Arthur Quiller-Couch, comp. The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse. 1922.
Alma MaterSir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch (18631944)
K
—Hers of the Book, the tripled Crown?
Still on the spire the pigeons flutter;
Still by the gateway haunts the gown;
Still on the street from corbel and gutter,
Faces of stone look down.
Some from library windows wan
Forth on her gardens, her green spaces,
Peer and turn to their books anon.
Hence, my Muse, from the green oases
Gather the tent, begone!
Under the rooms where once she play’d,
Who from the feast would rise and fling her
One poor sou for her serenade?
One poor laugh for the antic finger
Thrumming a lute-string fray’d?
Magdalen elms and Trinity limes—
Lissom the blades and the backs that swung then,
Eight good men in the good old times—
Careless we, and the chorus flung then
Under St. Mary’s chimes!
Christ Church meadow and Iffley track—
‘Idleness horrid and dogcart’ (tandem)—
Aylesbury grind and Bicester pack—
Pleasant our lines, and faith! we scann’d ’em;
Having that artless knack.
Leaves of the creeper redden and fall.
Was it a hand then clapp’d my shoulder?
—Only the wind by the chapel wall.
Dead leaves drift on the lute: so … fold her
Under the faded shawl.
We, who go reaping that we sow’d;
Cities at cock-crow wake before us—
Hey, for the lilt of the London road!
One look back and a rousing chorus!
Never a palinode!
Still by her gateway haunts the gown.
Ah, but her secret? You, young lover,
Drumming her old ones forth from town,
Know you the secret none discover?
Tell it—when you go down.
Lean to her whispers never so nigh;
Yet if at last not less her lover
You in your hansom leave the High;
Down from her towers a ray shall hover,
Touch you—a passer-by!