Here you will find the Poem Studies at Delhi, 1876 of poet Alfred Comyn Lyall
I.--The Hindu Ascetic. Here as I sit by the Jumna bank, Watching the flow of the sacred stream, Pass me the legions, rank on rank, And the cannon roar, and the bayonets gleam. Is it a god or a king that comes? Both are evil, and both are strong; With women and worshipping, dancing and drums, Carry your gods and your kings along. Fanciful shapes of a plastic earth, These are the visions that weary the eye; These I may 'scape by a luckier birth, Musing, and fasting, and hoping to die. When shall these phantoums flicker away? Like the smoke of the guns on the wind-swept hill, Like the sounds and colours of yesterday: And the soul have rest, and the air be still. II.--Badminton. Hardly a shot from the gate we stormed, Under the Moree battlement's shade; Close to the glacis our game was formed, There had the fight been, and there we played. Lightly the demoiselles tittered and leapt, Merrily capered the players all; North, was the garden where Nicholson slept, South, was the sweep of a battered wall. Near me a Musalmán, civil and mild, Watched as the shuttlecocks rose and fell; And he said, as he counted his beads and smiled, "God smite their souls to the depths of hell."