or birth,
Till we shall build as Thou hast willed 
O'er all Thy fruitful Earth. 
May we maintain the story 
Of honest, fearless right!
Not ours, not ours the Glory! 
What are we in Thy sight?
Thy servants, and no other, 
Thy servants may we be,
To help our weaker brother, 
As we crave for help from Thee! 
              Set  Thy  guard  over  us, 
              May  Thy  shield  cover  us, 
              Enfold  and  uphold  us 
                 On  land  and  on  sea! 
              From  the  palm  to  the  pine, 
              From  the  snow  to  the  line, 
                 Brothers  together 
                 And  children  of  Thee.
SIR NIGEL'S SONG 
A sword! A sword! Ah, give me a sword! 
For the world is all to win.
Though the way be hard and the door be 
barred,
The strong man enters in.
If Chance or Fate still hold the 
gate, 
Give me the iron key,
And turret high, my plume shall fly, 
Or you may weep for me! 
A horse! A horse! Ah, give me a horse, 
To bear me out afar,
Where blackest need and grimmest deed, 
And sweetest perils are.
Hold thou my ways from glutted days, 
Where poisoned leisure lies,
And point the path of tears and wrath 
Which mounts to high emprise. 
A heart! A heart! Ah, give me a heart, 
To rise to circumstance!
Serene and high, and bold to try 
The hazard of a chance.
With strength to wait, but fixed as fate, 
To plan and dare and do;
The peer of all -- and only thrall, 
Sweet lady mine, to you! 
THE ARAB STEED 
I gave the 'orse 'is evenin' feed, 
And bedded of 'im down,
And went to 'ear the sing-song
In the bar-room of the Crown,
And one young feller spoke a piece 
As told a kind of tale,
About an Arab man wot 'ad 
A certain 'orse for sale. 
I 'ave no grudge against the man -- 
I never 'eard 'is name,
But if he was my closest pal 
I'd say the very same,
For wot you do in other things 
Is neither 'ere nor there,
But w'en it comes to 'orses 
You must keep upon the square. 
Now I'm tellin' you the story 
Just as it was told last night,
And if I wrong this Arab man 
Then 'e can set me right;
But s'posin' all these fac's _are_ fac's, 
Then I make bold to say
That I think it was not sportsmanlike 
To act in sich a way. 
For, as I understand the thing, 
'E went to sell this steed --
Which is a name they give a 'orse 
Of some outlandish breed --,
And soon 'e found a customer, 
A proper sportin' gent,
Who planked 'is money down at once 
Without no argument. 
Now when the deal was finished
And the money paid, you'd think
This Arab would 'ave asked the gent 
At once to name 'is drink,
Or at least 'ave thanked 'im kindly, 
An' wished 'im a good day,
And own as 'e'd been treated 
In a very 'andsome way. 
But instead o' this 'e started 
A-talkin' to the steed,
And speakin' of its "braided mane" 
An' of its "winged speed,"
And other sich expressions 
With which I can't agree,
For a 'orse with wings an' braids an' things 
Is not the 'orse for me. 
The moment that 'e 'ad the cash -- 
Or wot '_e_ called the gold,
'E turned as nasty as could be: 
Says 'e, "You're sold! You're sold!"
Them was 'is words; it's not for 
me 
To settle wot he meant;
It may 'ave been the 'orse was sold, 
It may 'ave been the gent. 
I've not a word to say agin 
His fondness for 'is 'orse,
But why should 'e insinivate 
The gent would treat 'im worse?
An' why should 'e go talkin' 
In that aggravatin' way,
As if the gent would gallop 'im 
And wallop 'im all day?
It may 'ave been an' 'arness 'orse, 
It may 'ave been an 'ack,
But a bargain is a bargain, 
An' there ain't no goin' back;
For when you've picked the money up, 
That finishes the deal,
And after that your mouth is shut, 
Wotever you may feel. 
Supposin' this    
    
		
	
	
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