About Me

My photo
I am Miss Pancake Taylor. I have come from very far away to take care of my family Craig and Zita and Niamh and Emmet. Sometimes I have helpers; my friends the Blackthorn-Badgers. They are very old Scotsmen. I am very glad to meet you.

Tuesday, 30 April 2013

A Soldier

He is that fallen lance that lies as hurled,
That lies unlifted now, come dew, come rust,
But still lies pointed as it plowed the dust.
If we who sight along it round the world,
See nothing worthy to have been its mark,
It is because like men we look too near,
Forgetting that as fitted to the sphere,
Our missiles always make too short an arc.
They fall, they rip the grass, they intersect
The curve of earth, and striking, break their own;
They make us cringe for metal-point on stone.
But this we know, the obstacle that checked
And tripped the body, shot the spirit on
Further than target ever showed or shone.


 

Robert Frost
Gloria Mundi

Upon a bank, easeless with knobs of gold,
Beneath a canopy of noonday smoke,
I saw a measureless Beast, morose and bold,
With eyes like one from filthy dreams awoke,
Who stares upon the daylight in despair
For very terror of the nothing there.


This beast in one flat hand clutched vulture-wise
A glittering image of itself in jet,
And with the other groped about its eyes
To drive away the dreams that pestered it;
And never ceased its coils to toss and beat
The mire encumbering its feeble feet.


Sharp was its hunger, though continually
It seemed a cud of stones to ruminate,
And often like a dog let glittering lie
This meatless fare, its foolish gaze to sate;
Once more convulsively to stoop its jaw,
Or seize the morsel with an envious paw.


Indeed, it seemed a hidden enemy
Must lurk within the clouds above that bank,
It strained so wildly its pale, stubborn eye,
To pierce its own foul vapours dim and dank;
Till, wearied out, it raved in wrath and foam,
Daring that Nought Invisible to come.


Ay, and it seemed some strange delight to find
In this unmeaning din, till, suddenly,
As if it heard a rumour on the wind,
Or far away its freer children cry,
Lifting its face made-quiet, there it stayed,
Till died the echo its own rage had made.


That place alone was barren where it lay;
Flowers bloomed beyond, utterly sweet and fair;
And even its own dull heart might think to stay
In livelong thirst of a clear river there,
Flowing from unseen hills to unheard seas,
Through a still vale of yew and almond trees.


And then I spied in the lush green below
Its tortured belly, One, like silver, pale,
With fingers closed upon a rope of straw,
That bound the Beast, squat neck to hoary tail;
Lonely in all that verdure faint and deep,
He watched the monster as a shepherd sheep.


I marvelled at the power, strength, and rage
Of this poor creature in such slavery bound;
Fettered with worms of fear; forlorn with age;
Its blue wing-stumps stretched helpless on the ground;
While twilight faded into darkness deep,
And he who watched it piped its pangs asleep.


 

Walter de la Mare
An Epitaph

Here lies a most beautiful lady,
Light of step and heart was she;
I think she was the most beautiful lady
That ever was in the West Country.

But beauty vanishes, beauty passes;
However rare -- rare it be;
And when I crumble,who will remember
This lady of the West Country.


 

Walter de la Mare
The Social Plan

I know a very tiresome Man
Who keeps on saying, "Social Plan."
At every Dinner, every Talk
Where Men foregather, eat or walk,
No matter where, -- this Awful Man
Brings on his goddamn Social Plan.

The Fall in Wheat, the Rise in Bread,
The social Breakers dead ahead,
The Economic Paradox
That drives the Nation on the rocks,
The Wheels that false Abundance clogs --
And frightens us from raising Hogs, --
This dreary field, the Gloomy Man
Surveys and hiccoughs, Social Plan.

Till simpler Men begin to find
His croaking aggravates their mind,
And makes them anxious to avoid
All mention of the Unemployed,
And leads them even to abhor
The People called Deserving Poor.
For me, my sympathies now pass
To the poor Plutocratic Class.
The Crowd that now appeals to me
Is what he calls the Bourgeoisie.

So I have got a Social Plan
To take him by the Neck,
And lock him in a Luggage van
And tie on it a check,
Marked MOSCOW VIA TURKESTAN,
Now, how's that for a Social Plan?


Stephen Leacock
How pleasant to know Mr. Lear

How pleasant to know Mr. Lear,
Who has written such volumes of stuff.
Some think him ill-tempered and queer,
But a few find him pleasant enough.

His mind is concrete and fastidious,
His nose is remarkably big;
His visage is more or less hideous,
His beard it resembles a wig.

He has ears, and two eyes, and ten fingers,
(Leastways if you reckon two thumbs);
He used to be one of the singers,
But now he is one of the dumbs.

He sits in a beautiful parlour,
With hundreds of books on the wall;
He drinks a great deal of marsala,
But never gets tipsy at all.

He has many friends, laymen and clerical,
Old Foss is the name of his cat;
His body is perfectly spherical,
He weareth a runcible hat.

When he walks in waterproof white,
The children run after him so!
Calling out, "He's gone out in his night-
Gown, that crazy old Englishman, oh!"

He weeps by the side of the ocean,
He weeps on the top of the hill;
He purchases pancakes and lotion,
And chocolate shrimps from the mill.

He reads, but he does not speak, Spanish,
He cannot abide ginger beer;
Ere the days of his pilgrimage vanish,
How pleasant to know Mr. Lear!


Edward Lear

Monday, 29 April 2013

Wee, Wee German Lairdie

Wha the deil hae we gotten for a king
But a wee, wee German lairdie
And when we gaed to bring him hame
He was delving in his yairdie
Sheughing kail & laying leeks
But the hose & but the breeks
And up his begger duds he cleeks
This wee, wee German lairdie

And he's clapt down in our guidman's chair
This wee,wee German lairdie
And he's brouhgt fouth o' foreign trash
And dibbled them in his yairdie
He's pu'd the rose o' England loons
And broken the harp o' Irish clows
But our thistle taps will jag his thumbs
This wee, wee German lairdie

Come up amang our highland hills
Thou wee bit German lairdie
And see how the Stuart's lang kail thrive
They dibbled in our yaiddie
And if a stock ye dare to pu'
Or haud the yokin' o' a plough
We'll break your sceptre ower your mou'
Thou wee bit German lairdie

Our hills are steep, our glens are deep
Nae fitting for a yairdie
Our Norland thistles winna pu'
Thou wee bit German lairdie
We've the trenching blades o' weir
Wad prune ye o' your German gear
We'll pass ye 'neath the claymore's shear
Thou feckless German lairdie

Auld Scotland thou'rt ower cauld a hole
For nursin siccan vermin
But the very dogs o' England's court
They bark and howl in German
Then keep thy dibble in thy ain hand
Thy spade but  and thy yairdie
For wha the deil now claims your land
But a wee, wee German lairdie.






