God is.
    Laughter is a thing to strain and angle for,
    My heart is quick and shrinking and pains me at its core.
    I am older, older, than the Earth--O, I am old.
    If I should be older, colder, than the stars, far off and cold?...
    Once I danced and sang and capered on the grass
    At the cool close of day, when shadows creep and pass.
    When shadows link, and lengthen, and slowly become--nought.
    Light flies, and shadow dies without its sustenance.
    And stars shine out most silently, like jewels quietly wrought.
    Not even then I ceased, nor paused upon my dance.
    Now, I am struck and smitten with beauty’s poignancy.
    Now, I am hurt with wonder, closed in from ecstasy.
    No ecstasy is mine. I cannot get away.
    Every way I turn--myself. By night, by day,
    My face, my soul, my body, the people that I know--
    Ah, no more free fashioning of worlds that gleam and go.

           *       *       *       *       *

    I have grown to be my own world, my world with heart and pain
    And he that has found himself can be never lost again.
    And he that is quite awake cannot dream his dreams again.




_E. C. DICKINSON_

(_NON.-COLL._)


A TAVERN LILT

TO W. W.

    I do not know more wonderful respite
    Than to sit within the Inns of swinkèd lords
    With a mate upon the left hand and the right
    And tankards of good ale upon the boards.

    My lads, the World for us when we’re in yoke--
    To Hell and through to Heaven twice a day;
    While Lancashire’s a splendid land for folk
    Who’d woo a lass or taste a knuckled fray.

    And when we’re free, with Freedom’s cap fast on,
    How shall we bend new lives to jollity?
    What songs our Will and Tom would you have won
    Making the home-thatch rich for you and me?

    Our Will, you’re young--the lathe you scorn to turn--
    And sorrow life is not all Wigan Fair;
    While I’d seek luck beside a gipsy’s burn
    With a brace of whippets for a rabbits snare.

    And you, Tom, you--what would you draw for prize?
    A quickened pulse for the lass within your arms--
    With her to walk i’ the lanes at the moon’s rise,
    By the downland’s edge and over the sleeping farms.

    My mates, you’re English and o’ the very best--
    With no mean thought i’ the length or breadth o’ you:
    Not Galahads, but yet to stand confessed
    With finest hearts as ever heroes knew.

    Because o’ simple, wide, and proudest worth
    As English soil may give to English rule.
    My head is bared before your richened birth,
    My hand grips yours in cider-time and Yule!

    And so again--more wonderful respite
    I know not in the Inns of swinkèd lords,
    With you upon my left hand and my right
    And plenty of good ale upon the boards!

    A health, a health, my lads, for very joy!
    With such as you beside for love and life
    We can with ease Dame Sorrowful destroy;
    E’en toast the maid who will not be my wife!




_T. W. EARP_

(_EXETER_)


OUR LADY OF LIGHT

    On those eternal peaks of thought,
    Where her bright crystal towers shine,
    The many precious treasures brought
    Seem its clear walls to incarnadine.

    For all the varied colours heaped
    There mingle in one general flush,
    As through that lovely place there leaped
    The rose-leaf burnish of a blush.

    The golden arrowheads of wit,
    The laughters of refinèd sense,
    Diamond of sorrows infinite,
    Calm, open looks of innocence,

    And rubies, lovers’ burning hearts--
    With these she decks her diadem,
    Transmuting, by her learnèd arts,
    Each to its own peculiar gem.

    The jostling, crowded jewels show
    In sparkling piles where colours dance,
    And with angelic rosy glow
    The ramparts of her palace glance.

    And there she busied is, alone,
    To make of beauty beauties fresh,
    Or, seated queenly on her throne,
    Weaves fate into a glittering mesh.

    For every soul she gazes through
    And sees its deepest-hid desires,
    As though we were but drops of dew,
    Transparent, lit by alien fires.

    This one she chooses; it is clear
    And burns with an intenser flame;
    But that, for a long age’s year,
    Leaves to the darkness whence it came.

    While time itself grows weary, she
    Still solitary sits to weave,
    Until that last eternity
    When all are taken, none to leave.

    Then in her magic tissue hapt,
    The new-clothed, fragrant earth shall run
    In visionary radiance wrapped,
    A dazzling sister to the sun,
    And so Our Lady’s work be done.




_E. F. A. GEACH_

(_HOME STUDENT_)


ROMANCE

“_J’étais comme un autre Jason allant à la conquête de la
       toison d’or_.” (MADEMOISELLE DE MAUPIN).

    Round the next corner and in the next street
    Adventure lies in wait for you.
    Oh, who can tell what you may meet
    Round the next corner and in the next street!
    Could life be anything but sweet
    When all is hazardous and new
    Round the next corner and in the next street?
    Adventure lies in wait for you.


