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Sea Spray and Smoke Drift/Zu der edlen Yagd

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The Wearie Wayfarer: his Ballad
by Adam Lindsay Gordon
Zu der edlen Yagd

"Zu der edlen Yagd" (German) = "To the noble hunt"

4465645The Wearie Wayfarer: his Ballad — Zu der edlen YagdAdam Lindsay Gordon

FYTTE III.

ZU DER EDLEN YAGD.

[A TREATISE ON TREES—VINE-TREE v. SADDLE-TREE.]

“Now, welcome, welcome, masters mine,Thrice welcome to the noble chase,Nor earthly sport, nor sport divine,Can take such honourable place.”—Ballad of the Wild Huntsman.     (Free Translation.)


I remember some words my father said,When I was an urchin vain;—God rest his soul, in his narrow bedThese ten long years he hath lain.When I think one drop of the blood he boreThis faint heart surely must hold,It may be my fancy and nothing more,But the faint heart seemeth bold.
He said, that as from the blood of grape,Or from juice distilled from the grain,False vigour, soon to evaporate,Is lent to nerve and brain;So the coward will dare on the gallant horseWhat he never would dare alone,Because he exults in a borrowed force,And a hardihood not his own.
And it may be so, yet this difference lies’Twixt the vine and the saddle-tree,The spurious courage that drink suppliesSets our baser passions free;But the stimulant which the horseman feelsWhen he gallops fast and straight,To his better nature most appeals,And charity conquers hate.
As the kindly sunshine thaws the snow,E’en malice and spite will yield,We could almost welcome our mortal foeIn the saddle by flood and field;And chivalry dawns in the merry taleThat “Market Harborough” writes,And the yarns of “Nimrod” and “Martingale’Seen legends of loyal knights.
Now tell me for once, old horse of mine,Grazing round me loose and free,Does your ancient equine heart repineFor a burst in such companie,Where “the Powers that be” in the front rank ride,To hold your own with the throng,Or to plunge at “Faugh-a-Bullagh's” side.In the rapids of Dandenong?
Don't tread on my toes, you're no foolish weight,So I found to my cost, as underYour carcase I lay, when you rose too late,Yet I blame you not for the blunder:What! sulky, old man, your under lip falls!You think I too ready to rail arnAt your kinship remote to that duffer at walls,The talkative roadster of Balaam.

This work was published before January 1, 1930, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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