I
Wake! for the sun has driven in equal
flight
The stars before him from the Tee of Night,
And holed them every one without a Miss,
Swinging at ease his gold-shod Shaft of Light.
II
Wake, Loiterer! for already Dawn
is seen
With her red marker on the eastern Green,
And summons all her Little Ones to change
A joyous Three for every sad Thirteen.
III
And as the Cock crew, those who stood
before
The first Tee murmur’d: “Just this
chance to score,
You know how little while we have to play,
And, once departed, may return no more.”
IV
Now the fresh Year, reviving old
Desires,
The thoughtful Soul to Solitude retires,
Pores on this Club and That with anxious
eye,
And dreams of Rounds beyond the Rounds of Liars.
V
Campbell indeed is past with all
his Fame,
And old Tom Morris now is but a name;
But many a Jamie by the Bunker blows,
And many a Willie rules us, just the same.
VI
A thousand lips are lockt; but still
in hoar
High-balling Andrew’s Shrine, with “Fore,
fore, fore!
Oh, fore!” the Golfer to the Duffer
cries,
That reddened cheek of his to redden more.
VII
Come, choose your Ball, and in the
fire of Spring
Your Red Coat, and your wooden Putter fling;
The Club of Time has but a little while
To waggle, and the Club is on the swing.
VIII
Whether at Musselburgh or Shinnecock,
In motley Hose or humbler motley Sock,
The Cup of Life is ebbing Drop by Drop,
Whether the Cup be filled with Scotch or Bock.
IX
Each Morn a thousand Matches brings,
you say;
Yes, but who plays the Match of Yesterday?
And this first Summer month of opening
Greens
Shall take this Championship and That away.
X
Well, let it take them! What
have we to do
With Championships, or, Champion, with you?
Let This or Other struggle as he will,
For him alone the Strife for him to rue.
XI
With me along the strip of sandy
Down
That just divides the Desert from the sown,
Where name of Shop and Study is forgot,
And Peace to Croker on his golden Throne!
XII
A bag of Clubs, a Silver-Town or
two,
A Flask of Scotch, a Pipe of Shag and Thou
Beside me caddying in the Wilderness
Ah, Wilderness were Paradise enow.
XIII
Some for the weekly Handicap; and
some
Sigh for a greater Championship to come:
Ah, play the Match, and let the Medal
go,
Nor heed old Bogey with his wretched Sum.
XIV
Look to the blowing Rows about us “Lo,
“Strolling,” they say, “over the
course we go,
“And here or there we lightly flick
the Ball,
“Turn, and the Trick is done in So-and-so.”
XV
But those who keep their Cards and
turn them in,
And those who weekly Handicaps may win,
Alike to no such aureate Fame are brought,
As, buried once, Men want dug up again.
XVI
The shining Cup men set their hearts
upon
Is lost to them or won them; and anon,
Like a good Three set in a bald Three-score,
That Glory gleams a moment and is gone.
XVII
Think, in this worn, forlorn old
Field of Play,
Whose Green-keepers in turn are Night and Day,
How Champion after Champion with his Pomp
Abode his destin’d Hour and went his way.
XVIII
They say the Female and the Duffer
strut
On sacred Greens where Morris used to putt;
Himself a natural Hazard now, alas!
That nice Hand quiet now, that great Eye shut.
XIX
I sometimes think that never springs
so green
The Turf as where some Good Fellow has been,
And every emerald Stretch the Fair Green
shows
His kindly Tread has known, his sure Play seen.
XX
And this reviving Herb whose tender
green
Muffles the fair white Sphere o’er which we
lean,
Ah, curse it gently, for here Jamie once
Great Jamie lay, and fetch’d a bad
Thirteen.
XXI
Ah, my Beloved, play the Round that
offers
to-day some joy, whate’er To-morrow suffers:
To-morrow! why, to-morrow I
may be
Myself with Yesterday’s Sev’n thousand
Duffers.
XXII
And some we loved, the feeblest with
a Club,
Ordain’d to sclaff, to foozle, and to flub,
Have turned in Cards a Round or two before,
And played that final Green without a Rub.
XXIII
And we that now make merry on the
Green
They left, and Summer dresses in new sheen,
Ourselves must we beneath the springing
Turf
Add our Ell to the Bunker of Has-been.
XXIV
Ah, make the most of what we yet
may spend
Before we too into the Dust descend;
Dust into dust, and under Dust to lie,
Sans Breath, sans Golf, sans Golfer, and sans
End!
XXV
Alike for those who for to-day
prepare,
And those who after some to-morrow stare,
A Keeper from the Links of Darkness cries
Fools, your Reward is neither Here nor There.
XXVI
Why, all the Toms and Jamies who
discuss’d
Of the True Art so wisely they are thrust
Like foolish prophets forth; their Words
to Scorn
Are scatter’d, and their Mouths are stopt with
Dust.