RETROSPECT

    Now I have fallen out of love
    A year or two, I hold review
    Of all the things I used to do,
    Turning with fingers rational
    The closed leaves of my passional.
    And I am quite amazed, by Jove!
    Wholly incredulous I smile--
    So hard it is to reconcile
    With this, my mere immediate me
    The other self I used to be
    You with the you that once was you--
    Now I have fallen out of love
    A year or two.




_E. F. A. GEACH_ (_HOME STUDENT_)

_D. E. A. WALLACE_ (_SOMERVILLE_)


BALLADE OF LADIES WHO DIED FOR LOVE

    Ladies, why did ye all in vain
    Seek death to end your misery?
    Why did ye not forget your pain
    In new loves and new ecstasy?
    Ophelia racked with phantasy,
    And Sigismunda, sick with rue--
    Ladies, why did ye choose to die
    When all the world was made for you?

    Wild Phœdra by thy passion slain,
    Œnone, nymph of Thessaly,
    Dido and lily-white Elaine,
    O Queen who died for Antony,
    Sappho and all thy poesy,
    Juliet to thy dead love true--
    Ladies, why did ye choose to die
    When all the world was made for you?

    Fair Margaret distraught and fain
    Beside thy phantom love to lie,
    And Isabella who didst wane
    Over thy pot of porphyry,
    Aude and Isolde, tell me why,
    Your lovers direly stricken thro’,
    You chose by those same swords to die,
    When all the world was made for you?

    ENVOY:

    Love’s happiness had passed you by,
    But there were other things to do.
    Ladies, why did ye choose to die,
    When all the world was made for you?




_K. GIBBERD_

(_ST. HILDA’S HALL_)


WHEN I AM OLD

    I often think that when I’m old and grey,
    Mechanically living through each day,
    That when like all the rest I’ve found my groove
    With little room for heart or mind to move,
    But just enough to eat and work and dress;
    And keep a failing temper more or less--
    In tired sleep I’ll sometimes creep away
    Back down the years to some old Oxford way.

    And on this daisied lawn again I’ll lie,
    And listen while the river folk go by;
    And through the trees I’ll sometimes see the flash
    Of punters’ poles and hear the rhythmic splash
    Of oars; and over there again I’ll see
    The petalled path beneath the cherry-tree,
    And love the hawthorn scent, the cuckoo’s cry,
    And Magdalen chiming while the spring runs by.

    And you’ll be there, dear phantom friend, and you,
    And you familiar faces that I knew
    So well; and toward the ending of the day
    We’ll sit and talk--the old accustomed way,
    Till in the mutual calm we’ll see unfurled
    The immeasurable vastness of the world
    And I shall dream of all that I will do
    With Life--and so will you, and you and you.




_RUSSELL GREEN_

(_QUEEN’S_)


FAITH

    When a foam of snow is hurled
    Under the bare black trees,
    And rain is on the seas,
    And winter on the world,
    Yet, when I think of her,
    I know where summer is.

    When friends to-day forget
    Ardours of yesterday,
    And to-morrow turn away
    As if we never met,
    Yet, when I think of her,
    I know where constancy is.


HILLS

    As I go inland
    Lo! my heart drooping
    As a bird’s in the grove when the shadow falls swooping
    Of the hawk’s wing down from a cloudless sky.

    For the hills creep together,
    Murmuring, conspiring;
    Solitude, poverty, sorrow desiring
    For men that are born to dream and to die.

    A prison land-locked,
    A grave for the living,
    And the ancient warders unsleeping, unforgiving,
    Cordon after cordon, massing behind me.
    I am in peril. I have left the sea.




_REGINALD HARRIS_

(_C. C. C._)


SONG

     “_My heart was blithe at morning._”

    My heart was blithe at morning,
      For he was by my side,
    And through the woods together
      We wandered far and wide.

    My heart was gay at noon-tide
      Together on the lea
    We lay, and heard the murm’ring
      Of many a busy bee.

    My heart was sad at even,
      For in the cold stars’ wake,
    I laid him in the dark, dark grave
      And, oh, my heart would break!


FRAGMENT FROM THE “LAMENT FOR BION,” OF MOSCHUS

    Raise high, Sicilian Muses,
      Raise high the mournful cry,
    The mallows in the woodlands
      Whene’er they fade and die,
    And the dill, and the green parsley,
      When they grow wan and sere,
    Live on again, though dead a while,
      And flower another year.

    But we, the great, the noble men,
      The mighty, and the wise,
    Whene’er our term of life is past,
      And our frail body dies,
    Lie down for ever, evermore
      Beneath earth’s hollow deep,
    And undisturbed for ever
      Lie low in death’s long sleep.




