[A Logical
Discussion]
'Then hey for boot
and horse, lad !
And
round the world away !
Young blood will
have its course, lad !
And
every dog his day !'—C. Kingsley.
THERE'S a formula
which the west country clowns
Once used, ere their blows fell thick,
At the fairs on the
Devon and Cornwall downs,
In
their bouts with the single-stick.
You may read a
moral, not far amiss,
If
you care to moralize,
In the crossing
guard, where the ash-plants kiss,
To
the words 'God spare our eyes.'
No game was ever yet
worth a rap
For
a rational man to play,
Into which no
accident, no mishap,
Could possibly find its way.
If you hold the
willow, a shooter from Wills
May
transform you into a hopper,
And the football
meadow is rife with spills,
If
you feel disposed for a cropper ;
In a rattling gallop
with hound and horse
You
may chance to reverse the medal
On the sward, with
the saddle your loins across,
And
your hunter's loins on the saddle ;
In the stubbles
you'll find it hard to frame
A
remonstrance firm, yet civil,
When oft as 'our
mutual friend' takes aim,
Long odds may be
laid on the rising game,
And
against your gaiters level ;
There's danger even
where fish are caught
To
those who a wetting fear ;
For what's worth
having must ay be bought,
And sport's like
life, and life's like sport,
'It
ain't all skittles and beer.'
The honey bag lies
close to the sting,
The
rose is fenced by the thorn,
Shall we leave to
others their gathering,
And turn from
clustering fruits that cling
To
the garden wall in scorn ?
Albeit those purple
grapes hang high,
Like the fox in the ancient tale,
Let us pause and
try, ere we pass them by,
Though we, like the fox, may fail.
All hurry is worse
than useless ; think
On
the adage, ' 'Tis pace that kills ;'
Shun bad tobacco,
avoid strong drink,
Abstain from Holloway's pills,
Wear woollen socks,
they're the best you'll find,
Beware how you leave off flannel ;
And whatever you do,
don't change your mind
When once you have picked your panel ;
With a bank of cloud
in the south-south-east,
Stand ready to shorten sail ;
Fight shy of a
corporation feast ;
Don't trust to a martingale ;
Keep your powder
dry, and shut one eye,
Not
both, when you touch your trigger ;
Don't stop with your
head too frequently
(This advice ain't meant for a nigger) ;
Look before you
leap, if you like, but if
You
mean leaping, don't look long,
Or the weakest place
will soon grow stiff,
And
the strongest doubly strong ;
As far as you can,
to every man,
Let
your aid be freely given,
And hit out
straight, 'tis your shortest plan,
When against the ropes you're driven.
Mere pluck, though
not in the least sublime,
Is
wiser than blank dismay,
Since 'No sparrow
can fall before its time,'
And
we're valued higher than they ;
So hope for the best
and leave the rest
In
charge of a stronger hand,
Like the honest
boors in the far-off west,
With the formula terse and grand.
They were men for
the most part rough and rude,
Dull and illiterate,
But they nursed no
quarrel, they cherished no feud,
They were strangers to spite and hate ;
In a kindly spirit
they took their stand,
That brothers and sons might learn
How a man should
uphold the sports of his land,
And strike his best
with a strong right hand,
And
take his strokes in return.
' 'Twas a barbarous
practice,' the Quaker cries,
' 'Tis
a thing of the past, thank heaven'—
Keep your thanks
till the combative instinct dies
With the taint of the olden leaven ;
Yes, the times are
changed, for better or worse,
The
prayer that no harm befall
Has given its place
to a drunken curse,
And
the manly game to a brawl.
Our burdens are
heavy, our natures weak,
Some pastime devoid of harm
May we look for ?
'Puritan elder, speak !'
'Yea, friend,
peradventure thou mayest seek
Recreation singing a psalm.'
If I did, your
visage so grim and stern
Would relax in a ghastly smile,
For of music I never
one note could learn,
And my feeble
minstrelsy would turn
Your chant to discord vile.
Tho' the
Philistine's mail could naught avail,
Nor
the spear like a weaver's beam,
There are episodes
yet in the Psalmist's tale,
To obliterate which
his poems fail,
Which his exploits fail to redeem.
Can the Hittite's
wrongs forgotten be ?
Does HE warble
'Non nobis Domine,'
With his monarch in
blissful concert, free
From all malice to flesh inherent ;
Zeruiah's offspring, who served so well,
Yet between the
horns of the altar fell—
Does HIS voice the
'Quid gloriaris' swell,
Or
the 'Quare fremuerunt' ?
It may well be thus
where DAVID sings,
And
Uriah joins in the chorus,
But while earth to
earthy matter clings,
Neither you nor the
bravest of Judah's kings
As
a pattern can stand before us.