The Scarlet Gown

R.F. Murray
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Scarlet Gown, by R. F. Murray
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net

Title: The Scarlet Gown
being verses by a St. Andrews Man
Author: R. F. Murray
Release Date: October 8, 2005 [eBook #16821]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE
SCARLET GOWN***
Transcribed from the 1891 Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton & Co. edition
by David Price, [email protected]

THE SCARLET GOWN:
BEING VERSES BY A ST.
ANDREWS MAN
ST. ANDREWS, N.B.: A. M. HOLDEN
LONDON: SIMPKIN,
MARSHALL, HAMILTON & CO.
1891
' . . . the little town,
The drifting surf, the wintry year,
The college
of the scarlet gown,
St. Andrews by the Northern Sea,
That is a
haunted town to me.'
ANDREW LANG.
PREFACE

St. Andrews, but for its Town Council and its School Board, is a quiet
place; and the University, except during the progress of a Rectorial
Election, is peaceable and well-conducted. I hope these verses may so
far reflect St. Andrews life as to be found pleasant, if not over exciting.
I am able to reprint the verses on 'The City of Golf' by the special
courtesy of the Editor of the Saturday Review.
A few explanatory notes are given at the end of the book.
R. F. MURRAY.
THE VOICE THAT SINGS
The voice that sings across the night
Of long forgotten days and things,
Is there an ear to hear aright
The voice that sings?
It is as when a curfew rings
Melodious in the dying light,
A sound that flies on pulsing wings.
And faded eyes that once were bright
Brim over, as to life it brings
The echo of a dead delight,
The voice that sings.
THE BEST PIPE
In vain you fervently extol,
In vain you puff, your cutty clay.
A twelvemonth smoked and black
as coal,
'Tis redolent of rank decay
And bones of monks long passed away--

A fragrance I do not admire;
And so I hold my nose and say,
Give me a finely seasoned briar.
Macleod, whose judgment on the whole
Is faultless, has been led astray
To nurse a high-born meerschaum
bowl,
For which he sweetly had to pay.
Ah, let him nurse it as he may,
Before the colour mounts much higher,
The grate shall be its fate one
day.
Give me a finely seasoned briar.
The heathen Turk of Istamboul,
In oriental turban gay,
Delights his
unbelieving soul
With hookahs, bubbling in a way
To fill a Christian with dismay
And wake the old Crusading fire.
May no such pipe be mine, I pray;
Give me a finely seasoned briar.
Clay, meerschaum, hookah, what are they
That I should view them with desire?
Both now, and when my hair is
grey,
Give me a finely seasoned briar.
HYMN OF HIPPOLYTUS TO ARTEMIS
Artemis! thou fairest
Of the maids that be
In divine Olympus,

Hail! Hail to thee!
To thee I bring this woven weed
Culled for thee
from a virgin mead,
Where neither shepherd claims his flocks to feed


Nor ever yet the mower's scythe hath come.
There in the Spring the
wild bee hath his home,
Lightly passing to and fro
Where the virgin
flowers grow;
And there the watchful Purity doth go
Moistening
with dew-drops all the ground below,
Drawn from a river untaintedly
flowing,
They who have gained by a kind fate's bestowing
Pure
hearts, untaught by philosophy's care,
May gather the flowers in the
mead that are blowing,
But the tainted in spirit may never be there.
Now, O Divinest, eternally fair,
Take thou this garland to gather thy
hair,
Brought by a hand that is pure as the air.
For I alone of all the
sons of men
Hear thy pure accents, answering thee again.
And may
I reach the goal of life as I began the race,
Blest by the music of thy
voice, though darkness ever veil thy face!
ON A CRUSHED HAT
Brown was my friend, and faithful--but so fat!
He came to see me in the twilight dim;
I rose politely and invited him

To take a seat--how heavily he sat!
He sat upon the sofa, where my hat,
My wanton Zephyr, rested on its rim;
Its build, unlike my friend's,
was rather slim,
And when he rose, I saw it, crushed and flat.
O Hat, that wast the apple of my eye,
Thy brim is bent, six cracks are in thy crown,
And I shall never wear thee any more;
Upon a shelf thy loved
remains shall lie,
And with the years the dust will settle down
On thee, the neatest hat I ever wore!

A SWINBURNIAN INTERLUDE
Short space shall be hereafter
Ere April brings the hour
Of weeping and of laughter,
Of sunshine and of shower,
Of groaning and of gladness,
Of
singing and of sadness,
Of melody and madness,
Of all sweet things and sour.
Sweet to
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 16
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.