The Beginning

Some day I shall rise and leave my friends
And seek you again through the world's far ends,
You whom I found so fair
(Touch of your hands and smell of your hair!),
My only god in the days that were.


My eager feet shall find you again,
Though the sullen years and the mark of pain
Have changed you wholly; for I shall know
(How could I forget having loved you so?),
In the sad half-light of evening,
The face that was all my sunrising.


So then at the ends of the earth I'll stand
And hold you fiercely by either hand,
And seeing your age and ashen hair
I'll curse the thing that once you were,
Because it is changed and pale and old
(Lips that were scarlet, hair that was gold!),
And I loved you before you were old and wise,
When the flame of youth was strong in your eyes,
-- And my heart is sick with memories.
 


Rupert Brooke
A Worker Reads History

Who built the seven gates of Thebes?
The books are filled with names of kings.
Was it the kings who hauled the craggy blocks of stone?
And Babylon, so many times destroyed.
Who built the city up each time? In which of Lima's houses,
That city glittering with gold, lived those who built it?
In the evening when the Chinese wall was finished
Where did the masons go? Imperial Rome
Is full of arcs of triumph. Who reared them up? Over whom
Did the Caesars triumph? Byzantium lives in song.
Were all her dwellings palaces? And even in Atlantis of the legend
The night the seas rushed in,
The drowning men still bellowed for their slaves.

Young Alexander conquered India.
He alone?
Caesar beat the Gauls.
Was there not even a cook in his army?
Phillip of Spain wept as his fleet
was sunk and destroyed. Were there no other tears?
Frederick the Greek triumphed in the Seven Years War.
Who triumphed with him?

Each page a victory
At whose expense the victory ball?
Every ten years a great man,
Who paid the piper?

So many particulars.
So many questions.
 


Bertolt Brecht
Mack the Knife

Oh, the shark has pretty teeth, dear
And he shows them pearly white.
Just a jack knife has Macheath, dear
And he keeps it out of sight.

When the shark bites with his teeth, dear
Scarlet billows start to spread.
Fancy gloves, though, wears Macheath, dear
So there's not a trace of red.

On the side-walk Sunday morning
Lies a body oozing life;
Someone's sneaking 'round the corner.
Is that someone Mack the Knife?

From a tugboat by the river
A cement bag's dropping down;
The cement's just for the weight, dear.
Bet you Mackie's back in town.

Louie Miller disappeared, dear
After drawing out his cash;
And Macheath spends like a sailor.
Did our boy do something rash?

Sukey Tawdry, Jenny Diver,
Polly Peachum, Lucy Brown
Oh, the line forms on the right, dear
Now that Mackie's back in town.
 


Bertolt Brecht
Alexander VI Dines with the Cardinal of Capua

Next, then, the peacock, gilt
With all its feathers. Look, what gorgeous dyes
Flow in the eyes!
And how deep, lustrous greens are splashed and spilt
Along the back, that like a sea-wave's crest
Scatters soft beauty o'er th' emblazoned breast!

A strange fowl! But most fit
For feasts like this, whereby I honor one
Pure as the sun!
Yet glowing with the fiery zeal of it!
Some wine? Your goblet's empty? Let it foam!
It is not often that you come to Rome!

You like the Venice glass?
Rippled with lines that float like women's curls,
Neck like a girl's,
Fierce-glowing as a chalice in the Mass?
You start -- 'twas artist then, not Pope who spoke!
Ave Maria stella! -- ah, it broke!

'Tis said they break alone
When poison writhes within. A foolish tale!
What, you look pale?
Caraffa, fetch a silver cup! . . . You own
A Birth of Venus, now -- or so I've heard,
Lovely as the breast-plumage of a bird.

Also a Dancing Faun,
Hewn with the lithe grace of Praxiteles;
Globed pearls to please
A sultan; golden veils that drop like lawn --
How happy I could be with but a tithe
Of your possessions, fortunate one! Don't writhe

But take these cushions here!
Now for the fruit! Great peaches, satin-skinned,
Rough tamarind,
Pomegranates red as lips -- oh they come dear!
But men like you we feast at any price --
A plum perhaps? They're looking rather nice!

I'll cut the thing in half.
There's yours! Now, with a one-side-poisoned knife
One might snuff life
And leave one's friend with -- "fool" for epitaph!
An old trick? Truth! But when one has the itch
For pretty things and isn't very rich. . . .

There, eat it all or I'll
Be angry! You feel giddy? Well, it's hot!
This bergamot
Take home and smell -- it purges blood of bile!
And when you kiss Bianca's dimpled knee,
Think of the poor Pope in his misery!

Now you may kiss my ring!
Ho there, the Cardinal's litter! -- You must dine
When the new wine
Is in, again with me -- hear Bice sing,
Even admire my frescoes -- though they're nought
Beside the calm Greek glories you have bought!

Godspeed, Sir Cardinal!
And take a weak man's blessing! Help him there
To the cool air! . . .


Lucrezia here? You're ready for the ball?
-- He'll die within ten hours, I suppose --
Mhm! Kiss your poor old father, little rose!
 


Stephen Vincent Benet
Army Of Northern Virginia

Army of Northern Virginia, army of legend,
Who were your captains that you could trust them so surely?
Who were your battle-flags?
Call the shapes from the mist,
Call the dead men out of the mist and watch them ride.
Tall the first rider, tall with a laughing mouth,
His long black beard is combed like a beauty's hair,
His slouch hat plumed with a curled black ostrich-feather,
He wears gold spurs and sits his horse with the seat
Of a horseman born.


