A LETTER.

By Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch

Dear Kitty,

At length the term's ending;

I‘ m in for my Schools in a week;

And the time that at present I'm spending

On you should be spent upon Greek:

But I'm fairly well read in my Plato,

I'm thoroughly red in the eyes,

And I've almost forgotten the way to

Be healthy and wealthy and wise.

So‘ the best of all ways’ — why repeat you

The verse at 2. 30 a. m.,

When I‘ m stealing an hour to entreat you

Dear Kitty, to come to Commem.?

Oh, come! You shall rustle in satin

Through halls where Examiners trod:

Your laughter shall triumph o'er Latin

In lecture-room, garden, and quad.

They stand in the silent Sheldonian —

Our orators, waiting — for you,

Their style guaranteed Ciceronian,

Their subject —‘ the Ladies in Blue.’

The Vice sits arrayed in his scarlet;

He's pale, but they say he dissem-

-bles by calling his Beadle a‘ varlet’

Whenever he thinks of Commem.

There are dances, flirtations at Nuneham,

Flower-shows, the procession of Eights:

There's a list stretching usque ad Lunam

Of concerts, and lunches, and fetes:

There's the Newdigate all about‘ Gordon,’

— So sweet, and they say it will scan.

You shall flirt with a Proctor, a Warden

Shall run for your shawl and your fan.

They are sportive as gods broken loose from

Olympus, and yet very em-

-inent men. There are plenty to choose from,

You'll find, if you come to Commem.

I know your excuses: Red Sorrel

Has stumbled and broken her knees;

Aunt Phoebe thinks waltzing immoral;

And‘ Algy, you are such a tease;

It's nonsense, of course, but she is strict’;

And little Dick Hodge has the croup;

And there's no one to visit your‘ district’

Or make Mother Tettleby's soup.

Let them cease for a se'nnight to plague you;

Oh, leave them to manage pro tem.

With their croups and their soups and their ague )

Dear Kitty, and come to Commem.

Do n't tell me Papa has lumbago,

That you have n't a frock fit to wear,

That the curate‘ has notions, and may go

To lengths if there's nobody there,’

That the Squire has‘ said things’ to the Vicar,

And the Vicar‘ had words’ with the Squire,

That the Organist's taken to liquor,

And leaves you to manage the choir:

For Papa must be cured, and the curate

Coerced, and your gown is a gem;

And the moral is — Do n't be obdurate,

Dear Kitty, but come to Commem.

‘ My gown? Though, no doubt, sir, you're clever,

You‘ d better leave fashions alone.

Do you think that a frock lasts for ever?’

Dear Kitty, I'll grant you have grown;

But I thought of my‘ scene’ with McVittie

That night when he trod on your train

At the Bachelor's Ball.‘'Twas a pity,’

You said, but I knew‘ twas Champagne.

And your gown was enough to compel me

To fall down and worship its hem —

( Are‘ hems’ wearing? If not, you shall tell me

What is, when you come to Commem. )

Have you thought, since that night, of the Grotto?

Of the words whispered under the palms,

While the minutes flew by and forgot to

Remind us of Aunt and her qualms?

Of the stains of the old Journalisten?

Of the rose that I begged from your hair?

When you turned, and I saw something glisten —

Dear Kitty, do n't frown; it was there!

But that idiot Delane in the middle

Bounced in with‘ Our dance, I — ahem!’

And — the rose you may find in my Liddell

And Scott when you come to Commem.

Then, Kitty, let‘ yes’ be the answer.

We'll dance at the‘ Varsity Ball,

And the morning shall find you a dancer

In Christ Church or Trinity hall.

And perhaps, when the elders are yawning

And rafters grow pale overhead

With the day, there shall come with its dawning

Some thought of that sentence unsaid.

Be it this, be it that —‘ I forget,’ or

‘ Was joking’ — whatever the fem-

-inine fib, you'll have made me your debtor

And come,— you will come? to Commem.