The Poetry Corner

With A Volume Of Verse.

By Henry Austin Dobson

About the ending of the Ramadn, When leanest grows the famished Mussulman, A haggard ne'er-do-well, Mahmoud by name, At the tenth hour to Caliph OMAR came. "Lord of the Faithful (quoth he), at the last The long moon waneth, and men cease to fast; Hard then, O hard! the lot of him must be, Who spares to eat ... but not for piety!" "Hast thou no calling, Friend?"--the Caliph said. "Sir, I make verses for my daily bread." "Verse!"--answered OMAR. "'Tis a dish, indeed, Whereof but scantily a man may feed. Go. Learn the Tenter's or the Potter's Art,-- Verse is a drug not sold in any mart." I know not if that hungry Mahmoud died; But this I know--he must have versified, For, with his race, from better still to worse, The plague of writing follows like a curse; And men will scribble though they fail to dine, Which is the Moral of more Books than mine.