It is Stuart of Laurel Hill,
'Beauty' Stuart, the genius of cavalry,
Reckless, merry, religious, theatrical,
Lover of gesture, lover of panache,
With all the actor's grace and the quick, light charm
That makes the women adore him-a wild cavalier
Who worships as sober a God as Stonewall Jackson,
A Rupert who seldom drinks, very often prays,
Loves his children, singing, fighting spurs, and his wife.
Sweeney his banjo-player follows him.
And after them troop the young Virginia counties,
Horses and men, Botetort, Halifax,
Dinwiddie, Prince Edward, Cumberland, Nottoway,
Mecklenburg, Berkeley, Augusta, the Marylanders,
The horsemen never matched till Sheridan came.
Now the phantom guns creak by. They are Pelham's guns.
That quiet boy with the veteran mouth is Pelham.
He is twenty-two. He is to fight sixty battles
And never lose a gun.
The cannon roll past,
The endless lines of the infantry begin.
A. P. Hill leads the van. He is small and spare,
His short, clipped beard is red as his battleshirt,
Jackson and Lee are to call him in their death-hours.
Dutch Longstreet follows, slow, pugnacious and stubborn,
Hard to beat and just as hard to convince,
Fine corps commander, good bulldog for holding on,
But dangerous when he tries to think for himself,
He thinks for himself too much at Gettysburg,
But before and after he grips with tenacious jaws.
There is D. H. Hill-there is Early and Fitzhugh Lee-
Yellow-haired Hood with his wounds and his empty sleeve,
Leading his Texans, a Viking shape of a man,
With the thrust and lack of craft of a berserk sword,
All lion, none of the fox.
When he supersedes
Joe Johnston, he is lost, and his army with him,
But he could lead forlorn hopes with the ghost of Ney.
His bigboned Texans follow him into the mist.
Who follows them?
These are the Virginia faces,
The Virginia speech. It is Jackson's footcavalry,
The Army of the Valley,
It is the Stonewall Brigade, it is the streams
Of the Shenandoah, marching.
Ewell goes by,
The little woodpecker, bald and quaint of speech
With his wooden leg stuck stiffly out from his saddle,
He is muttering, 'Sir, I'm a nervous Major-General,
And whenever an aide rides up from General Jackson
I fully expect an order to storm the North Pole.'
He chuckles and passes, full of crotchets and courage,
Living on frumenty for imagined dyspepsia,
And ready to storm the North Pole at a Jackson phrase.
Then the staff-then little Sorrel-and the plain
Presbyterian figure in the flat cap,
Throwing his left hand out in the awkward gesture
That caught the bullet out of the air at Bull Run,
Awkward, rugged and dour, the belated Ironside
With the curious, brilliant streak of the cavalier
That made him quote Mercutio in staff instructions,
Love lancet windows, the color of passion-flowers,
Mexican sun and all fierce, tautlooking fine creatures;
Stonewall Jackson, wrapped in his beard and his silence,
Cromwell-eyed and ready with Cromwell's short
Bleak remedy for doubters and fools and enemies,
Hard on his followers, harder on his foes,
An iron sabre vowed to an iron Lord,
And yet the only man of those men who pass
With a strange, secretive grain of harsh poetry
Hidden so deep in the stony sides of his heart
That it shines by flashes only and then is gone.
It glitters in his last words.
He is deeply ambitious,
The skilled man, utterly sure of his own skill
And taking no nonsense about it from the unskilled,
But God is the giver of victory and defeat,
And Lee, on earth, vicegerent under the Lord.
Sometimes he differs about the mortal plans
But once the order is given, it is obeyed.
We know what he thought about God. One would like to know
What he thought of the two together, if he so mingled them.
He said two things about Lee it is well to recall.
When he first beheld the man that he served so well,
'I have never seen such a fine-looking human creature.'
Then, afterwards, at the height of his own fame,
The skilled man talking of skill, and something more.
'General Lee is a phenomenon,
He is the only man I would follow blindfold.'
Think of those two remarks and the man who made them
When you picture Lee as the rigid image in marble.
No man ever knew his own skill better than Jackson
Or was more ready to shatter an empty fame.
He passes now in his dusty uniform.
The Bible jostles a book of Napoleon's Maxims
And a magic lemon deep in his saddlebags.

And now at last,
Comes Traveller and his master. Look at them well.
The horse is an iron-grey, sixteen hands high,
Short back, deep chest, strong haunch, flat legs, small head,
Delicate ear, quick eye, black mane and tail,
Wise brain, obedient mouth.
Such horses are
The jewels of the horseman's hands and thighs,
They go by the word and hardly need the rein.
They bred such horses in Virginia then,
Horses that were remembered after death
And buried not so far from Christian ground
That if their sleeping riders should arise
They could not witch them from the earth again
And ride a printless course along the grass
With the old manage and light ease of hand.
The rider, now.
He too, is iron-grey,
Though the thick hair and thick, blunt-pointed beard
Have frost in them.
Broad-foreheaded, deep-eyed,
Straight-nosed, sweet-mouthed, firmlipped, head cleanly set,
He and his horse are matches for the strong
Grace of proportion that inhabits both.
They carry nothing that is in excess
And nothing that is less than symmetry,
The strength of Jackson is a hammered strength,
Bearing the tool marks still. This strength was shaped
By as hard arts but does not show the toil
Except as justness, though the toil was there.
-And so we get the marble man again,
The head on the Greek coin, the idol image,
The shape who stands at Washington's left hand,
Worshipped, uncomprehended and aloof,
A figure lost to flesh and blood and bones,
Frozen into a legend out of life,
A blank-verse statue-
How to humanize
That solitary gentleness and strength
Hidden behind the deadly oratory
Of twenty thousand Lee Memorial days,
How show, in spite of all the rhetoric,
All the sick honey of the speechifiers,
Proportion, not as something calm congealed
From lack of fire, but ruling such a fire
As only such proportion could contain?

The man was loved, the man was idolized,
The man had every just and noble gift.
He took great burdens and he bore them well,
Believed in God but did not preach too much,
Believed and followed duty first and last
With marvellous consistency and force,
Was a great victor, in defeat as great,
No more, no less, always himself in both,
Could make men die for him but saved his men
Whenever he could save them-was most kind
But-was not disobeyed-was a good father,
A loving husband, a considerate friend:
Had litle humor, but enough to play
Mild jokes that never wounded but had charm,
Did not seek intimates, yet drew men to him,
Did not seek fame, did not protest against it,
Knew his own value without pomp or jealousy
And died as he preferred to live-sans praise,
With commonsense, tenacity and courage,
A Greek proportion-and a riddle unread.
And everything that we have said is true
And nothing helps us yet to read the man,
Nor will he help us while he has the strength
To keep his heart his own.


For he will smile
And give you, with unflinching courtesy,
Prayers, trappings, letters, uniforms and orders,
Photographs, kindness, valor and advice,
And do it with such grace and gentleness
That you will know you have the whole of him
Pinned down, mapped out, easy to understand-
And so you have.
All things except the heart
The heart he kept himself, that answers all.
For here was someone who lived all his life
In the most fierce and open light of the sun,
Wrote letters freely, did not guard his speech,
Listened and talked with every sort of man,
And kept his heart a secret to the end
From all the picklocks of biographers.

He was a man, and as a man he knew
Love, separation, sorrow, joy and death.
He was a master of the tricks of war,
He gave great strokes and warded strokes as great.
He was the prop and pillar of a State,
The incarnation of a national dream,
And when the State fell and the dream dissolved
He must have lived with bitterness itself-
But what his sorrow was and what his joy,
And how he felt in the expense of strength,
And how his heart contained its bitterness,
He will not tell us.


We can lie about him,
Dress up a dummy in his uniform
And put our words into the dummy's mouth,
Say 'Here Lee must have thought,' and 'There, no doubt,
By what we know of him, we may suppose
He felt-this pang or that-' but he remains
Beyond our stagecraft, reticent as ice,
Reticent as the fire within the stone.