XXVII
Myself when young did eagerly frequent
Jamie and His, and heard great argument
Of Grip and Stance and Swing; but evermore
Found at the Exit but a Dollar spent.
XXVIII
With them the seed of Wisdom did
I sow,
And with mine own hand sought to make it grow;
And this was all the Harvest that I reap’d
“You hold it This Way, and you swing it So.”
XXIX
Patient I fared to many a sacred
Spot,
Ev’n at the Shrine of Andrew cast my lot,
And many a Knot unravel’d by the
Road;
But not, alas! of Golf the Master-knot.
XXX
There was a Green for which I found
no Tee,
And a blind Bunker which I might not see:
Out of the distant Dark a Voice cries
“Fore!”
And then and then no more of Thee and Me.
XXXI
As then the Sparrow for his morning
Crumb,
Do thou each Morrow to the First Tee come,
And play thy quiet Round, till crusty
Age
Condemn thee to a hopeless Dufferdom.
XXXII
PERPLEXT no more with Where or How or
Why,
Thy easy fingers to the Shaft apply,
Content to send away a fair straight Ball,
Though follow’d earthward by the naked Eye.
XXXIII
And if the Ball you drive, the Shaft
you press,
End in what all begins and ends in Yes;
Thank Heav’n you play to-day
as yesterday
You play’d to-morrow you
shall not do less.
XXXIV
Glad if the Master of the Handicap
At last shall find you come without Mishap,
Though without Glory, to turn in the Card
He has expected of your sort of Chap.
XXXV
What though a Fluke should fling
your Class aside,
And Best Gross be your momentary pride:
Are you a Golfer more than when last week
You did your best, and barely saved your Hide?
XXXVI
’Tis like a private Bar where
for a Day
Innumerable Rickies come your way,
Happy but on the morrow happier
far
Had there been less to drink and more to pay.
XXXVII
And fear not lest the Fair Green
after your
Ill-luck and mine should yield Bad Lies no more;
One or two Others may fare ill as you:
Nay, even three, or maybe maybe four.
XXXVIII
When you and I our final Match have
play’d,
Think not the ever-springing Green shall fade;
Which of our Coming and Departure heeds
As Caddies heed the Bag, their Quarter
paid.
XXXIX
A moment’s Flight a
momentary Flick
Of Being from the Providential Stick,
And Lo! the phantom human Sphere
has reacht
The Nothing it set out from Ah, be quick!
XL
Would you that Fillip of Existence
spend
About the Secret quick about
it, Friend!
A Hair perhaps divides the False and True,
And upon what, prithee, does this Golf depend?
XLI
A Hair perhaps divides the False
and True,
Yes, and a single Jamie were the Clue
Could you but find him to the
Championship,
And peradventure to the Champion too.
XLII
And yet what matter who a Moment
reigns?
’Tis not for such a Toy you take your pains;
To play the steady, simple, honest Game;
That is the Joy and Credit that remains.
XLIII
Behind the uprisen Turf fair in the
Ditch,
To risk the Overhang, or play back which
To do? Ah, Brother, let the Gallery
go:
Than tear the Web, better to drop a Stitch!
XLIV
Two Three aye,
better Golf we all have seen
But bravo! Four a sweet
Approach and Clean;
Steady, you still may well go down in
Five:
There are no Hazards on the Putting-Green.
XLV
Waste not your Hour, nor try in vain
to fix
The How and Why some wondrous Brew to mix;
Better be jocund with a calm Two-score
Than sadden for a bitter Thirty-six.
XLVI
Strange, is it not? that
of the myriads who
Into the Out-of-Bounds have late play’d through,
Not one returns to tell us of the Stroke
To guarantee the shortest Hole in Two.
XLVII
The Ball no question makes of Ayes
and Noes,
But Here or There as strikes the Player goes,
And ye who play behold the Ball fly clean,
Or roll a Rod; but why? Who knows? Who knows?
XLVIII
The swinging Brassie strikes; and,
having struck,
Moves on: nor all your Wit or future Luck
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Stroke,
Nor from the Card a single Seven pluck.
XLIX
No hope by Club or Ball to win the
Prize:
The batter’d, blacken’d Re-made sweetly
flies,
Swept cleanly from the Tee; this is the
truth:
Nine-tenths is Skill, and all the rest is Lies.
L
And that inverted Ball they call
the High
By which the Duffer thinks to live or die,
Lift not your hands to it for help,
for it
As impotently froths as you or I.
LI
Of Earth’s first Clay was the
last Golfer framed,
And that last Golfer’s latest Score was named
When the first Morning of Creation sang
The Dirge of every Duffer Golf has claimed.
LII
Yesterday this Day’s Foozling
did prepare;
to-MORROW’S Slicing will not yield to Prayer:
Play! for you know not whence you came,
nor why:
Play! for you know not why you go, nor where.
LIII
I tell you this When,
after youth was past,
A kindly Heav’n gave me to Golf at last;
No Freedom but I gladly barter’d
for
The satisfying Bond that holds me fast.
