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				Title:     England, July 1913 
			    
Author: Christopher Morley [
More Titles by Morley]		                
			    
To Rupert Brooke
    O England, England ... that July
    How placidly the days went by!
    Two years ago (how long it seems)
    In that dear England of my dreams
    I loved and smoked and laughed amain
    And rode to Cambridge in the rain.
    A careless godlike life was there!
    To spin the roads with _Shotover_,
    To dream while punting on the Cam,
    To lie, and never give a damn
    For anything but comradeship
    And books to read and ale to sip,
    And shandygaff at every inn
    When _The Gorilla_ rode to Lynn!
    O world of wheel and pipe and oar
    In those old days before the War.
    O poignant echoes of that time!
    I hear the Oxford towers chime,
    The throbbing of those mellow bells
    And all the sweet old English smells--
    The Deben water, quick with salt,
    The Woodbridge brew-house and the malt;
    The Suffolk villages, serene
    With lads at cricket on the green,
    And Wytham strawberries, so ripe,
    And _Murray's Mixture_ in my pipe!
    In those dear days, in those dear days,
    All pleasant lay the country ways;
    The echoes of our stalwart mirth
    Went echoing wide around the earth
    And in an endless bliss of sun
    We lay and watched the river run.
    And you by Cam and I by Isis
    Were happy with our own devices.
    Ah, can we ever know again
    Such friends as were those chosen men,
    Such men to drink, to bike, to smoke with,
    To worship with, or lie and joke with?
    Never again, my lads, we'll see
    The life we led at twenty-three.
    Never again, perhaps, shall I
    Go flashing bravely down the High
    To see, in that transcendent hour,
    The sunset glow on Magdalen Tower.
    Dear Rupert Brooke, your words recall
    Those endless afternoons, and all
    Your Cambridge--which I loved as one
    Who was her grandson, not her son.
    O ripples where the river slacks
    In greening eddies round the "backs";
    Where men have dreamed such gallant things
    Under the old stone bridge at _King's_,
    Or leaned to feed the silver swans
    By the tennis meads at _John's_.
    O Granta's water, cold and fresh,
    Kissing the warm and eager flesh
    Under the willow's breathing stir--
    The bathing pool at _Grantchester_....
    What words can tell, what words can praise
    The burly savour of those days!
    Dear singing lad, those days are dead
    And gone for aye your golden head;
    And many other well-loved men
    Will never dine in Hall again.
    I too have lived remembered hours
    In Cambridge; heard the summer showers
    Make music on old _Heffer's_ pane
    While I was reading Pepys or Taine.
    Through _Trumpington_ and _Grantchester_
    I used to roll on _Shotover_;
    At _Hauxton Bridge_ my lamp would light
    And sleep in _Royston_, for the night.
    Or to _Five Miles from Anywhere_
    I used to scull; and sit and swear
    While wasps attacked my bread and jam
    Those summer evenings on the Cam.
    (O crispy English cottage-loaves
    Baked in ovens, not in stoves!
    O white unsalted English butter
    O satisfaction none can utter!) ...
    To think that while those joys I knew
    In Cambridge, I did not know you.
      _July_ 1915.
[The end]
Christopher Morley's poem: England, July 1913
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