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To Sir William Harcourt

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My dear Sir William Harcourt, -         (I have not time to get up your other distinguished names,         So that you must please excuse the plain Sir William),         My dear Sir William, do you ever survey the Liberal party,         From China to Peru,         And from Rosebery to Lloyd-George as it were?         Do you, my dear Sir William?    O do you?         I do sometimes.         I do, Sir William, I do indeed.         O, I do!         And what is the conclusion I come to, my dear Sir William,         Ah, what?         O, what?         What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what?         Shall I tell you, my dear Sir William?         You are sure you won't be offended if I do?         And it will be strictly between ourselves, now, won't it?         Well then, come hither, coz,         Put your sweet hand in mine and trust in me,         And do not construe my kindness into cruelty;         Harken, my dear Sir William, harken,         Harken, harken, harken, harken har -    - court: -         The Liberal party is an unweeded garden         Choked with a myriad strange growths,         And a sad, fierce, baffled, careless-ordered thing to look upon,         And in its midst there sits down perennially         A huge and ponderous and unwieldy ruminant,         Whom, merely for the sake of talking, my dear Sir William,         We will call the Harcourt.         Here, when it is not at its lordly pleasure-house,         Which men call Malwood,         The Harcourt, as I say, sits down.         Goodman Bannerman cometh to his Liberal Garden         To gather him a posy and do a little weeding;         The Harcourt is there heavily chewing the cud,         And it takes the heart out of goodman Bannerman         To behold him.         Goodman Asquith had fain pick a bit of dinner in the precincts;         The Harcourt watcheth him with rolling eye,         And goodman Asquith shivereth.         And by and by cometh the simple, rural Rosebery,         Armed cap--pie with a muck-fork;         Being rural he understands gardening;         He looks over the wall and sayeth,         "Gadzooks, when folk tell me that I am the man to put this garden to rights         They speak a mortal deal o' truth.         I will e'en go in and delve a bit."         And then he beholdeth the Harcourt         Luxuriating with his back against the biggest fig tree,         And he sayeth "No;         That powerful big animal be there still,         And I know'un, I do, I know'un!"         And who shall blame him?         What jobbing gardener of any self-respect         Would undertake to do up my genariums and fuchers         If I had a wild rhinoceros gambolling upon them         Day in and day out?         I should have great difficulty         In finding such a jobbing gardener, my dear Sir William;         And, to come at once to the plain poetry so belovd of this age,         Let me tell you, my dear Sir William,         That, in my opinion, you (and no other) are at the present juncture         The real trouble and incubus of the party you love.         If you would only go home and crown yourself with a laurel or two,         And read history books, and take tea with bishops         And not come back again,         I believe the Liberal party         Would begin to get along like a house afire.         Will you not try it, my dear Sir William; oh, will you not try it?         For who would fardels bear and flounder round,         When he might sit with Lulu on the lawn         And leave his party for his party's good?

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"My dear Sir William Harcourt, -..."

"To Sir William Harcourt" is a quintessential example of Thomas William Hodgson Crosland's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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