The Legend of Evil

                        I

1 
This is the sorrowful story
    Told when the twilight fails
And the monkeys walk together
    Holding their neighbours' tails:–
2 
"Our fathers lived in the forest,
    Foolish people were they,
They went down to the cornland
    To teach the farmers to play.
3 
"Our fathers frisked in the millet,
    Our fathers skipped in the wheat,
Our fathers hung from the branches,
    Our fathers danced in the street.
4 
"Then came the terrible farmers,
    Nothing of play they knew,
Only...they caught our fathers
    And set them to labour too!
5 
"Set them to work in the cornland
    With ploughs and sickles and flails,
Put them in mud-walled prisons
    And–cut off their beautiful tails!
6 
"Now, we can watch our fathers,
    Sullen and bowed and old,
Stooping over the millet,
    Sharing the silly mould,
7 
"Driving a foolish furrow,
    Mending a muddy yoke,
Sleeping in mud-walled prisons,
    Steeping their food in smoke.
8 
"We may not speak to our fathers,
    For if the farmers knew
They would come up to the forest
    And set us to labour too."
9 
This is the horrible story
    Told as the twilight fails
And the monkeys walk together
    Holding their kinsmen's tails.
	
                                              II

'Twas when the rain fell steady an' the Ark was pitched an' ready,
    That Noah got his orders for to take the bastes below;
He dragged them all together by the horn an' hide an' feather,
    An' all excipt the Donkey was agreeable to go.

Thin Noah spoke him fairly, thin talked to him sevarely,
    An' thin he cursed him squarely to the glory av the Lord:–
"Divil take the ass that bred you, and the greater ass that fed you–
    Divil go wid you, ye spalpeen!" an' the Donkey went aboard.

But the wind was always failin', an' 'twas most onaisy sailin',
    An' the ladies in the cabin couldn't stand the stable air;
An' the bastes betwuxt the hatches, they tuk an' died in batches,
    Till Noah said:–"There's wan av us that hasn't paid his fare!"

For he heard a flusteration 'mid the bastes av all creation–
    The trumpetin' av elephints an' bellowin' av whales;
An' he saw forninst the windy whin he wint to stop the shindy
    The Divil wid a stable-fork bedivillin' their tails.

The Divil cursed outrageous, but Noah said umbrageous:–
    "To what am I indebted for this tenant-right invasion?"
An' the Divil gave for answer:–"Evict me if you can, sir,
    For I came in wid the Donkey–on Your Honour's invitation."

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The Rhyme of the Three Sealers