_MERCY HARVEY_

(_ST. HILDA’S HALL_)


SONG

    Oh! who hath seen Twilight the solemn-eyed?
    When the earth with a weary sigh
    Turns unto her, as a widowed bride,
    With the light all gone from the sky.
    She walketh in solitariness,
    Where still, shadowy waters gleam,
    But her grey eyes are none the less
    As if full of a troubled dream.




_H. C. HARWOOD_

(_BALLIOL_)


INCOMPATIBILITY

    There shall be no more sorrow and no more pain.
    Go you to your anger and I to my books again.
    You loved me, but never have liked me, the issue was plain,
    Woman, if you be woman, you live too late,
    Never the man was suckled to be your mate,
    Wed with a god and break him in battle with fate.
    You are truth, and the world is illusion; faith, it is doubt.
    It wraps its disaster in darkness, and you shine out;
    And the liquor that drugs to endurance is not for your drought.
    Pass on to the waste and the fell! I stay, and forget
    Your breasts and your hair and your laughter like suns that are set.
    Despise me, forgive me, but leave me. I love you yet.


DEDICATION, OF AN UNWRITTEN MASTERPIECE, TO A WOMAN AS YET UNKNOWN

    If I have laboured seven years,
      It was not for your heart.
      Mine was the better part
    And hope is bright amid the vapourous fears.
    You are too close to me to need
      The idle compliment
      That it was my intent
    To build your name above the ages’ greed.
    We are comrade adventurers;
      Here is my challenge hurled
      Against the conspired world;
    You will have little time for flatterers,
    An equal combatant ... Or so,
      While in the dark I groped
      Vainly perhaps, I hoped,
    And, when at length we meet and love, shall know.




_LUISA HEWITT_

(_HOME STUDENT_)

    You lit your cigarette from mine,
    And each increased the other’s glow
    Till the blue clouds began to blow
    And two red stars began to shine.

    Who knows, if then our lips had met,
    A greater fire we might have fanned
    Whose fragrant smoke had filled the land,
    But left us ashes and regret.


AVE ATQUE VALE

    Zeus! whom Prometheus first defied and failed to quell,
    Once, only once I call on you that cannot hear;
    Titans and monstrous Forms inspiring these with fear;
    Heroes enthroned in Heaven, of whom their children tell;
    Pan of the forest, fauns and dryads of the dell;
    Chryselephantine gods to Art and Athens dear,
    Protectors of the deme, the spindle and the spear,--
    Once, only once I give you greeting and--farewell.

    Proud-vested charioteers of punctual sun and moon,
    Racing and wrestling in your diverse course divine,
    Ye stars of peace and war, ye rivers of the sea,
    Greeting! from one who will forget your name right soon;
    Farewell! the while I pass, and nevermore repine
    The Perfect God in Man alone constraining me.




_R. M. HEWITT_

(_KEBLE_)


ITER PERSICUM

    When I rode out of Ispahan
      A thousand years ago,
    My horse’s hoofs were shod with gold,
    My turban rolled with gems untold,
      And the people louted low.

    My poet rode along with me
      And sang of old Irán,
    Of Rustem and of Rudabeh,
    And whiled away the summer day
      As only poets can.

    But now I march the Persian road
      With the devil of a pack;
    The jackals howl as we go by,
    And the fellows sigh and curse and cry,
      And my clothes are like a sack.

    And the palaces of Ispahan
      Are full of owls and bats,
    And the truest poet that ever I knew,
    Whose roses grew in the Syrian dew,
      Lies dead at Davos Platz.


GAUDIUM IN COELO

    I dreamed that I was dead, and after
      My soul had passed its mortal bars
    I caught an echo of rolling laughter
      Across the intervening stars.

    And all my fear was changed to wonder,
      I knew the rapture of the blest;
    To hear the immortal sons of thunder
      Applaud each day the immortal jest.




_E. E. ST. L. HILL_

(_KEBLE_)


PARTING

    The sky illumed by evening’s magic light
    Reflected in the lake seems opal blue.
    The autumn sun glows with a radiance bright
    That gives to everything an orange hue.
    The evening of the year draws on to night.

    No sound of arms within this hallowed place
    Comes to disturb us with the thought of strife.
    Unhindered I may gaze upon your face,
    My jewel of priceless worth--my Love--my Life--
    Forgetting I must leave you for a space.

    The woods around us, clothed in sombre gold,
    Robed for the great Death Pageant of the year,
    Grow dark. I strain you to my breast and hold
    You there, whispering in your ear
    Stories of love you know ere they are told.

    Now I must go. But, when the blue-bells make
    The woods a carpet azure as the sky,
    Once more my darling in my arms I’ll take,
    Once more we’ll be together--you and I--
    And dream our dreams again and never wake.