Yet-look at the face again-look at it well-
This man was not repose, this man was act.
This man who murmured 'It is well that war
Should be so terrible, if it were not
We might become too fond of it-' and showed
Himself, for once, completely as he lived
In the laconic balance of that phrase;
This man could reason, but he was a fighter,
Skilful in every weapon of defence
But never defending when he could assault,
Taking enormous risks again and again,
Never retreating while he still could strike,
Dividing a weak force on dangerous ground
And joining it again to beat a strong,
Mocking at chance and all the odds of war
With acts that looked like hairbread'th recklessness -
We do not call them reckless, since they won.
We do not see him reckless for the calm
Proportion that controlled the recklessness-
But that attacking quality was there.
He was not mild with life or drugged with justice,
He gripped life like a wrestler with a bull,
Impetuously. It did not come to him
While he stood waiting in a famous cloud,
He went to it and took it by both horns
And threw it down.


Oh, he could bear the shifts
Of time and play the bitter loser's game,
The slow, unflinching chess of fortitude,
But while he had an opening for attack
He would attack with every ounce of strength.
His heart was not a stone but trumpet-shaped
And a long challenge blew an anger through it
That was more dread for being musical
First, last, and to the end.
Again he said
A curious thing to life.
'I'm always wanting something.'
The brief phrase
Slides past us, hardly grasped in the smooth flow
Of the well-balanced, mildly-humorous prose
That goes along to talk of cats and duties,
Maxims of conduct, farming and poor bachelors,
But for a second there, the marble cracked
And a strange man we never saw before
Showed us the face he never showed the world
And wanted something-not the general
Who wanted shoes and food for ragged men,
Not the good father wanting for his children,
The patriot wanting victory-all the Lees
Whom all the world could see and recognize
And hang with gilded laurels-but the man
Who had, you'd say, all things that life can give
Except the last success-and had, for that,
Such glamor as can wear sheer triumph out,
Proportion's son and Duty's eldest sword
And the calm mask who-wanted something still,
Somewhere, somehow and always.
Picklock biographers,
What could he want that he had never had?

He only said it once-the marble closed-
There was a man enclosed within that image.
There was a force that tried Proportion's rule
And died without a legend or a cue
To bring it back. The shadow-Lees still live.
But the first-person and the singular Lee?


The ant finds kingdoms in a foot of ground
But earth's too small for something in our earth,
We'll make a new earth from the summer's cloud,
From the pure summer's cloud.
It was not that,
It was not God or love or mortal fame.
It was not anything he left undone.
-What does Proportion want that it can lack?
-What does the ultimate hunger of the flesh
Want from the sky more than a sky of air?

He wanted something. That must be enough.
Now he rides Traveller back into the mist.
 


Stephen Vincent Benet
July

 
The Kings come riding back from the Crusade,
The purple Kings and all their mounted men;
They fill the street with clamorous cavalcade;
The Kings have broken down the Saracen.
Singing a great song of the eastern wars,
In crimson ships across the sea they came,
With crimson sails and diamonded dark oars,
That made the Mediterranean flash with flame.

And reading how, in that far month, the ranks
Formed on the edge of the desert, armoured all,
I wish to God that I had been with them
When the first Norman leapt upon the wall,
And Godfrey led the foremost of the Franks,
And young Lord Raymond stormed Jerusalem.
 


Hilaire Belloc
Ares God of War

UNDER the stars the armies lie asleep:
Between the lines a quiet river flows
Through brakes of honeysuckle, and of rose,
And fields where poppies droop in languor deep:
The night as with a mantle now enfolds
The muffled forms upon the pasture low;
The scent of thyme comes down across the wolds,
And on the roses of the dark hedgerow
The summer starlight falls in flakes of silver snow.

Here, from the wooded haunt of nymph and fawn,
The hidden guns peer forth across the hills,
Their wheels are on the trampled daffodils,
And so they wait the coming of the dawn.
In dappled shadows, where the fairy weaves
On grasses tall his web of sparkling lace,
The gunners lie, their heads upon the sheaves:
White falls the moon on many a sunburnt face,
That ere the day shall feel another God's embrace.

Among the barrows of the sunken plain,
Where sleep the soldiers of another day,
On misty meadow and on upland gray,
On many eyes, that close but once again,
The peaceful earth her benediction throws,
The waves of healing music from the streams,
That though the willows softly comes, and goes ;
And now the face of all the country seems
A mirror consecrated to an army's dreams.

From far away is borne a woman's pray'r
To Ares, restless in his iron crown :
'Sleep, Ares, Sleep ! For, once the dice are thrown,
Empires to thee are leaves upon the air !
Ere all the homes go smoking to the skies,
And men are swept upon the battle-blast,
Ere all the tears are wept from women's eyes,
O Queen of Love, hold now the Lover fast,
And let him taste eternal anodyne at last !'

But with the dawn there comes a soldier's song:
'When all the guns have fired their last salute,
And the tongues of all the world are mute,
And life is dearer than to right a wrong,
Then may he weary of his burning wine,
And rest forever in the arms divine
Of Aphrodite passionate and pale-
But Hark ! He comes ! Hail, Ares ! Lord of Thunder, Hail !

'He rides above the ocean and the snow,
His trail is on the curtain of the skies :
Brighter than dawn, his young eternal eyes
Shine in the eyes of Valour far below :
Now Mammon hides beneath his trembling halls,
While Honour marches singing into war ;
On strange forgotten hearts a radiance falls,
As ever nearer, burning from afar,
The sword of Ares gleams above the morning star.'

'The other gods are weaker ; thou alone
Dost break the king and bend the emperor's knee:
Lower than unto Christ they bow to thee,
Lord of the slave, and guardian of the free,
Steel-hearted Ares, shaker of the throne ;
Young god of battle, restless lover, hail !
For, once a man has seen thine eyes aflame,
And mounted on the horses of the gale,
Death is a nothing, life an empty name:
Arise and lead us ere our blood be tame,
O lord of thunder, Arcs of the crimson mail !'


Herbert Asquith

On a Troopship - 1915
FAREWELL, the village leaning to the hill,
And all the cawing rooks that homeward fly ;
The bees; the drowsy anthem of the mill
The willows winding under April sky !
We watch the breakers crashing on the bow,
And those far flashes in the Eastern haze :
The fields and friends, that were, are fainter now
Than whispering of ancient waterways.
Now England stirs, as stirs a dreamer wound
In immemorial slumber ; lids apart,
Soon will she rouse her giant limbs, attuned
To that old music hidden at her heart.
The small occasions and the menial cries
Fade fast away : the little men beware :
She rises in her circuit of the skies,
An eagle drinking of the mountain air.
We come to harbour in the breath of wars;
Welcome again, the land of our farewells
In this strange ruin, open to the stars,
We find the haven, where her spirit dwells.


Herbert Asquith

Friday, 26 April 2013

The Superman
 


THE HORROR-HAUNTED Belgian plains riven by shot and shell   
Are strewn with her undaunted sons who stayed the jaws of hell.   
In every sunny vale of France death is the countersign.   
The purest blood in Britain’s veins is being poured like wine.   

