THE TROPHY.

I'd dined at home; I'd read till ten;

I'd thought, "The space upon the wall

Above the stuffed Thames trout

Wants filling." That was really all:

And then I closed my eyes, and then

I let my pipe go out.


We crawled, the Khan of Khot and I,

On a Thibetan precipice

(It was Thibet, I think),

A place of snow and black abyss;

We lay on rock—mid wind and sky—

Above a beetling brink.

For lo, along the ridge there fed

The sheep that ne'er a shepherd know

Save the shrill wind of morn,

Five "Oves Ammon" of the snow;

I saw the big ram lift his head,

Twin-mooned in mighty horn.

Broadside he turned, a mountain-god

In sweep of coronal sublime,

And the fierce whisper broke—

The Khan of Khot's, he hissed, "Tak time!"

And handed me my spinning-rod;

And as he did I woke!


One thing at least is clear, and that's

My empty wall is yet to fill;

Though oft with even's shade

I see that great head from the hill,

Unstable as the Cheshire cat's,

Look down therefrom and fade.


Two quotations from The Publisher's Circular:—

"Mr. Robert Bowes (who by the way is in his sixty-seventh year)...."

"Mr. Robert Bowes is in his seventy-ninth year.... But then he is much younger than many older men."

So are all of us. Mr. Bowes's distinction is in being twelve years younger than himself.