_ALDOUS HUXLEY_

(_BALLIOL_)


TWO SONGS

I

    Thick-flowered is the trellis
      That hides our joys
    From prying eyes of malice
      And all annoys,
      And we lie rosily bowered.

    Through the long afternoons
      And evenings endlessly
    Drawn out, when summer swoons
      In perfume windlessly,
      Sounds our light laughter,

    With whispered words between
      And silent kisses.
    None but the flowers have seen
      Our white caresses--
      Flowers and the bright-eyed birds.


II

    Men of a certain age
      Grow sad remembering
    Their youth’s libertinage,
      Drinking and chambering.

    She, whom devotedly
      Once they solicited,
    Proves all too bloatedly
      Gross when revisited

    Twenty years after,
      Sordid years,
    Oh, bitter laughter
      And bitter tears!


SONG OF POPLARS

    Shepherd, to yon tall poplars tune your flute:
    Let them pierce, keenly, subtly shrill,
    The slow blue rumour of the hill;
    Let the grass cry with an anguish of evening gold,
    And the great sky be mute.

    Then hearken how the poplar trees unfold
    Their buds, yet close and gummed and blind,
    In airy leafage of the mind,
    Rustling in silvery whispers the twin-hued scales
    That fade not nor grow old.

    “Poplars and fountains and you cypress spires
    Springing in dark and rusty flame,
    Seek you aught that hath a name?
    Or say, say: Are you all an upward agony
    Of undefined desires?

    “Say, are you happy in the golden march
    Of sunlight all across the day?
    Or do you watch the uncertain way
    That leads the withering moon on cloudy stairs
    Over the heaven’s wide arch?

    “Is it towards sorrow or towards joy you lift
    The sharpness of your trembling spears?
    Or do you seek, through the grey tears
    That blur the sky, in the heart of the triumphing blur,
    A deeper, calmer rift?”

    So; I have tuned my music to the trees,
    And there were voices, dim below
    Their shrillness, voices swelling slow
    In the blue murmur of hills, and a golden cry
    And then vast silences.




_C. R. JURY_

(_MAGDALEN_)


A SONNET TO A FRIEND

    Young bright-plumed eagle, prince of pure heaven’s fire,
    Inhabitant of glory clothed in light,
    Exalt me to this new triumphant pyre
    That burns the shades and monsters of our night,
    Vouchsafe thy spirit; touch me with the power
    So to desire, and so maintain my voice
    As thou, who in thy fair ascending hour
    Hawk’st in the top of morning at thy joys;
    O mortal splendour in immortal beams,
    Or deathless ghost, who buildest out of dust
    An edifice of temporal flame which seems
    Beyond the movement of our change and rust,
    Though it must die; O sheer delight above me,
    Fountain of undescended love, I love thee.


AN EPITAPH

    You who shall come, exalt these childless dead
    As your great fathers, from whose fire you are bred;
    The dead beget you now, for now they give
    Their hope of sons, that you, their sons, may live.




_MARGARET LEIGH_

(_SOMERVILLE_)


TWO EPITAPHS

I. ON A DIPLOMAT.

    Oh, who will bid me rise again
    That gambled with the souls of men?
    Those whose lives I signed away
    Will meet me at the Judgment Day,
    My dead: can _they_ forgive and pray?
    All honest men, pray for me, and pray well,
    Lest true men’s curses send the false to hell.


II. ON A PROFITEER.

    I fattened on the blood and tears
    Of these long laborious years;
    Out of loss came forth my gain,
    Watered by another’s pain:
    Who shall bid me rise again?
    Pray for me, all poor men, and pray right well,
    Lest poor men’s curses bring the rich to hell.


SONNET: THE JOURNALIST

    He called for blood, and would not shed his own,
    He sat at ease, and sent young men to die
    With his strong pen; he was the enemy
    Stalking at noontide, by whose hand were sown
    Rank tares among us--love of country grown
    To poisonous cant, and blind hostility.
    He forged a chain to lead the people by,
    A chain of words, rattling with strident tone.
    He battened on men’s selfishness and fear,
    He pulled the strings that shook their statesmen down;
    The people were content to sit and hear
    His platitudes, and tremble at his frown,
    And followed him with meek attentive ear
    Till His Mendacity assumed the crown.




_E. H. W. MEYERSTEIN_

(_MAGDALEN_)


THE INCANTATION

    Evil birds of evil feather
    Night and storm are met together,
    Bitter gale and dripping wrack
    Unforetold by almanack.
    Come, Lucasta, bolt the door
    While I grave upon the floor
    Circle wide, and strew around
    Pentacles to guard the ground
    When the solemn fiends appear
    In fulfilment of our prayer;
    For though Cimon scorn thy sight
    He shall sleep with thee to-night.