Far, far across the crimsoned map the impassioned armies sweep.            

Destruction flashes down the sky and penetrates the deep.   
The Dreadnought knows the silent dread, and seas incarnadine   
Attest the carnival of strife, the madman’s battle scene.   

Relentless, savage, hot, and grim the infuriate columns press   
Where terror simulates disdain and danger is largess,           

Where greedy youth claims death for bride and agony seems bliss.   
It is the cause, the cause, my soul! which sanctifies all this.   

Ride, Cossacks, ride! Charge, Turcos, charge! The fateful hour has come.   
Let all the guns of Britain roar or be forever dumb.   
The Superman has burst his bonds. With Kultur-flag unfurled           

And prayer on lip he runs amuck, imperilling the world.”   

The impious creed that might is right in him personified   
Bids all creation bend before the insatiate Teuton pride,   
Which, nourished on Valhalla dreams of empire unconfined,   
Would make the cannon and the sword the despots of mankind.            


Efficient, thorough, strong, and brave—his vision is to kill.   
Force is the hearthstone of his might, the pole-star of his will.   
His forges glow malevolent: their minions never tire   
To deck the goddess of his lust whose twins are blood and fire.   

O world grown sick with butchery and manifold distress!            

O broken Belgium robbed of all save grief and ghastliness!   
Should Prussian power enslave the world and arrogance prevail,   
Let chaos come, let Moloch rule, and Christ give place to Baal.   
 


Robert Grant
Headquarters
 


A LEAGUE and a league from the trenches—from the traversed maze of the lines,   
Where daylong the sniper watches and daylong the bullet whines,   
And the cratered earth is in travail with mines and with countermines—   

Here, where haply some woman dreamed (are those her roses that bloom   
In the garden beyond the windows of my littered working room?) 

We have decked the map for our masters as a bride is decked for the groom.   

Fair, on each lettered numbered square—crossroad and mound and wire,   
Loophole, redoubt, and emplacement—lie the targets their mouths desire;   
Gay with purples and browns and blues, have we traced them their arcs of fire.   

And ever the type-keys chatter; and ever our keen wires bring            

Word from the watchers a-crouch below, word from the watchers a-wing:   
And ever we hear the distant growl of our hid guns thundering.   

Hear it hardly, and turn again to our maps, where the trench lines crawl,   
Red on the gray and each with a sign for the ranging, shrapnel’s fall—   
Snakes that our masters shall scotch at dawn, as is written here on the wall.            


For the weeks of our waiting draw to a close…. There is scarcely a leaf astir   
In the garden beyond my windows, where the twilight shadows blur   
The blaze of some woman’s roses….   
                    “Bombardment orders, sir.”



Gilbert Frankau

 
 The Road to Dieppe

 
BEFORE I knew, the Dawn was on the road,   
Close at my side, so silently he came   
Nor gave a sign of salutation, save   
To touch with light my sleeve and make the way   
Appear as if a shining countenance            

Had looked on it. Strange was this radiant Youth,   
As I, to these fair, fertile parts of France,   
Where Cæsar with his legions once had passed,   
And where the Kaiser’s Uhlans yet would pass   
Or e’er another moon should cope with clouds            

For mastery of these same fields.—To-night   
(And but a month has gone since I walked there)   
Well might the Kaiser write, as Cæsar wrote,   
In his new Commentaries on a Gallic war,   
“Fortissimi Belgæ.”—A moon ago!            

Who would have then divined that dead would lie   
Like swaths of grain beneath the harvest moon   
Upon these lands the ancient Belgæ held,   
From Normandy beyond renowned Liège!—   

But it was out of that dread August night            

From which all Europe woke to war, that we,   
This beautiful Dawn-Youth, and I, had come,   
He from afar. Beyond grim Petrograd   
He’d waked the moujik from his peaceful dreams,   
Bid the muezzin call to morning prayer            

Where minarets rise o’er the Golden Horn,   
And driven shadows from the Prussian march   
To lie beneath the lindens of the stadt.

   
Softly he’d stirred the bells to ring at Rheims,   
He’d knocked at high Montmartre, hardly asleep,           
Heard the sweet carillon of doomed Louvain,   
Boylike, had tarried for a moment’s play   
Amid the traceries of Amiens,   
And then was hast’ning on the road to Dieppe,   
When he o’ertook me drowsy from the hours            

Through which I’d walked, with no companions else   
Than ghostly kilometer posts that stood   
As sentinels of space along the way.


Often, in doubt, I’d paused to question one,   
With nervous hands, as they who read Moon-type;            

And more than once I’d caught a moment’s sleep   
Beside the highway, in the dripping grass,   
While one of these white sentinels stood guard,   
Knowing me for a friend, who loves the road,   
And best of all by night, when wheels do sleep            

And stars alone do walk abroad.

But once three watchful shadows, deeper than the dark,   
Laid hands on me and searched me for the marks   
Of traitor or of spy, only to find   
Over my heart the badge of loyalty.—            

With wish for bon voyage they gave me o’er   
To the white guards who led me on again.   

Thus Dawn o’ertook me and with magic speech   
Made me forget the night as we strode on.   
Where’er he looked a miracle was wrought:            

A tree grew from the darkness at a glance;   
A hut was thatched; a new château was reared   
Of stone, as weathered as the church at Cæn;   
Gray blooms were coloured suddenly in red;   
A flag was flung across the eastern sky.

        
Nearer at hand, he made me then aware   
Of peasant women bending in the fields,   
Cradling and gleaning by the first scant light,   
Their sons and husbands somewhere o’er the edge   
Of these green-golden fields which they had sowed,            

But will not reap,—out somewhere on the march,   
God but knows where and if they come again.   
One fallow field he pointed out to me   
Where but the day before a peasant ploughed,   
Dreaming of next year’s fruit, and there his plough            

Stood now mid-field, his horses commandeered,   
A monstrous sable crow perched on the beam.   

Before I knew, the Dawn was on the road,   
Far from my side, so silently he went,   
Catching his golden helmet as he ran,            

And hast’ning on along the dun straight way,   
Where old men’s sabots now began to clack   
And withered women, knitting, led their cows,   
On, on to call the men of Kitchener   
Down to their coasts,—I shouting after him:            

“O Dawn, would you had let the world sleep on   
Till all its armament were turned to rust,   
Nor waked it to this day of hideous hate,   
Of man’s red murder and of woman’s woe!”   

Famished and lame, I came at last to Dieppe,           
But Dawn had made his way across the sea,   
And, as I climbed with heavy feet the cliff,   
Was even then upon the sky-built towers   
Of that great capital where nations all,   
Teuton, Italian, Gallic, English, Slav,            

Forget long hates in one consummate faith.   


John Finley
 

Tuesday, 23 April 2013

Quote:

“Pay attention to where you are going because without meaning you might get nowhere.”


