Or lesser breeds without the Law –
   Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
   Lest we forget – lest we forget!
   For heathen heart that puts her trust
   In reeking tube and iron shard,
   All valiant dust that builds on dust,
   And guarding, calls not Thee to guard,
   For frantic boast and foolish word –
   Thy mercy on Thy People, Lord!
   Amen.
   THE WHITE MAN’S BURDEN
   Take up the White Man’s burden –
   Send forth the best ye breed –
   Go bind your sons to exile
   To serve your captives’ need;
   To wait in heavy harness
   On fluttered folk and wild –
   Your new-caught, sullen peoples,
   Half devil and half child.
   Take up the White Man’s Burden –
   In patience to abide,
   To veil the threat of terror
   And check the show of pride;
   By open speech and simple,
   An hundred times made plain,
   To seek another’s profit,
   And work another’s gain.
   Take up the White Man’s burden –
   The savage wars of peace –
   Fill full the mouth of Famine
   And bid the sickness cease;
   And when your goal is nearest
   The end for others sought,
   Watch Sloth and heathen Folly
   Bring all your hope to nought.
   Take up the White Man’s burden –
   No tawdry rule of kings,
   But toil of serf and sweeper –
   The tale of common things.
   The ports ye shall not enter,
   The roads ye shall not tread,
   Go make them with your living,
   And mark them with your dead!
   Take up the White Man’s burden –
   And reap his old reward:
   The blame of those ye better,
   The hate of those ye guard –
   The cry of hosts ye humour
   (Ah, slowly!) toward the light: –
   Why brought ye us from bondage,
   ‘Our loved Egyptian night?’
   Take up the White Man’s burden –
   Ye dare not stoop to less –
   Nor call too loud on Freedom
   To cloak your weariness;
   By all ye cry or whisper,
   By all ye leave or do,
   The silent, sullen peoples
   Shall weigh your Gods and you.
   Take up the White Man’s burden –
   Have done with childish days –
   The lightly proffered laurel,
   The easy, ungrudged praise.
   Comes now, to search your manhood
   Through all the thankless years,
   Cold, edged with dear-bought wisdom,
   The judgment of your peers!
   A SCHOOL SONG
   ‘Let us now praise famous men’ –
   Men of little showing –
   For their work continueth,
   And their work continueth,
   Broad and deep continueth,
   Greater than their knowing!
   Western wind and open surge
   Took us from our mothers;
   Flung us on a naked shore
   (Twelve bleak houses by the shore!
   Seven summers by the shore!)
   ’Mid two hundred brothers.
   There we met with famous men
   Set in office o’er us;
   And they beat on us with rods –
   Faithfully with many rods –
   Daily beat us on with rods,
   For the love they bore us!
   Out of Egypt unto Troy –
   Over Himalaya –
   Far and sure our bands have gone –
   Hy-Brazil or Babylon,
   Islands of the Southern Run,
   And Cities of Cathaia!
   And we all praise famous men –
   Ancients of the College;
   For they taught us common sense –
   Tried to teach us common sense –
   Truth and God’s Own Common Sense,
   Which is more than knowledge!
   Each degree of Latitude
   Strung about Creation
   Seeth one, (or more), of us
   (Of one muster all of us),
   Diligent in that he does,
   Keen in his vocation.
   This we learned from famous men,
   Knowing not its uses,
   When they showed, in daily work,
   Man must finish off his work –
   Right or wrong, his daily work –
   And without excuses.
   Servants of the Staff and chain,
   Mine and fuse and grapnel –
   Some, before the face of Kings,
   Stand before the face of Kings;
   Bearing gifts to divers Kings –
   Gifts of case and shrapnel.
   This we learned from famous men
   Teaching in our borders,
   Who declarèd it was the best,
   Safest, easiest, and best –
   Expeditious, wise, and best –
   To obey your orders.
   Some beneath the further stars
   Bear the greater burden:
   Set to serve the lands they rule,
   (Save he serve no man may rule),
   Serve and love the lands they rule;
   Seeking praise nor guerdon.
   This we learned from famous men,
   Knowing not we learned it.
   Only, as the years went by –
   Lonely, as the years went by –
   Far from help as years went by,
   Plainer we discerned it.
   Wherefore praise we famous men
   From whose bays we borrow –
   They that put aside To-day –
   All the joys of their To-day –
   And with toil of their To-day
   Bought for us To-morrow!
   Bless and praise we famous men –
   Men of little showing –
   For their work continueth,
   And their work continueth,
   Broad and deep continueth,
   Great beyond their knowing!
