The City of Golf

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Would you like to see a city given over,
  Soul and body, to a tyrannising game?
  If you would, there's little need to be a rover,
  For St. Andrews is the abject city's name.

  It is surely quite superfluous to mention,
  To a person who has been here half an hour,
  That Golf is what engrosses the attention
  Of the people, with an all-absorbing power.

  Rich and poor alike are smitten with the fever;
  Their business and religion is to play;
  And a man is scarcely deemed a true believer,
  Unless he goes at least a round a day.

  The city boasts an old and learned college,
  Where you'd think the leading industry was Greek;
  Even there the favoured instruments of knowledge
  Are a driver and a putter and a cleek.

  All the natives and the residents are patrons
  Of this royal, ancient, irritating sport;
  All the old men, all the young men, maids and matrons -
  The universal populace, in short.

  In the morning, when the feeble light grows stronger,
  You may see the players going out in shoals;
  And when night forbids their playing any longer,
  They tell you how they did the different holes.

  Golf, golf, golf - is all the story!
  In despair my overburdened spirit sinks,
  Till I wish that every golfer was in glory,
  And I pray the sea may overflow the links.

  One slender, struggling ray of consolation
  Sustains me, very feeble though it be:
  There are two who still escape infatuation,
  My friend M'Foozle's one, the other's me.

  As I write the words, M'Foozle enters blushing,
  With a brassy and an iron in his hand….
  This blow, so unexpected and so crushing,
  Is more than I am able to withstand.

  So now it but remains for me to die, sir.
  Stay! There is another course I may pursue -
  And perhaps upon the whole it would be wiser -
  I will yield to fate and be a golfer too!

© Robert Fuller Murray