A.A. Milne
Fairies

    THERE are fairies at the bottom of our garden!
        It's not so very, very far away;
    You pass the gardner's shed and you just keep straight ahead --
        I do so hope they've really come to stay.
    There's a little wood, with moss in it and beetles,
        And a little stream that quietly runs through;
    You wouldn't think they'd dare to come merrymaking there--
              Well, they do.

    There are fairies at the bottom of our garden!
        They often have a dance on summer nights;
    The butterflies and bees make a lovely little breeze,
        And the rabbits stand about and hold the lights.
    Did you know that they could sit upon the moonbeams
        And pick a little star to make a fan,
    And dance away up there in the middle of the air?
              Well, they can.

    There are fairies at the bottom of our garden!
        You cannot think how beautiful they are;
    They all stand up and sing when the Fairy Queen and King
        Come gently floating down upon their car.
    The King is very proud and very handsome;
        The Queen--now you can quess who that could be
    (She's a little girl all day, but at night she steals away)?
              Well -- it's Me!

        Rose Fyleman
Champagne, 1914–15


IN the glad revels, in the happy fêtes,   
  When cheeks are flushed, and glasses gilt and pearled   
With the sweet wine of France that concentrates   
  The sunshine and the beauty of the world,   

Drink sometimes, you whose footsteps yet may tread            

  The undisturbed, delightful paths of Earth,   
To those whose blood, in pious duty shed,   
  Hallows the soil where that same wine had birth.   

Here, by devoted comrades laid away,   
  Along our lines they slumber where they fell,            

Beside the crater at the Ferme d’Alger   
  And up the bloody slopes of La Pompelle,   

And round the city whose cathedral towers   
  The enemies of Beauty dared profane,   
And in the mat of multicoloured flowers            

  That clothe the sunny chalk-fields of Champagne.   

Under the little crosses where they rise   
  The soldier rests. Now round him undismayed   
The cannon thunders, and at night he lies   
  At peace beneath the eternal fusillade …            
That other generations might possess—   
  From shame and menace free in years to come—   
A richer heritage of happiness,   
  He marched to that heroic martyrdom.   

Esteeming less the forfeit that he paid            

  Than un-dishonoured that his flag might float   
Over the towers of liberty, he made   
  His breast the bulwark and his blood the moat.   

Obscurely sacrificed, his nameless tomb,   
  Bare of the sculptor’s art, the poet’s lines,            

Summer shall flush with poppy-fields in bloom,   
  And Autumn yellow with maturing vines.   

There the grape-pickers at their harvesting   
  Shall lightly tread and load their wicker trays,   
Blessing his memory as they toil and sing            

  In the slant sunshine of October days …   

I love to think that if my blood should be   
  So privileged to sink where his has sunk,   
I shall not pass from Earth entirely,   
  But when the banquet rings, when healths are drunk.            


And faces that the joys of living fill   
  Glow radiant with laughter and good cheer,   
In beaming cups some spark of me shall still   
  Brim toward the lips that once I held so dear.   

So shall one coveting no higher plane            

  Than nature clothes in colour and flesh and tone,   
Even from the grave put upward to attain   
The dreams youth cherished and missed and might have known;   

And that strong need that strove unsatisfied   
  Toward earthly beauty in all forms it wore,            

Not death itself shall utterly divide   
  From the beloved shapes it thirsted for.   

Alas, how many an adept for whose arms   
  Life held delicious offerings perished here,   
How many in the prime of all that charms,            

  Crowned with all gifts that conquer and endear!   

Honour them not so much with tears and flowers,   
  But you with whom the sweet fulfilment lies,   
Where in the anguish of atrocious hours   
  Turned their last thoughts and closed their dying eyes,            


Rather when music on bright gatherings lays   
  Its tender spell, and joy is uppermost,   
Be mindful of the men they were, and raise   
  Your glasses to them in one silent toast.   

Drink to them—amorous of dear Earth as well,           
  They asked no tribute lovelier than this—   
And in the wine that ripened where they fell,   
  Oh, frame your lips as though it were a kiss.



Alan Seeger


My Son

HERE is his little cambric frock   
    That I laid by in lavender so sweet,   
And here his tiny shoe and sock   
    I made with loving care for his dear feet.   

I fold the frock across my breast,            

    And in imagination, ah, my sweet,   
Once more I hush my babe to rest,   
    And once again I warm those little feet.   

Where do those strong young feet now stand?   
    In flooded trench, half numb to cold or pain,            

Or marching through the desert sand   
    To some dread place that they may never gain.   

God guide him and his men to-day!   
    Though death may lurk in any tree or hill,   
His brave young spirit is their stay,            

     Trusting in that they’ll follow where he will.   

They love him for his tender heart   
    When poverty or sorrow asks his aid,   
But he must see each do his part—   
    Of cowardice alone he is afraid.            
I ask no honours on the field,   
    That other men have won as brave as he—   
I only pray that God may shield   
    My son, and bring him safely back to me!   
 


Ada Tyrrell

Monday, 22 April 2013

Quote:

The farther backward you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.

Winston Churchill
A Song of Defeat

    THE line breaks and the guns go under,
        The lords and the lackeys ride the plain;
    I draw deep breaths of the dawn and thunder,
        And the whole of my heart grows young again.
    For our chiefs said 'Done,' and I did not deem it;
        Our seers said 'Peace,' and it was not peace;
    Earth will grow worse till men redeem it,
        And wars more evil, ere all wars cease. 


    But the old flags reel and the old drums rattle,
        As once in my life they throbbed and reeled;
    I have found my youth in the lost battle,
        I have found my heart on the battlefield.
            For we that fight till the world is free,
            We are not easy in victory:
            We have known each other too long, my brother,
            And fought each other, the world and we.

    And I dream of the days when work was scrappy,
        And rare in our pockets the mark of the mint,
    When we were angry and poor and happy,
        And proud of seeing our names in print. 


    For so they conquered and so we scattered,
        When the Devil road and his dogs smelt gold,
    And the peace of a harmless folk was shattered;
        When I was twenty and odd years old. 


    When the mongrel men that the market classes
        Had slimy hands upon England's rod,
    And sword in hand upon Afric's passes
        Her last Republic cried to God. 


            For the men no lords can buy or sell,
            They sit not easy when all goes well,
            They have said to each other what naught can smother,
            They have seen each other, our souls and hell.

    It is all as of old, the empty clangour,
        The Nothing scrawled on a five-foot page,
    The huckster who, mocking holy anger,
        Painfully paints his face with rage. 


    And the faith of the poor is faint and partial,
        And the pride of the rich is all for sale,
    And the chosen heralds of England's Marshal
        Are the sandwich-men of the Daily Mail,
    And the niggards that dare not give are glutted,
        And the feeble that dare not fail are strong,
    So while the City of Toil is gutted,
        I sit in the saddle and sing my song. 