   THE TWO-SIDED MAN
   Much I owe to the Lands that grew –
   More to the Lives that fed –
   But most to Allah Who gave me two
   Separate sides to my head.
   Much I reflect on the Good and the True
   In the Faiths beneath the sun,
   But most upon Allah Who gave me two
   Sides to my head, not one.
   Wesley’s following, Calvin’s flock,
   White or yellow or bronze,
   Shaman, Ju-ju or Angekok,
   Minister, Mukamuk, Bonze –
   Here is a health, my brothers, to you,
   However your prayers are said,
   And praised be Allah Who gave me two
   Separate sides to my head!
   I would go without shirt or shoe,
   Friend, tobacco or bread,
   Sooner than lose for a minute the two
   Separate sides of my head!
   BRIDGE-GUARD IN THE KARROO
   ‘… and will supply details to guard the Blood River Bridge.’
   District Orders: Lines of Communication – South
   African War
   Sudden the desert changes,
   The raw glare softens and clings,
   Till the aching Oudtshoorn ranges
   Stand up like the thrones of Kings –
   Ramparts of slaughter and peril –
   Blazing, amazing – aglow
   ’Twixt the sky-line’s belting beryl
   And the wine-dark flats below.
   Royal the pageant closes,
   Lit by the last of the sun –
   Opal and ash-of-roses,
   Cinnamon, umber 
					     					 			, and dun.
   The twilight swallows the thicket,
   The starlight reveals the ridge.
   The whistle shrills to the picket –
   We are changing guard on the bridge.
   (Few, forgotten and lonely,
   Where the empty metals shine –
   No, not combatants – only
   Details guarding the line.)
   We slip through the broken panel
   Of fence by the ganger’s shed;
   We drop to the waterless channel
   And the lean track overhead;
   We stumble on refuse of rations,
   The beef- and the biscuit-tins;
   We take our appointed stations,
   And the endless night begins.
   We hear the Hottentot herders
   As the sheep click past to the fold –
   And the click of the restless girders
   As the steel contracts in the cold –
   Voices of jackals calling
   And, loud in the hush between,
   A morsel of dry earth falling
   From the flanks of the scarred ravine.
   And the solemn firmament marches,
   And the hosts of heaven rise
   Framed through the iron arches –
   Banded and barred by the ties,
   Till we feel the far track humming,
   And we see her headlight plain,
   And we gather and wait her coming –
   The wonderful north-bound train.
   (Few, forgotten and lonely,
   Where the white car-windows shine –
   No, not combatants – only
   Details guarding the line.)
   Quick, ere the gift escape us!
   Out of the darkness we reach
   For a handful of week-old papers
   And a mouthful of human speech.
   And the monstrous heaven rejoices,
   And the earth allows again
   Meetings, greetings, and voices
   Of women talking with men.
   So we return to our places,
   As out on the bridge she rolls;
   And the darkness covers our faces,
   And the darkness re-enters our souls.
   More than a little lonely
   Where the lessening tail-lights shine.
   No – not combatants – only
   Details guarding the line!
   THE ISLANDERS
   No doubt but ye are the People – your throne is above
   the King’s.
   Whoso speaks in your presence must say acceptable things:
   Bowing the head in worship, bending the knee in fear –
   Bringing the word well smoothen – such as a King
   should hear.
   Fenced by your careful fathers, ringed by your
   leaden seas,
   Long did ye wake in quiet and long lie down
   at ease;
   Till ye said of Strife, ‘What is it?’ of the Sword, ‘It is
   far from our ken’;
   Till ye made a sport of your shrunken hosts and a toy
   of your armèd men.
   Ye stopped your ears to the warning – ye would
   neither look nor heed –
   Ye set your leisure before their toil and your lusts
   above their need.
   Because of your witless learning and your beasts of
   warren and chase,
   Ye grudged your sons to their service and your fields
   for their camping place.
   Ye forced them glean in the highways the straw for
   the bricks they brought;
   Ye forced them follow in byways the craft that ye
   never taught.
   Ye hindered and hampered and crippled; ye thrust out
   of sight and away
   Those that would serve you for honour and those that
   served you for pay.
   Then were the judgments loosened; then was your
   shame revealed,
   At the hands of a little people, few but apt in the field.
   Yet ye were saved by a remnant (and your land’s
   long-suffering star),
   When your strong men cheered in their millions while
   your striplings went to the war.
   Sons of the sheltered city – unmade, unhandled, unmeet –
   Ye pushed them raw to the battle as ye picked them
   raw from the street.