1 
Away by the lands of the Japanee
Where the paper lanterns glow
And the crews of all the shipping drink
In the house of Blood Street Joe,
At twilight, when the landward breeze
Brings up the harbour noise,
And ebb of Yokohama Bay
Swigs chattering through the buoys,
In Cisco’s Dewdrop Dining-Rooms
They tell the tale anew
Of a hidden sea and a hidden fight,
When the Baltic ran from the Northern Light
And the Stralsund fought the two.
2 
Now this is the Law of the Muscovite, that he proves with shot and steel,
When ye come by his isles in the Smoky Sea ye must not take the seal,
Where the gray sea goes nakedly between the weed-hung shelves,
And the little blue fox he is bred for his skin and the seal they breed for themselves;
For when the matkas seek the shore to drop their pups aland,
The great man-seal haul out of the sea, a-roaring, band by band;
And when the first September gales have slaked their rutting-wrath,
The great man-seal haul back to the sea and no man knows their path.
Then dark they lie and stark they lie—rookery, dune, and floe,
And the Northern Lights come down o’ nights to dance with the houseless snow;
And God Who clears the grounding berg and steers the grinding floe,
He hears the cry of the little kit-fox and the wind along the snow.
But since our women must walk gay and money buys their gear,
The sealing-boats they filch that way at hazard year by year.
English they be and Japanee that hang on the Brown Bear’s flank,
And some be Scot, but the worst of the lot, and the boldest thieves, be Yank!
3 
It was the sealer Northern Light, to the Smoky Seas she bore,
With a stovepipe stuck from a starboard port and the Russian flag at her fore.
(Baltic, Stralsund, and Northern Light—oh! they were birds of a feather—
Slipping away to the Smoky Seas, three seal-thieves together!)
And at last she came to a sandy cove and the Baltic lay therein,
But her men were up with the herding seal to drive and club and skin.
There were fifteen hundred skins abeach, cool pelt and proper fur,
When the Northern Light drove into the bight and the sea-mist drove with her.
The Baltic called her men and weighed—she could not choose but run—
For a stovepipe seen through the closing mist, it shows like a four-inch gun.
(And loss it is that is sad as death to lose both trip and ship
And lie for a rotting contraband on Vladivostok slip.)
She turned and dived in the sea-smother as a rabbit dives in the whins,
And the Northern Light sent up her boats to steal the stolen skins.
They had not brought a load to side or slid their hatches clear,
When they were aware of a sloop-of-war, ghost-white and very near.
Her flag she showed, and her guns she showed—three of them, black, abeam,
And a funnel white with the crusted salt, but never a show of steam.
4 
There was no time to man the brakes, they knocked the shackle free,
And the Northern Light stood out again, goose-winged to open sea.
(For life it is that is worse than death, by force of Russian law
To work in the mines of mercury that loose the teeth in your jaw.)
They had not run a mile from shore—they heard no shots behind—
When the skipper smote his hand on his thigh and threw her up in the wind:
“Bluffed—raised out on a bluff,” said he, “for if my name’s Tom Hall,
“You must set a thief to catch a thief—and a thief has caught us all!
“By every butt in Oregon and every spar in Maine,
“The hand that spilled the wind from her sail was the hand of Reuben Paine!
“He has rigged and trigged her with paint and spar, and, faith, he has faked her well—
“But I’d know the Stralsund’s deckhouse yet from here to the booms o’ Hell.
“Oh, once we ha’ met at Baltimore, and twice on Boston pier,
“But the sickest day for you, Reuben Paine, was the day that you came here—
“The day that you came here, my lad, to scare us from our seal
“With your funnel made o’ your painted cloth, and your guns o’ rotten deal!
“Ring and blow for the Baltic now, and head her back to the bay,
“And we’ll come into the game again—with a double deck to play!”
5 
They rang and blew the sealers’ call—the poaching cry of the sea—
And they raised the Baltic out of the mist, and an angry ship was she:
And blind they groped through the whirling white and blind to the bay again,
Till they heard the creak of the Stralsund’s boom and the clank of her mooring chain.
They laid them down by bitt and boat, their pistols in their belts,
And: “Will you fight for it, Reuben Paine, or will you share the pelts?”
6 
A dog-toothed laugh laughed Reuben Paine, and bared his flenching-knife.
“Yea, skin for skin, and all that he hath a man will give for his life;
“But I’ve six thousand skins below, and Yeddo Port to see,
“And there’s never a law of God or man runs north of Fifty-Three:
“So go in peace to the naked seas with empty holds to fill,
“And I’ll be good to your seal this catch, as many as I shall kill!”
7 
Answered the snap of a closing lock and the jar of a gun-butt slid,
But the tender fog shut fold on fold to hide the wrong they did.
The weeping fog rolled fold on fold the wrath of man to cloak,
And the flame-spurts pale ran down the rail as the sealing-rifles spoke.
The bullets bit on bend and butt, the splinter slivered free
(Little they trust to sparrow-dust that stop the seal in his sea!),
The thick smoke hung and would not shift, leaden it lay and blue,
But three were down on the Baltic’s deck and two of the Stralsund’s crew.
An arm’s-length out and overside the banked fog held them bound,
But, as they heard or groan or word, they fired at the sound.