    Wond’rest not how I, a crone
    Whom no crippled lout would own
    His paramour, have strength to fling
    The loveless ’neath his true love’s wing.
    The old are strong, the young are fair,
    And thou, wan leaf, whom eager care
    Spirits to this world-shop of mine,
    Shalt for this hour see things divine.
    Thou trustest that my ugliness
    Shall dissipate thy soul’s distress.
    Yea, though he loathe Lucasta bright,
    Cimon shall sleep with her to-night.

    See yon dun familiar toad
    That infecteth my abode
    With sage humours; stroke his head.
    Now he sleeps as he were dead.
    Yet must he hearken to the charm
    Watching that we take no harm,
    For spirits are fickle as men are
    And called to help may come to war.
    He wakes; now will I cease my croak
    And read the grand words from this book
    That he who recks not of our rite
    May sleep with her who loves to-night.

    Arise, ye majesties of flame
    Exhorted by Jehovah’s name,
    That all things to itself hath won,
    The almighty Tetragrammaton.
    Paymon, Belphegor, ye that err,
    Tried spaniel-friends to Lucifer
    And him whose red and gusty eyes
    Captain the legions of the flies,
    Attend with ceremonious hum,
    Conjure the light o’ love to come
    Infirm of step, infirm of sight,
    To sleep with her who loves to-night.

    Lucasta, see the lamp burns blue.
    Spirits, have we this boon of you?
    In the smoke their faces nod,
    He shall come though he were God.
    Shake not, girl, thy love they say
    Conquers--Spirits frisk away;
    By the powers that raised you, hence
    To your depths. Ye have licence.
    So, they are vanished. Why so frail?
    Once more the wick gleams yellow pale,
    The smokewreaths whirl to left and right,
    Cimon shall sleep with thee to-night.

    He comes; his hand is on the latch,
    The owlet shrieks above the thatch,
    Unbolt, unbolt--scatter the yew,
    The tripod, and the cauldron’s brew.
    Cimon, Lucasta, hails thee now,
    The star of fate is on his brow,
    His eyes grow moist, his bosom warms,
    Receive him in thy weary arms,
    Loveliest! By Thessalian might
    He sleeps with her he loves to-night.




_ROBERT NICHOLS_

(_TRINITY_)


CLOSING LINES FROM “POLYPHEMUS HIS PASSION: A PASTORAL”

THE SHEPHERD. A GIRL.

      _Shepherd._ Thus found he his loved Galatea fled
    With Acis! What rage ensued thou knowest.
    Deceived, dejected, foiled, and overthrown
    In hoarse distraction a full sev’n days’ term
    He ranged, but on the eighth no more was glimpsed
    Striding from vale to vale nor, raging, heard
    Splintering the pine-slope nigh the precipice
    With fist far flung nor with a desolate
    Thunder of voice, volleyed from scarp to jag,
    Dislodging from steep snowfields friths compact
    In downward avalanche: less loud than he.
    And no tide had we of him, save by chance
    The while I wandered seeking a strayed goat
    Through seaward vales, I happen’d on him.

      _Girl._ Ah!
    Lubberly still poor wretch? or quiet grown?

      _Shepherd._ He on an ocean pinnacle of rock
    Sat, scowling, motionless. In truth he seemed
    Rather a further buttress of the crag
    Than a giant, helpless and unhappy being.
    About his brooding bulk all day the birds,
    The slippery swallow, the pois’d martin,
    Lifted or swept a-scatter ev’n as when,
    Chatting, such gad around the ravaged mien
    Of the colossal Pharaoh or twin gods
    Hawk-headed and immense of ancient Egypt.
    Thus grieved he. And the huge begnarlèd hands
    Pillared his jaw. A chillness gloomed his face
    As on bare hills shadow of moveless cloud.
    Nor spake he aught. But when the sun raged high
    Grappling a rock he dashed it ’gainst his breast
    And roared till the golden-green sea blackened
    And spouting drove, loud with careering gulls,
    Before his gusty breath; but passion spent
    Dropping then pined, while from the single eye
    One tear, as huge and hot as Phlegethon,
    Fell in a hissing flood.

      _Girl._ Alas, poor brute!
    And yet I laugh.

      _Shepherd._ Longtime in sufferance
    Bowed he his massy head, quite dumb with grief.
    But, at the last, confusedly arousing
    His sluggish hands, groped for and found his pipes
    Twin, dry, boughless trunks of beech fire-hollowed
    And with huge cinder bored. This pair he set
    To cave-like mouth, then, pursing hairy lips,
    Vented, with monster fingers laid on stops,
    His heart’s deep sorrow: ’twas a wounding sound.

