<h2> A Voice from the Town </h2>
<p>A sequel to [Mowbray Morris's] 'A Voice from the Bush'<br/></p>
<p>I thought, in the days of the droving,<br/>
Of steps I might hope to retrace,<br/>
To be done with the bush and the roving<br/>
And settle once more in my place.<br/>
With a heart that was well nigh to breaking,<br/>
In the long, lonely rides on the plain,<br/>
I thought of the pleasure of taking<br/>
The hand of a lady again.<br/>
<br/>
I am back into civilisation,<br/>
Once more in the stir and the strife,<br/>
But the old joys have lost their sensation —<br/>
The light has gone out of my life;<br/>
The men of my time they have married,<br/>
Made fortunes or gone to the wall;<br/>
Too long from the scene I have tarried,<br/>
And, somehow, I'm out of it all.<br/>
<br/>
For I go to the balls and the races<br/>
A lonely companionless elf,<br/>
And the ladies bestow all their graces<br/>
On others less grey than myself;<br/>
While the talk goes around I'm a dumb one<br/>
'Midst youngsters that chatter and prate,<br/>
And they call me 'the Man who was Someone<br/>
Way back in the year Sixty-eight.'<br/>
<br/>
And I look, sour and old, at the dancers<br/>
That swing to the strains of the band,<br/>
And the ladies all give me the Lancers,<br/>
No waltzes — I quite understand.<br/>
For matrons intent upon matching<br/>
Their daughters with infinite push,<br/>
Would scarce think him worthy the catching,<br/>
The broken-down man from the bush.<br/>
<br/>
New partners have come and new faces,<br/>
And I, of the bygone brigade,<br/>
Sharply feel that oblivion my place is —<br/>
I must lie with the rest in the shade.<br/>
And the youngsters, fresh-featured and pleasant,<br/>
They live as we lived — fairly fast;<br/>
But I doubt if the men of the present<br/>
Are as good as the men of the past.<br/>
<br/>
Of excitement and praise they are chary,<br/>
There is nothing much good upon earth;<br/>
Their watchword is <i>NIL ADMIRARI</i>,<br/>
They are bored from the days of their birth.<br/>
Where the life that we led was a revel<br/>
They 'wince and relent and refrain' —<br/>
I could show them the road — to the devil,<br/>
Were I only a youngster again.<br/>
<br/>
I could show them the road where the stumps are<br/>
The pleasures that end in remorse,<br/>
And the game where the Devil's three trumps are,<br/>
The woman, the card, and the horse.<br/>
Shall the blind lead the blind — shall the sower<br/>
Of wind reap the storm as of yore?<br/>
Though they get to their goal somewhat slower,<br/>
They march where we hurried before.<br/>
<br/>
For the world never learns — just as we did,<br/>
They gallantly go to their fate,<br/>
Unheeded all warnings, unheeded<br/>
The maxims of elders sedate.<br/>
As the husbandman, patiently toiling,<br/>
Draws a harvest each year from the soil,<br/>
So the fools grow afresh for the spoiling,<br/>
And a new crop of thieves for the spoil.<br/>
<br/>
But a truce to this dull moralising,<br/>
Let them drink while the drops are of gold,<br/>
I have tasted the dregs — 'twere surprising<br/>
Were the new wine to me like the old;<br/>
And I weary for lack of employment<br/>
In idleness day after day,<br/>
For the key to the door of enjoyment<br/>
Is Youth — and I've thrown it away.<br/></p>
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