LIV
And this I know: there is a
Charm about
The quiet State of Golf, tho’ fools may flout,
That with its magic has unlock’d
the Door
Of Happiness they only howl without.
LV
As under cover of departing Day
Slinks the defeated Duffer on his way,
Once more within the Maker’s house
alone
I stood, surrounded by the Tools of Play.
LVI
Clubs of all Sorts and Sizes, great
and small,
That stood along the floor and by the wall;
And some old batter’d Veterans were;
and some
Had swung perhaps, but never driv’n at all.
LVII
Said one among them “Surely
not for naught
Tom Morris fashion’d me with anxious thought,
Has not my Form won many a Match and Cup?
And yet and yet I am no longer
bought.”
LVIII
Then said a Second “Hear
the Codger croak!
Sure he would make of Golf an ancient Joke;
But Me just think! a modern
Willie Park,
My fickle Owner cannot sell nor soak!”
LIX
After a momentary silence spake
A Brassie of a more ungainly make
“They sneer at me for leaning all
awry:
Well, then, I ask who won the last Sweepstake?”
LX
Whereat some one of the loquacious
Lot,
I think a putting Niblick, or if not,
A driving Putter, or a goose-neck’d
Cleek
“Pray, what is Golf then, and the
Golfer what?”
LXI
“Why,” said another,
“Some there are who say
That Golf is but a Game that Golfers play,
And some that Life is but a mighty Green,
And Golf the Art to use it day by day.”
LXII
“Well,” murmur’d
one, “let whoso make or buy,
All in one Pickle we like as we lie:
For let the right Good-Fellow come along,
We all may lay the Ball dead by and by.”
LXIII
So one and one and one I heard them
speak:
“Ah, Friends,” said I, “’tis
not a Make we seek,
A Duffer arm’d with all the Clubs
there be
What is he to a Player with a Cleek?”
LXIV
Lately, agape beside the door of
Fame,
Sudden a Touch upon my shoulder came,
And thro’ the Dusk an Angel Shape
held out
The greater Guerdon; and it was the Game!
LXV
The Game that can with Logic absolute
The Dronings of the Soberheads confute,
Silence the scoffing ones, and in a trice
Life’s leaden metal into Gold transmute.
LXVI
Indeed, the brave Game I have loved
so well
Has little taught me how to buy or sell;
Has pawn’d my Greatness for an Hour
of Ease,
And barter’d cold Cash for a Miracle.
LXVII
Indeed, indeed, Repentance oft before
I swore but it was Winter when I swore,
And then and then came Spring, and Club-in-hand
I hasten’d forth for one Round one
Round more.
LXVIII
But much as Golf has play’d
the Infidel,
And robb’d me of my worldly Profit Well,
I often wonder what the Grubbers earn
One half so precious as the Joy they sell.
LXIX
What! for a senseless Bank-Account
to wreak
Their manly Strength on Ledgers, till too weak
To swing a club? So Caddies
calmly tread
In Mire the Ball Heav’n sent them here to seek.
LXX
What! as a poor dull Drudge to waste
the Force
That might have made a Golfer, till the Source
Of Golf be dried and Life grow
all too brief
To top a Ball around the Ladies’ Course!
LXXI
Yet, ah, that Golf should vanish
with the green!
What noble matches Winter might have seen;
And in Old Age what glorious Hazards foil’d,
What Zest of painful Pleasures might have been!
LXXII
Would but the dim Face of old Winter
yield
One glimpse of green, like Youth to Age reveal’d,
Thro’ which once more the failing
Limbs might spring
As springs the trampled Herbage of the Field.
LXXIII
Ah! with the Green my fading life
provide,
Some ancient golfing Crony by my side:
Content to play one Round, or, meeker
still,
To mix a gentle Foursome satisfied.
LXXIV
That even the wavering Remnant of
the Swing
May bear some witness to my virtuous Spring,
And leave no True-believer passing-by
Unedified by its Admonishing.
LXXV
Would but the god of Golfers ere
too late
Arrest the sure-advancing step of Fate,
What matter if we play the Odd or Like?
Or if we play hole out in Four
or Eight?
LXXVI
Ah, let the Honor go to Fate, and
let
All difficulties by that Crack be met;
The Duffer still may win a Half or two,
Content while Fate is only Dormie yet.
LXXVII
Or if ev’n this be taken, you
and I
May still fare onward calmly, honestly,
Nor care how many Down the Record stand:
The Match is over Let us play the Bye!
LXXVIII
Yon rising Moon that leads us Home
again,
How oft hereafter will she wax and wane;
How oft hereafter rising wait for us
At this same Turning and for One
in vain.
LXXIX
And when, like her, my Golfer, I
have been
And am no more above the pleasant Green,
And you in your mild Journey pass the
Hole
I made in One ah! pay my Forfeit then!
TAMAM