For one cried out on the Name of God, and one to have him cease,
And the questing volley found them both and bade them hold their peace;
And one called out on a heathen joss and one on the Virgin’s Name,
And the schooling bullet leaped across and showed them whence they came.
And in the waiting silences the rudder whined beneath,
And each man drew his watchful breath slow taken ‘tween the teeth—
Trigger and ear and eye acock, knit brow and hard-drawn lips—
Bracing his feet by chock and cleat for the rolling of the ships.
Till they heard the cough of a wounded man that fought in the fog for breath,
Till they heard the torment of Reuben Paine that wailed upon his death:
8 
“The tides they’ll go through Fundy Race but I’ll go nevermore
“And see the hogs from ebb-tide mark turn scampering back to shore.
“No more I’ll see the trawlers drift below the Bass Rock ground,
“Or watch the tall Fall steamer lights tear blazing up the Sound.
“Sorrow is me, in a lonely sea and a sinful fight I fall,
“But if there’s law o’ God or man you’ll swing for it yet, Tom Hall!”
9 
Tom Hall stood up by the quarter-rail. “Your words in your teeth,” said he.
“There’s never a law of God or man runs north of Fifty-Three.
“So go in grace with Him to face, and an ill-spent life behind,
“And I’ll be good to your widows, Rube, as many as I shall find.”
10
A Stralsund man shot blind and large, and a war-lock Finn was he,
And he hit Tom Hall with a bursting ball a hand’s-breadth over the knee.
Tom Hall caught hold by the topping-lift, and sat him down with an oath,
“You’ll wait a little, Rube,” he said, “the Devil has called for both.
“The Devil is driving both this tide, and the killing-grounds are close,
“And we’ll go up to the Wrath of God as the holluschickie goes.
“O men, put back your guns again and lay your rifles by,
“We’ve fought our fight, and the best are down. Let up and let us die!
“Quit firing, by the bow there—quit! Call off the Baltic’s crew!
“You’re sure of Hell as me or Rube—but wait till we get through.”
There went no word between the ships, but thick and quick and loud
The life-blood drummed on the dripping decks, with the fog-dew from the shroud,
The sea-pull drew them side by side, gunnel to gunnel laid,
And they felt the sheerstrakes pound and clear, but never a word was said.
11 
Then Reuben Paine cried out again before his spirit passed:
“Have I followed the sea for thirty years to die in the dark at last?
“Curse on her work that has nipped me here with a shifty trick unkind—
“I have gotten my death where I got my bread, but I dare not face it blind.
“Curse on the fog! Is there never a wind of all the winds I knew
“To clear the smother from off my chest, and let me look at the blue?”
The good fog heard—like a splitten sail, to left and right she tore,
And they saw the sun-dogs in the haze and the seal upon the shore.
12 
Silver and gray ran spit and bay to meet the steel-backed tide,
And pinched and white in the clearing light the crews stared overside.
O rainbow-gay the red pools lay that swilled and spilled and spread,
And gold, raw gold, the spent shell rolled between the careless dead—
The dead that rocked so drunkenwise to weather and to lee,
And they saw the work their hands had done as God had bade them see.
13 
And a little breeze blew over the rail that made the headsails lift,
But no man stood by wheel or sheet, and they let the schooners drift.
And the rattle rose in Reuben’s throat and he cast his soul with a cry,
And “Gone already?” Tom Hall he said. “Then it’s time for me to die.”
His eyes were heavy with great sleep and yearning for the land,
And he spoke as a man that talks in dreams, his wound beneath his hand.
14 
“Oh, there comes no good o’ the westering wind that backs against the sun;
“Wash down the decks—they’re all too red—and share the skins and run,
“Baltic, Stralsund, and Northern Light—clean share and share for all,
“You’ll find the fleets off Tolstoi Mees, but you will not find Tom Hall.
“Evil he did in shoal-water and blacker sin on the deep,
“But now he’s sick of watch and trick and now he’ll turn and sleep.
“He’ll have no more of the crawling sea that made him suffer so,
“But he’ll lie down on the killing-grounds where the holluschickie go.
“And west you’ll sail and south again, beyond the sea-fog’s rim,
“And tell the Yoshiwara girls to burn a stick for him.
“And you’ll not weight him by the heels and dump him overside,
“But carry him up to the sand-hollows to die as Bering died,
“And make a place for Reuben Paine that knows the fight was fair,
“And leave the two that did the wrong to talk it over there!” 
15 
Half-steam ahead by guess and lead, for the sun is mostly veiled—
Through fog to fog, by luck and log, sail ye as Bering sailed;
And if the light shall lift aright to give your landfall plain,
North and by west, from Zapne Crest, ye raise the Crosses Twain.
Fair marks are they to the inner bay, the reckless poacher knows
What time the scarred see-catchie lead their sleek seraglios.
Ever they hear the floe-pack clear, and the blast of the old bull-whale,
And the deep seal-roar that beats off-shore above the loudest gale.
Ever they wait the winter’s hate as the thundering boorga calls,
Where northward look they to St.George, and westward to St.Paul’s.
Ever they greet the hunted fleet—lone keels off headlands drear—
When the sealing-schooners flit that way at hazard year by year.
Ever in Yokohama port men tell the tale anew
Of a hidden sea and a hidden fight,
When the Baltic ran from the Northern Light
And the Stralsund fought the two. 

