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Rudyard Kipling - The Plea of the Simla DancersRudyard Kipling - The Plea of the Simla Dancers
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Too late, alas! the song    To remedy the wrong; The rooms are taken from us, swept and      garnished for their fate.    But these tear-besprinkled pages    Shall attest to future ages That we cried against the crime of it      too late, alas! too late! "What have we ever done to bear this grudge?"  Was there no room save only in Benmore For docket, duftar, and for office drudge,  That you usurp our smoothest dancing floor? Must babus do their work on polished teak?  Are ball-rooms fittest for the ink you spill? Was there no other cheaper house to seek?  You might have left them all at Strawberry Hill. We never harmed you! Innocent our guise,  Dainty our shining feet, our voices low; And we revolved to divers melodies,  And we were happy but a year ago. To-night, the moon that watched our lightsome wiles  That beamed upon us through the deodars Is wan with gazing on official files,  And desecrating desks disgust the stars. Nay! by the memory of tuneful nights  Nay! by the witchery of flying feet Nay! by the glamour of foredone delights  By all things merry, musical, and meet By wine that sparkled, and by sparkling eyes  By wailing waltz by reckless gallop`s strain By dim verandas and by soft replies,  Give us our ravished ball-room back again! Or hearken to the curse we lay on you!  The ghosts of waltzes shall perplex your brain, And murmurs of past merriment pursue  Your `wildered clerks that they indite in vain; And when you count your poor Provincial millions,  The only figures that your pen shall frame Shall be the figures of dear, dear cotillions  Danced out in tumult long before you came. Yea! "See Saw" shall upset your estimates,  "Dream Faces" shall your heavy heads bemuse, Because your hand, unheeding, desecrates  Our temple; fit for higher, worthier use. And all the long verandas, eloquent  With echoes of a score of Simla years, Shall plague you with unbidden sentiment  Babbling of kisses, laughter, love, and tears. So shall you mazed amid old memories stand,  So shall you toil, and shall accomplish nought, And ever in your ears a phantom Band  Shall blare away the staid official thought. Wherefore and ere this awful curse he spoken,  Cast out your swarthy sacrilegious train, And give ere dancing cease and hearts be broken  Give us our ravished ball-room back again!
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