STOMACH FOR THE FIGHT.

O not because my taste for bread

Tended to make me much too stout,

And all the leading doctors said

I should be better far without;

Not that my health may be more rude,

More svelte my rounded style of beauty,

I sacrifice this staple food—

But from a sense of duty!

I "can no other" when I think

Of how the Hun, docile and meek,

Suffers his ravenous maw to shrink,

And only strikes, say, once a week;

If he for all these months has stood

The sorry fare they feed the brute on,

I hope that I can be as good

A patriot as your Teuton.

Henceforth I spurn the dear delight

That went so well with jam or cheese;

No turn of mine shall wear the white

Flour of a shameless life of ease;

Others may pass one loaf in three,

Some rather more than that, and some less,

But I—the only course for me—

Go absolutely crumbless.

So, when I quit this mortal strife,

Men on my grave these lines shall score:—

"Much as he loved the Staff of Life

He loved his country even more;

He needed no compelling ban;

England, in fact, had but to ask it,

And he surrendered, like a man,

The claims of his bread-basket."

O.S.