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To These People

1 
'Peace upon Earth to people of good will'
So runs the song of eighteen hundred years
Caught by the drowsy shepherds on the hill
From Regents of the Spheres.
2
Now we have lost the Babe among the straw
That men, too wise, thresh out of Death and Birth;
But year by year the old sweet changeless Law
Rings downward to the Earth.
3
Wherefore so long as mortal life endures,
To that Beyond we doubt and dream of still,
Peace upon earth and all goodwill be yours
O household of goodwill!
4
And none  the less because so near to Youth 
The hand that fails your merits in confessing
And none the less because so far from truth 
The heart that shapes the blessing.
5
Against the petty round of wearing strife 
You gave me refuge very dear and new—
The tender courtesies of daily life 
Unwavering, sweet and true.
6
Forgoing much you opened wide your doors
And made me welcome past all worth or right—
An inky gamin doing inky chores
And doing 'em at night!
7
You heard the egotistic tongue that jumped 
From babbling joy to beer-begotten gloom,
Nor shuddered when cheroot in hand I stumped 
Your dainty drawing room.
8
Do I write jestingly? Believe me no— 
Between the lines a deeper meaning lies
And heartier thanks than best Blue Black can show 
Or pen anatomize
9
Help, Comfort, Sympathy and Kindness lie 
Beyond all scribbling though I set apart
A thirty page edition of the Pi
And filled it—from my heart.
10
I thank you for I hold you very dear—
Science and Housewifry who made me guest,
And more than guest, for half a happy year—
And veil my thanks in jest
11
Behold! The stranger in your gates calls down 
A mighty Blessing—yea, a note of credit
Available at every sea and town
As you and yours shall tread it
12
All good encompass you  from East to West 
Till utmost East becomes the West extreme,
What time you take your giant pleasure–quest 
To lands whereof I dream.
13
For you shall China's wave take softer mood, 
And Yeddo yield her choicest 'broideries,
And Halcyons hastening from their haunts shall brood 
O'er North Pacific seas.
14
Most rare medicaments on every breeze
Shall steal beneath the awnings for your sake
Till tortured temples find unbroken ease,
And burning brows forget the way to ache.
15
Rangoon shall strew her rubies at your  feet,
New skies shall show uncharted constellations,
And gentle earthquakes in Japan shall meet
Your rage for observations.
16
No plate of all the gross shall frill or blur,
Your trunks shall 'scape unclean douane-darogahs,
Though gems and netschies, curios and fur 
Shall cram your Saratogas.
17
So shall you fare, while happy omens bless,
By land and sea, thrice proof against all harms,
Till ...
Alex finds himself an F.R.S.
And Ted her Father's arms.

  

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Nursery Rhymes for little Anglo-Indians

             1. Hush-a-by, Baby, 
                  In the verandah!
               When the sun drops 
                  Baby may wander. 
              
              When the hot weather comes 
                  Baby will die-
               With a fine pukka tomb 
                  In the ce-me-te-ry.
               
              2. I had a little husband
                  Who gave me all his pay. 
               I left him for Mussoorie,  
                  A hundred miles away.
              
               I dragged my little husband's name 
                  Through heaps of social mire,
               And joined him in October,
                  As good as you'd desire.

 3. 'Ba-Ba-Babu, have you got your will?'
   'Yes Sar, Yes Sar, thanks to the Bill. 
   Four-anna witnesses-plenty telling cram,
And bless the Barra-Lat-Sahib, who says how good I am.'
         
     4. See-saw, Justice and Law,
            The Raiyats shall have a new master.
         And the Zemindar ain't allowed to distraint
            Because they can't pay any faster.
              
           5. Sing a Song of Sixpence, 
                  Purchased by our lives­
               Decent English Gentlemen 
                  Roasting with their wives.
              
               In the plains of India 
                  Where like flies they die.
               Isn't that a wholesome risk 
                  To get our living by?
 
               The fever's in the Jungle, 
                  The typhoid's in the tank,
               And men may catch the cholera 
                  Apart from social rank;
             
               And Death is in the Garden, 
                  A-waiting till we pass,
               For the Krait is in the drain-pipe, 
                  The Cobra in the grass!
                 
             6. With a lady flirt a little­ 
                    'Tis manners so to do.
                  Of a lady speak but little­
                     'Tis safest so to do.
               
           7. Jack's own Jill goes up to the Hill
                  Of Murree or Chakrata. 
               Jack remains, and dies in the plains, 
                  And Jill remarries soon after.
             
           8. Mary, Mary, quite contrary, 
                  Where do your subalterns go?
               For love is brief and the next 'relief' 
                  Will scatter them all like snow.
 

(Rhyme 3. above was included in Echoes, but 
not in the later collected editions.)

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The Quid Pro Quo

  'He was aware'—Oh great and good
  And virtuous Doctor Hunter!—He
Observed in sympathetic mood,
  My struggles with the base Rupee
Yea—he could feel for others, who
By thousands counts his monthly 'screw'!