      _Girl._ And was it angry, then, the giant’s plaint?

      _Shepherd._ Angry ’twas not: though anger in it spake
    As of a rebel turning eye to heav’n
    With moody imprecation natural
    To one so crossed from birth. Melancholy
    Lent majesty to strains uncouth. He mourned
    The gift of might which is his mightiest foe.
    Mourned! though the dire pipes themselves rebelling
    Came apt not to his hand. With rage he shook
    Yet, obstinate, subdued them to his mood
    So that they brimmed the dusky lower air,
    The fire-strewn skies, flushed cliffs and tawny sea
    With the beauty borne of desolation.
    Thus lingered he.

      _Girl._ And of the tune itself,
    Ugly, was it?

      _Shepherd._ Listen: when twilight fell,
    While the near wave lapsed with but seldom foam,
    Darkling against the light foretells the moon,
    He still played on. “Strange end,” thought I, “thou hast,
    Poor fool whose all of life is ended now,
    Saving the music thou canst make of it.”
    Since, as I think, his heart is shipwrecked now:
    Heart, but not song! For as the night waxed late
    Somewhat of beauty found he and with beauty
    Somewhat of solace. To the last I listened
    The while th’ unbroken moon rocked in the tide
    And multitudes of sea-sprites, glistering,
    Rose up in choir, but, sudden, hushed to hear
    Such grief pine on. Thus somewhat was the sound--
    Like to the muffled wind among the crags
    When night is clear, without or stars or moon,
    And lightless clouds drift on a lightless sky;
    Or as the mournful blowing of the waves,
    Which in the pyloned gloom of northern cave
    Nightly with flood soon-swallowed and discharge
    Of pouring foam, deep tide and troubled ebb,
    Makes profound plaint and dreary melody
    To lightless waste, huge night and solemn stars.
    Such was the Cyclops’ music.

      _Girl._ Ah, poor soul!

      _Shepherd._ Dost weep?

      _Girl._ Yes, shepherd.

      _Shepherd._ Fie, now; comfort thee!
    The gods wax angry at a lass’s tears
    Who has no whit to cry for. Thus say I,
    Those there are who ev’n by living darken
    The lives of such as are less passionate
    Yet in their fall, by ev’n the full measure
    That they o’ertopped us, must we mourn for them,
    Such wonder has Life bared.

      _Girl._ Maybe ’tis so;
    Still I am sorry.

      _Shepherd._ Yield thee now thine arm.
    So: round my neck as mine sinks now round thine....
    Evening falls. Hear the brook in the spinney:
    Thy very voice.

      _Girl._ And ... is yon star Venus?

      _Shepherd._ Aye: Venus ’tis. Thou hast eyes like heaven.

      _Girl._ Love is a pretty thing. Kiss me, sweet shepherd.




_L. RICE-OXLEY_

(_KEBLE_)


THE OPENING OF THE GRAVE OF ARTHUR AND GUINEVERE AT GLASTONBURY[A]

    One slender relic from the wreck of death,
      One golden hair from that far age,
    A gleaming memory, a momentary breath
      Of mystic times and Merlin sage!

    This only trace of that far-famous queen
      And of her beauty causing sin
    Recalled what Lancelot had whilom seen,
      What fame his compeers sought to win.

    Swift as a monk stoops down to grasp that hair
      The golden glint dissolves to dust,
    And naught of that old glory lieth there
      But bones, and armour gone to rust.

    Seek ye not thus to clutch the golden past
      Of legend and romance, for so
    Its splendour will dissolve and nothing last
      But Now, and dust of long ago.

[A] A tradition says that the grave was opened in the time of Henry
II., and that all that remained of the royal pair was a hair, which too
turned to dust as a monk stooped down to pick it up.




_DOROTHY L. SAYERS_

(_SOMERVILLE_)


PYGMALION

    Therefore one day, as all flesh must, she died,
    Just as the mowers brought the last load in
    From happy meadows warm with summer-tide,
    And through the open casement, far and thin,
    The nightingale’s first music did begin.

    “Love is the sum of this world’s whole delight,
    Love,” said the bird, “the ending of desire,
    Love brought us, timid, forth to the lovely light,
    Love the sole outlet, love, both toil and hire,
    Love, with whose death the songs of life expire.”

    Yet, as the limbs turned stone and bitter-cold,
    Widowed Pygmalion sat beside the bed,
    Huddling dry-eyed to see the new grown old
    Again so strangely, and his clamorous head
    Jarred him with discourse; and at length he said:

    “Marble, my white girl, marble! Cyprian thighs
    And amorous bosom all made chaste once more,
    As though no lips had ever kissed thine eyes
    To slumber--virgin as they were, before
    The feet of Venus glowed along the floor!...