            For we that fight till the world is free,
            We have no comfort in victory;
            We have read each other as Cain his brother,
            We know each other, these slaves and we.

        G. K. Chesterton
John Brown

    HAD he been made of such poor clay as we,
        Who, when we feel a little fire aglow
        'Gainst wrong within us, dare not let it grow,
    But crouch and hide it, lest the scorner see
    And sneer, yet bask our self-complacency
        In that faint warmth -- had he been fashioned so,
        The nation n'er had come to that birth-throe
    That gave the world a new humanity.
    He was no vain professor of the word --
        His life a mockery of the creed; -- he made
    No discount on the Golden Rule, but heard
        Above the Senate's brawls and din of trade
    Ever the clank of chains, until he stirred
        The nation's heart on that immortal raid.

        William Herbert Carruth
 Hohenlinden

    ON Linden, when the sun was low,
    All bloodless lay the untrodden snow;
    And dark as winter was the flow
    Of Iser, rolling rapidly.

    But Linden saw another sight,
    When the drum beat at dead of night,
    Commanding fires of death to light
    The darkness of her scenery.

    By torch and trumpet fast arrayed,
    Each horseman drew his battle-blade,
    And furious every charger neighed
    To join the dreadful revelry.

    Then shook the hills with thunder riven,
    Then rushed the steed to battle driven,
    And louder than the bolts of heaven
    Far flashed the red artillery.

    But redder yet that light shall glow
    On Linden's hills of stainèd snow,
    And bloodier yet the torrent flow
    Of Iser, rolling rapidly.

    'Tis morn, but scarce yon level sun
    Can pierce the war-clouds, rolling dun
    Where furious Frank and fiery Hun
    Shout in their sulphurous canopy.

    The combat deepens. On, ye brave,
    Who rush to glory, or the grave!
    Wave, Munich, all thy banners wave,
    And charge with all thy chivalry!

    Few, few shall part where many meet!
    The snow shall be their winding-sheet,
    And every turf beneath their feet
    Shall be a soldier's sepulchre.

    Thomas Campbell

Sunday, 21 April 2013

 Mending Wall


SOMETHING there is that doesn’t love a wall,   
That sends the frozen-ground-swell under it,   
And spills the upper boulders in the sun;   
And makes gaps even two can pass abreast.   
The work of hunters is another thing:            

I have come after them and made repair   
Where they have left not one stone on a stone,   
But they would have the rabbit out of hiding,   
To please the yelping dogs. The gaps I mean,   
No one has seen them made or heard them made,            

But at spring mending-time we find them there.
  
I let my neighbour know beyond the hill;   
And on a day we meet to walk the line   
And set the wall between us once again.   
We keep the wall between us as we go.  

          
To each the boulders that have fallen to each.   
And some are loaves and some so nearly balls   
We have to use a spell to make them balance:   
“Stay where you are until our backs are turned!”   
We wear our fingers rough with handling them.

            
Oh, just another kind of out-door game,   
One on a side. It comes to little more:   
There where it is we do not need the wall:   
He is all pine and I am apple orchard.

   
My apple trees will never get across           

 And eat the cones under his pines, I tell him.   
He only says, “Good fences make good neighbours.”   
Spring is the mischief in me, and I wonder   
If I could put a notion in his head:   
“Why do they make good neighbours? Isn’t it            

Where there are cows? But here there are no cows.   
Before I built a wall I’d ask to know   
What I was walling in or walling out,   
And to whom I was like to give offence.

   
Something there is that doesn’t love a wall,            

That wants it down.” I could say “Elves” to him,   
But it’s not elves exactly, and I’d rather   
He said it for himself. I see him there   
Bringing a stone grasped firmly by the top   
In each hand, like an old-stone savage armed.            

He moves in darkness as it seems to me,   
Not of woods only and the shade of trees.   
He will not go behind his father’s saying,   
And he likes having thought of it so well   
He says again, “Good fences make good neighbours.”


Robert Frost
The Sound of the Trees

I WONDER about the trees.   
Why do we wish to bear   
Forever the noise of these   
More than another noise   
So close to our dwelling place?            

We suffer them by the day   
Till we lose all measure of pace,   
And fixity in our joys,   
And acquire a listening air.

   
They are that that talks of going            

But never gets away;   
And that talks no less for knowing,   
As it grows wiser and older,   
That now it means to stay. 

  
My feet tug at the floor           

And my head sways to my shoulder   
Sometimes when I watch trees sway,   
From the window or the door.  

 
I shall set forth for somewhere,   
I shall make the reckless choice            

Some day when they are in voice   
And tossing so as to scare   
The white clouds over them on.   
I shall have less to say,   
But I shall be gone. 


Robert Frost           
Ode

    GOD save the Rights of Man!
    Give us a heart to scan
    Blessings so dear:
    Let them be spread around
    Wherever man is found,
    And with the welcome sound
    Ravish his ear.

    Let us with France agree,
    And bid the world be free,
    While tyrants fall!
    Let the rude savage host
    Of their vast numbers boast--
    Freedom's almight trust
    Laughs at them all!

    Though hosts of slaves conspire
    To quench fair Gallia's fire,
    Still shall they fail:
    Though traitors round her rise,
    Leagu'd with her enemies,
    To war each patriot flies,
    And will prevail.

    No more is valor's flame
    Devoted to a name,
    Taught to adore--
    Soldiers of Liberty
    Disdain to bow the knee,
    But ateach Equality
    To every shore.

    The world at last will join
    To aid thy grand design,
    Dear Liberty!
    To Russia's frozen lands
    The generous flame expands:
    On Afric's burning sands
    Shall man be free!

    In this our western world
    Be Freedom's flag unfurl'd
    Through all its shores!
    May no destructive blast
    Our heaven of joy o'ercast,
    May Freedom's fabric last
    While time endures.

    If e'er her cause require!--
    Should tyrants e'er aspire
    To aim their stroke,
    May no proud despot daunt--
    Should he his standard plant,
    Freedom will never want
    Her hearts of oak!

        Philip Freneau

Old Dog Tray

    THE morn of life is past,
    And ev'ning comes at last;
       It brings me a dream of a once happy day,
    Of merry forms I've seen
    Upon the village green,
       Sporting with my old dog Tray.


        Chorus:
        Old dog Tray's ever faithful;
           Grief cannot drive him away;
        He's gentle, he is kind,
        I'll never, never find
           A better friend than old dog Tray.


    The forms I called my own
    Have vanish'd one by one,
       The lov'd ones, the dear ones have all pass'd away;
    Their happy smiles have flown,
    Their gentle voices gone,
       I've nothing left but old dog Tray.


        Chorus.

    When thoughts recall the past,
    His eyes are on me cast,
       I know that he feels what my breaking heart would say;
    Although he cannot speak,
    I'll vainly, vainly seek
       A better friend than old dog Tray.


        Chorus.