  'He was aware' my Jimmy's bills
  For schooling annually grow.
He found the balm for all my ills—
  The panacea as below:—
'Five pie per hardly earned rupee
Secures His Lordship's sympathy.'

  'He was aware' my wife desired
  A homeward journey in the spring;
'He was aware' my son required
  A final College polishing ...
My son will be a clerk—but I—
I have 'his Lordship's sympathy'.

  It is a great and holy gift,
  But (mournfully the bard confesses)
It will not give his son a lift,
  Or pay for Mrs. Timpkins' dresses.
One cannot clothe one's self you see
With e'en Viceregal sympathy.

  Wife of my bosom, o'er the main
  You cannot go—Droop sweetly here!
What matter? Let us read again
  That cutting from the Pioneer.
Just think! We paupers—you and I— 
Possess His Lordship's sympathy!

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Rebirth

If any God should say,
"I will restore
The world her yesterday
Whole as before
My Judgment blasted it"—who would not lift
Heart, eye, and hand in passion o'er the gift?

If any God should will
To wipe from mind
The memory of this ill
Which is Mankind
In soul and substance now—who would not bless
Even to tears His loving-tenderness?

If any God should give
Us leave to fly
These present deaths we live,
And safely die
In those lost lives we lived ere we were born—
What man but would not laugh the excuse to scorn?

For we are what we are—
So broke to blood
And the strict works of war—
So long subdued
To sacrifice, that threadbare Death commands
Hardly observance at our busier hands.

Yet we were what we were,
And, fashioned so,
It pleases us to stare
At the far show
Of unbelievable years and shapes that flit,
In our own likeness, on the edge of it.

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An Amateur

Our friend just hears that doggrel writing pays 
And sees himself already crowned with bays

Borrows whole volumes, burns the midnight oil 
And Bores his neighbours with his wordy toil

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A Dedication

And they were stronger hands than mine
That digged the Ruby from the earth—
More cunning brains that made it worth
The large desire of a king,
And stouter hearts that through the brine
Went down the perfect Pearl to bring.

Lo, I have wrought in common clay
Rude figures of a rough–hewn race,
Since pearls strew not the market-place
In this my town of banishment,
Where with the shifting dust I play,
And eat the bread of discontent.

Yet is there life in that I make.
O thou who knowest, turn and see–
As thou hast power over me
So have I power over these,
Because I wrought them for thy sake,
And breathed in them mine agonies.

Small mirth was in the making—now
I lift the cloth that cloaks the clay,
And, wearied, at thy feet I lay
My wares, ere I go forth to sell.
The long bazar will praise, but thou–
Heart of my heart—have I done well?

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A Song of Travel

Where's the lamp that Hero lit
  Once to call Leander home?
Equal Time hath shovelled it
  ’Neath the wrack of Greece and Rome.
Neither wait we any more
  That worn sail which Argo bore. 

Dust and dust of ashes close
  All the Vestal Virgins’ care;
And the oldest altar shows
  But an older darkness there.
Age-encamped Oblivion
  Tenteth every light that shone. 

Yet shall we, for Suns that die,
  Wall our wanderings from desire?
Or, because the Moon is high
  Scorn to use a nearer fire?
Lest some envious Pharaoh stir,
  Make our lives our sepulchre? 

Nay! Though Time with petty Fate
   Prison us and Emperors,
By our Arts do we create
  That which Time himself devours—
Such machines as well may run
  ’Gainst the Horses of the Sun. 

When we would a new abode,
  Space, our tyrant King no more,
Lays the long lance of the road
  At our feet and flees before,
Breathless, ere we overwhelm,
  To submit a further realm!

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A Song of the White Men

Now, this is the cup the White Men drink
  When they go to right a wrong,
And that is the cup of the old world’s hate—
  Cruel and strained and strong.
We have drunk that cup—and a bitter, bitter cup—
  And tossed the dregs away.
But well for the world when the White Men drink
   To the dawn of the White Man’s day! 

Now, this is the road that the White Men tread
   When they go to clean a land—
Iron underfoot and levin overhead
   And the deep on either hand.
We have trod that road—and a wet and windy road—
  Our chosen star for guide.
Oh, well for the world when the White Men tread
   Their highway side by side!

Now, this is the faith that the White Men hold
  When they build their homes afar—
“Freedom for ourselves and freedom for our sons
   And, failing freedom, War.”
We have proved our faith—bear witness to our faith,
  Dear souls of freemen slain!
Oh, well for the world when the White Men join
   To prove their faith again!

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