    “Thy beauty should have made the workman blind
    That found thee buried in the dust of thrones
    Hereafter, when our pomps are left behind
    Like some strange, sprawling scale of barbarous tones,
    Our temples turned to curious heaps of stones;

    “When by the highways merchant folk shall go
    Three feet of earth above our walls and towers,
    And other than Grecian ships bear to and fro
    New wares, new men, and all as brief as flowers--
    Thou hadst outlasted all that time devours.

    “But thou art dead; thou art flesh and art dead;
    The grave will be thy lover, thy round breast
    Nourish the worm, while, shred by ghastly shred,
    The mouth that laughed, the fingers that caressed,
    Wither, O dearest of my works and best!...

    “What have I gained? some mornings when my soul
    Leaped out of me into the arms of day,
    When the world, like a chariot, span in my own control,
    Times when I saw the beech-tree leaves a-sway
    And knew how green they were and far from grey.

    “Say I learned joy--this was indeed a gain;
    But can I face the reckoning unafraid?
    For joy I bartered, first, that ancient pain
    Which stabbed me into vision; next, betrayed
    All that men looked for in me; thus I paid.

    “Yea, I that rated at a small amount
    That strange, cold jewel, purchased unawares,
    Men’s gratitude--I that no longer count
    For anything in any man’s affairs,
    Am doubtful now; thus the gods grant our prayers.

    “Ay me undone! The world cries out to me:
    ‘Pygmalion the sculptor, where art thou?’--
    Buried indeed, O buried hopelessly
    Fathom-deep under, fathom-deep under now--
    The curious rootlets pry about his brow ...

    “There is no remedy; what is changed is changed;
    No skill can rub out wrinkles from the heart,
    Nor even God knit friends that are estranged
    As innocently again as at the start,
    Since they must keep the memory of that smart

    “For good or evil still. So I return
    Never to that old quiet which asked no beat
    Of answering pulse, content alone to burn,
    While no fierce hand might fret thy bosom sweet,
    Nor any lover come betwixt thy feet.

    “I wrought thee for the world, and then thou wast
    Immortal--and I wept uncomforted;
    But since I made thee mine--O thou art lost
    To me and all men. I was glad,” he said,
    “But thou art dead, O thou art dead, art dead.”




_HELEN SIMPSON_

(_HOME STUDENT_)


THE HEAD OF THE TABLE; DECODERS W.R.N.S.

    Every day at ten to three,
    Be the weather wet or warm,
    I doff my identity,
    And assume a uniform.
    Clad in this I sally out,
    Cause considerable stir,
    Order nobodies about
    As becomes an Officer;
    Freeze the surreptitious smile
    With a chill severity--
    Longing all the weary while
    For the unregenerate Me.
    But when my release is earned
    And I am at home, secure,
    My identity has turned
    Unexpectedly demure.
    Why? I enter rather late
    And My manner when we meet,
    Seems, I fear, to indicate
    The repentant indiscreet.
    I, thus tantalized by Me
    Spend an irritated day;
    Now the question seems to be--
    What goes on when I’m away?


AEROPLANE, JUNE 6TH.

    I was watching as you flew
    Circling in the summer sky;
    Round about you thoughts I threw,
    Every bit as swift as you,
    Every bit as high.

    Out of cloud a palace springs,
    Domes and minarets and towers,
    Bastions, where the trumpet rings
    And my topmost turret swings
    High about the showers.

    You were captain in the skies
    Nimble as a darting sword--
    Of the company of spies
    Who my castle from surprise
    Vigilantly ward.

    Wheeling, darting, unaware
    That you were the warden bold
    Of my palace towering there,
    Of its battlements of air
    And its roofs of gold.

    All unheeding trumpet calls
    Down you plunged from out the blue;
    Warderless the silver wells,
    And my airy castle falls
    Swifter far than you.




_L. A. G. STRONG_

(_WADHAM_)


RUFUS PRAYS

    In the darkening church,
    Where but a few had stayed,
    At the Litany Desk
    The idiot knelt and prayed.

    Rufus, stunted, uncouth.
    The one son of his mother:
    “Eh, I’d sooner ’ave Rufie,”
    She said, “than many another.

    “‘E’s so useful about the ’ouse
    And so gentle as ’e can be:
    And ’e gets up early o’ mornin’s
    To make me a cup o’ tea.”

    The formal evensong
    Had passed over his head:
    He sucked his thumb, and squinted,
    And dreamed, instead.

    Now while the organ boomed
    To few who still were there,
    At the Litany Desk
    The idiot made his prayer:

    “Gawd bless Muther,
    ’N’ make Rufie a good lad.
    Take Rufie to Heaven,
    ’N’ forgive him when he’s bad.

