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METRE RAMAL MAQSŪR.
IN the spring-time, like a rose, go, pitch thy tent where roses twine,
Take thy place where sit the fair ones, let thy cup brim high with wine.
On the wild winds fling thy thumb-worn tomes and, like barbarian, cast
Fire on stored-up hoards of wisdom, garnered relics of the past.
Makhfi, in sweet hours of spring-tide, though the gardener rate and scold,
Pluck from this parterre a rose-bud, set it in thy turban’s fold.
NOTE.—The above approaches more closely to the slow rhythm of Ramal Maqsur than the “Locksley Hall” metre elsewhere employed.