TO SMITH IN MESOPOTAMY.

Master of Arts, how is it with you now?

Our spires stand up against the saffron dawn

And Isis breaks in silver at the prow

Of many a skiff, and by each dewy lawn

Purple and gold the tall flag-lilies stand;

And SHELLEY sleeps above his empty tomb

Hard by the staircase where you had your room,

And all the scented lilacs are in bloom,

But you are far from this our fairy-land.

Your heavy wheel disturbs the ancient dust

Of empires dead ere Oxford saw the light.

Those flies that form a halo round your crust

And crawl into your sleeping-bag at night—

Their grandsires drank the blood of NADIR SHAH,

And tapped the sacred veins of SULEYMAN;

There flashed dread TIMOUR'S whistling yataghan,

And soothed the tiger ear of GENGHIZ KHAN

The cream of Tartary's battle-drunk "Heiyah!"

And yonder, mid the colour and the cries

Of mosque and minaret and thronged bazaars

And fringed palm-trees dark against the skies

HARUN AL RASCHID walked beneath the stars

And heard the million tongues of old Baghdad,

Till out of Basrah, as the dawn took wing,

Came up the laden camels, string on string;

But now there is not left them anything

Of all the wealth and wisdom that they had.

Somehow I cannot see you, lean and browned,

Chasing the swart Osmanli through the scrub

Or hauling railroad ties and "steel mild round"

Sunk in the sands of Irak to the hub,

Heaping coarse oaths on Mesopotamy;

But rather strewn in gentlemanly ease

In some cool serdab or beneath the trees

That fringe the river-bank you hug your knees

And watch the garish East go chattering by.

And at your side some wise old priest reclines

And weaves a tale of dead and glorious days

When MAMUN reigned; expounds the heavenly signs

Whose movements fix the span of mortal days;

Touches on Afreets and the ways of Djinns;

Through his embroidered tale real heroes pass,

RUSTUM the bold and BAHRAM the wild ass,

Who never dreamed of using poisoned gas

Or spread barbed wire before the foeman's shins.

I think I hear you saying, "Not so much

Of waving palm-trees and the flight of years;

It's evident that you are out of touch

With war as managed by the Engineers.

Hot blasts of sherki are our daily treat,

And toasted sandhills full of Johnny Turk

And almost anything that looks like work,

And thirst and flies and marches that would irk

A cast-iron soldier with asbestos feet."

Know, then, the thought was fathered by the wish

We oldsters feel, that you and everyone

Who through the heat and flies conspire to dish

The "Drang nach Osten" of the beastly Hun

Shall win their strenuous virtue's modest wage.

And if at Nishapur and Babylon

The cup runs dry, we'll fill it later on,

And here where Cherwell soothes the fretful don

In flowing sherbet pledge our easeful sage.

ALGOL.