The Poetry Corner

Discontent

By Adam Lindsay Gordon

LAURENCE RABY. Laurence: I said to young Allan MIlveray, Beside the swift swirls of the North, When, in lilac shot through with a silver ray, We hauld the strong salmon fish forth, Said only, He gave us some trouble To land him, and what does he weigh? Our friend has caught one that weighs double, The game for the candle wont pay Us to-day, We may tie up our rods and away. I said to old Norman MGregor, Three leagues to the west of Glen Dhu, I had drawn, with a touch of the trigger, The best bead that ever I drew, Said merely, For birds in the stubble I once had an eye, I could swear Hes down, but hes not worth the trouble Of seeking. You once shot a bear In his lair, Tis only a buck that lies there. I said to Lord Charles only last year, The time that we toppd the oak rail Between Whartons plough and Whynnes pasture, And cleard the big brook in Blakesvale, We only, at Warburtons double He fell, then I finishd the run And killd clean, said, So bursts a bubble That shone half an hour in the sun, What is won? Your sire cleard and captured a gun. I said to myself, in true sorrow, I said yestereen, A fair prize Is won, and it may be to-morrow Twill not seem so fair in thine eyes, Real life is a race through sore trouble, That gains not an inch on the goal, And bliss an intangible bubble That cheats an unsatisfied soul, And the whole Of the rest an illegible scroll.