    “’N’ early mornin’s in Heaven
    ’E’ll make Muther’s tea,
    ’N’ a cup for the Lord Jesus
    ’N’ a cup for Thee.”


IN THE GARDEN

    A soft and flowered vision
      Came on me as a breeze
    In summer, and I saw
      The souls of men like bees.

    Up stairs of orchard foam
      With balustrade of may,
    Stagger, a mazy cluster,
      Drunk with the scented day.

    Then strong from newer honey,
      With brighter pollen shod,
    The little souls went buzzing
      Up to the Hives of God.




_SHERARD VINES_

(_NEW COLLEGE_)


PERMISSION

    Not till, fallen swooning at the last
    Round, heart-broken at the cruel pace,
    Thrown out useless from my working place
    Sickness, scorn, and bitterness to taste,
    Not till hard days have me crucified
    To a desk, the close nights to a bed
    Comfortless, and all my gain unmade,
    All the towers brought low that were my pride,
    May I seek the silent golden tor,
    Sleep beside long crumbled architraves,
    See the desolate glory of the waves
    Snarling, like tigers on a lone lee shore.


SUMMER

    In blatant light the grasses look
    Like bronzen swords of green,
    The hillock-tops simmer and smoke,
    The stark road thrusts between.

    No mild opacity of cloud
    Transmutes the harshness, where
    Like stars of newly spattered blood
    Kempt cottage flowers stare.

    A blast of Hell gets up to flout
    The sharp metallic trees,
    And hungry insects haste about
    Their cruel purposes.




_D. E. A. WALLACE_

(_SOMERVILLE_)


RIVER-POOLS

          Were I a shadow in a pool
    I would not live, I would not fear to die;
          But only, faint and cool,
    I’d pass my days of unreality
    In passive contemplation of the sky;
          And no desire should shake me.
          And no denial break me,
                          Ah, fool,
          Thou art no shadow in a pool.

          Were I a shadow in a pool
    I could not love, I could not thrill with hate;
          But, ashy-pale and cool,
    Through endless meadows moving desolate
    I would outgaze the sky dispassionate,
          With never grief to move me.
          And never friend to love me.
                          Glad fool,
          Thou art no shadow in a pool!


LIFE AND I

    Life and I are a pair of lovers:
        Life is only as old as I.
        Here he kissed me, with no one by,
        Here the day long will we lie,
    On a hillside swept with the calling of plovers,
    Until the stooping midnight covers
        Life and me with the star-wrought sky.

    Life, come kiss me! Joy, come tell me,
        Will you love me still to-morrow?
    Will you ravish me and sell me,
        Love of mine, to sorrow?

    “Sweet, come kiss me! Sweet, come tell me
        No misgivings of the morrow!
    But ... there are two ways to spell me:
        I am Joy--and Sorrow.”


BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS. GUILDFORD, ENGLAND




FROM B. H. BLACKWELL’S LIST


[Illustration]

     =Oxford Poetry, 1910-1913.=

_Out of Print._

     =Oxford Poetry, 1914-1916.= Uniform with the 1910-1913 volume, 5s.
     net.

     =Oxford Poetry, 1914.=

[_Out of Print._

     =Oxford Poetry, 1915.= Edited by G. D. H. C. and T. W. E. Uniform
     with the above, Roxburgh parchment, 2s. 6d. net; sewed, 1s. 6d.
     net.

[_Third Impression._

     =Oxford Poetry, 1916.= Edited by T. W. E., W. R. C., and A. L. H.
     Uniform with the above, Roxburgh parchment, 2s. 6d. net; sewed, 1s.
     6d. net.

     =Oxford Poetry, 1917.= Edited by T. W. E., W. R. C., and D. L. S.
     Uniform with the above. Roxburgh parchment, 2s. 6d. net; sewed, 1s.
     6d. net.

[_Second Impression._

_DOROTHY L. SAYERS._

     (_Author of ‘Op. I.’_)

     =Catholic Tales.= Impl. 16mo, art wrapper, 3s. net.

     These poems are startling. Inspired equally by the New Testament,
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       *       *       *       *       *


FROM B. H. BLACKWELL’S LIST


_A. G. SHIRREFF, I.C.S._

(_Author of ‘The Dilettante,’ and ‘The Tale of Florentius.’_)

     =Tales of the Sarai.= Crown 8vo, sewed, 2s. 6d. net.

‘Very delightful ... for humour we want nothing better. We have not
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     =Wheels: An Anthology of Verse.= Edited by EDITH SITWELL. Impl. 16mo,
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‘They have not as a body very much in common.’--_The Times._

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     =Wheels, 1917: A Second Cycle.= Uniform with the above, 3s. 6d. net.

‘“Wheels” is, in its way, as notable a phenomenon as “The Yellow
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