   And what did you look they should compass?
   Warcraft learned in a breath,
   Knowledge unto occasion at the fast far view of Death?
   So? And ye train your horses and the dogs ye feed
   and prize?
   How are the beasts more worthy than the souls you
   sacrifice?
   But ye said, ‘Their valour shall show them’; but ye
   said, ‘The end is close.’
   And ye sent them comfits and pictures to help them
   harry your foes:
   And ye vaunted your fathomless power, and ye
   flaunted your iron pride,
   Ere – ye fawned on the Younger Nations for the men
   who could shoot and ride!
   Then ye returned to your trinkets; then ye contented
   your souls
   With the flannelled fools at the wicket or the muddied
   oafs at the goals.
   Given to strong delusion, wholly believing a lie,
   Ye saw that the land lay fenceless, and ye let the
   months go by
   Waiting some easy wonder, hoping some saving sign –
   Idle – openly idle – in the lee of the forespent Line.
   Idle – except for your boasting – and what is your
   boasting worth
   If ye grudge a year of service to the lordliest life
   on earth?
   Ancient, effortless, ordered, cycle on cycle set,
   Life so long untroubled, that ye who inherit forget
   It was not made with the mountains, it is not one with
   the deep.
   Men, not gods, devised it. Men, not gods, must keep.
   Men, not children, servants, or kinsfolk called
   from afar,
   But each man born in the Island broke to the matter
   of war.
   Soberly and by custom taken and trained for the same,
   Each man born in the Island entered at youth to
   the game –
   As it were almost cricket, not to be mastered in haste,
   But after trial and labour, by temperance, living
   chaste.
   As it were almost cricket – as it were even your play,
   Weighed and pondered and worshipped, and practised
   day and day.
   So ye shall bide sure-guarded when the restless
   lightnings wake
   In the womb of the blotting war-cloud, and the pallid
   nations quake.
   So, at the haggard trumpets, instant your soul
   shall leap
   Forthright, accoutred, accepting – alert from the wells
   of sleep.
   So at the threat ye shall summon – so at the need ye
   shall send
   Men, not children or servants, tempered and taught to
   the end;
   Cleansed of servile panic, slow to dread or despise,
   Humble because of knowledge, mighty by sacrifice …
   But ye say, ‘It will mar our comfort.’ Ye say, ‘It will
   minish our trade.’
   Do ye wait for the spattered shrapnel ere ye learn how
   a gun is laid?
   (For the low, red glare to southward when the raided
   coast-towns burn?
   Light ye shall have on that lesson, but little time
   to learn.)
   Will ye pitch some white pavilion, and lustily even
   the odds,
   With nets and hoops and mallets, with rackets and
   bats and ro 
					     					 			ds?
   Will the rabbit war with your foeman – the red deer
   horn them for hire?
   Your kept cock-pheasant keep you? – he is master of
   many a shire.
   Arid, aloof, incurious, unthinking, un thanking, gelt,
   Will ye loose your schools to flout them till their
   brow-beat columns melt?
   Will ye pray them or preach them, or print them, or
   ballot them back from your shore?
   Will your workmen issue a mandate to bid them strike
   no more?
   Will ye rise and dethrone your rulers? (Because ye
   were idle both?
   Pride by insolence chastened? Indolence purged
   by sloth?)
   No doubt but ye are the People; who shall make
   you afraid?
   Also your gods are many; no doubt but your gods
   shall aid.
   Idols of greasy altars built for the body’s ease;
   Proud little brazen Baals and talking fetishes;
   Teraphs of sept and party and wise wood-pavement
   gods –
   These shall come down to the battle and snatch you
   from under the rods?
   From the gusty, flickering gun-roll with viewless
   salvoes rent,
   And the pitted hail of the bullets that tell not whence
   they were sent.
   When ye are ringed as with iron, when ye are
   scourged as with whips,
   When the meat is in your belly, and the boast is yet on
   your lips;
   When ye go forth at morning and the noon beholds
   you broke,
   Ere ye lie down at even, your remnant, under the yoke?
   No doubt but ye are the People – absolute, strong, and wise;
   Whatever your heart has desired ye have not withheld from
   your eyes.
   On your own heads, in your own hands, the sin and the
   saving lies!
   THE BROKEN MEN
   For things we never mention,
   For Art misunderstood –
   For excellent intention
   That did not turn to good;
   From ancient tales’ renewing,
   From clouds we would not clear –
   Beyond the Law’s pursuing
   We fled, and settled here.