        Stephen Foster
 The Dying Patriot

    DAY breaks on England down the Kentish hills,
    Singing in the silence of the meadow-footing rills,
    Day of my dreams, O day!
        I saw them march from Dover, long ago,
        With a silver cross before them, singing low,
    Monks of Rome from their home where the blue seas break in foam,
        Augustine with his feet of snow.

    Noon strikes on England, noon on Oxford town,
    --Beauty she was statue cold--there's blood upon her gown:
    Noon of my dreams, O noon!
        Proud and godly kings had built her, long ago,
        With her towers and tombs and statues all arow,
    With her fair and floral air and the love that lingers there,
        And the streets where the great men go.

    Evening on the olden, the golden sea of Wales,
    When the first star shivers and the last wave pales:
    O evening dreams!
        There's a house that Britons walked in, long ago,
        Where now the springs of ocean fall and flow,
    And the dead robed in red and sea-lilies overhead
        Sway when the long winds blow.

    Sleep not, my country: though night is here, afar
    Your children of the morning are clamorous for war:
    Fire in the night, O dreams!
        Though she send you as she sent you, long ago,
        South to the desert, east to ocean, north to snow,
    West of these out to seas colder than the Hebrides I must go
        Where the fleet of stars is anchored, and the young star-captains glow.

 James Elroy Flecker


The Owl Critic

    "WHO stuffed that white owl?" No one spoke in the shop:
    The barber was busy, and he couldn't stop;
    The customers, waiting their turns, were all reading
    The "Daily," the "Herald," the "Post," little heeding
    The young man who blurted out such a blunt question;
    Not one raised a head, or even made a suggestion;
                        And the barber kept on shaving.

    "Don't you see, Mister Brown,"
    Cried the youth, with a frown,
    "How wrong the whole thing is,
    How preposterous each wing is,
    How flattened the head is, how jammed down the neck is--
    In short, the whole owl, what an ignorant wreck 't is!
    I make no apology;
    I've learned owl-eology.
    I've passed days and nights in a hundred collections,
    And cannot be blinded to any deflections
    Arising from unskilful fingers that fail
    To stuff a bird right, from his beak to his tail.
    Mister Brown! Mister Brown!
    Do take that bird down,
    Or you'll soon be the laughing-stock all over town!"
                        And the barber kept on shaving.

    "I've studied owls,
    And other night fowls,
    And I tell you
    What I know to be true:
    An owl cannot roost
    With his limbs so unloosed;
    No owl in this world
    Ever had his claws curled,
    Ever had his legs slanted,
    Ever had his bill canted,
    Ever had his neck screwed
    Into that attitude.
    He can't do it, because
    'T is against all bird-laws.
    Anatomy teaches,
    Ornithology preaches
    An owl has a toe
    That can't turn out so!
    I've made the white owl my study for years,
    And to see such a job almost moves me to tears!
    Mister Brown, I'm amazed
    You should be so gone crazed
    As to put up a bird
    In that posture absurd!
    To look at that owl really brings on a dizziness;
    The man who stuffed him don't half know his business!"
                        And the barber kept on shaving.

    "Examine those eyes.
    I'm filled with surprise
    Taxidermists should pass
    Off on you such poor glass;
    So unnatural they seem
    They'd make Audubon scream,
    And John Burroughs laugh
    To encounter such chaff.
    Do take that bird down;
    Have him stuffed again, Brown!"
                        And the barber kept on shaving.

    "With some sawdust and bark
    I could stuff in the dark
    An owl better than that.
    I could make an old hat
    Look more like an owl
    Than that horrid fowl,
    Stuck up there so stiff like a side of coarse leather.
    In fact, about him there's not one natural feather."

    Just then, with a wink and a sly normal lurch,
    The owl, very gravely, got down from his perch,
    Walked round, and regarded his fault-finding critic
    (Who thought he was stuffed) with a glance analytic,
    And then fairly hooted, as if he should say:
    "Your learning's at fault this time, any way;
    Don't waste it again on a live bird, I pray.
    I'm an owl; you're another. Sir Critic, good-day!"
                        And the barber kept on shaving.

        James T. Fields

Quote:

“Some people talk to animals. Not many listen though. That's the problem.”


A.A. Milne

Saturday, 20 April 2013

Canadian Railroad Trilogy


There was a time in this fair land when the railroad did not run
When the wild majestic mountains stood alone against the sun
Long before the white man and long before the wheel
When the green dark forest was too silent to be real
But time has no beginnings and hist'ry has no bounds
As to this verdant country they came from all around
They sailed upon her waterways and they walked the forests tall
And they built the mines the mills and the factories for the good of us all

And when the young man's fancy was turnin' to the spring
The railroad men grew restless for to hear the hammers ring
Their minds were overflowing with the visions of their day
And many a fortune lost and won and many a debt to pay

For they looked in the future and what did they see
They saw an iron road runnin' from sea to the sea
Bringin' the goods to a young growin' land
All up through the seaports and into their hands

Look away said they across this mighty land
From the eastern shore to the western strand
Bring in the workers and bring up the rails
We gotta lay down the tracks and tear up the trails
Open 'er heart let the life blood flow
Gotta get on our way 'cause we're movin' too slow

Bring in the workers and bring up the rails
We're gonna lay down the tracks and tear up the trails
Open 'er heart let the life blood flow
Gotta get on our way 'cause we're movin' too slow
Get on our way 'cause we're movin' too slow

Behind the blue Rockies the sun is declinin'
The stars, they come stealin' at the close of the day
Across the wide prairie our loved ones lie sleeping
Beyond the dark oceans in a place far away

We are the navvies who work upon the railway
Swingin' our hammers in the bright blazin' sun
Livin' on stew and drinkin' bad whisky
Bendin' our old backs 'til the long days are done

We are the navvies who work upon the railway
Swingin' our hammers in the bright blazin' sun
Layin' down track and buildin' the bridges
Bendin' our old backs 'til the railroad is done

So over the mountains and over the plains
Into the muskeg and into the rain
Up the St. Lawrence all the way to Gaspe
Swingin' our hammers and drawin' our pay
Drivin' 'em in and tyin' 'em down
Away to the bunkhouse and into the town
A dollar a day and a place for my head
A drink to the livin' and a toast to the dead

Oh the song of the future has been sung
All the battles have been won
O'er the mountain tops we stand
All the world at our command
We have opened up the soil
With our teardrops and our toil

For there was a time in this fair land when the railroad did not run
When the wild majestic mountains stood alone against the sun
Long before the white man and long before the wheel
When the green dark forest was too silent to be real
When the green dark forest was too silent to be real
And many are the dead men too silent to be real.


Gordon Lightfoot
 Buachaill ón Éirne

Buachaill ón Éirne mé 's bhréagfainn cailín deas óg
Ní iarrfainn bó spré léi tá mé fhéin saibhir go leor
'S liom Corcaigh da mhéid é, dhá thaobh
a' ghleanna 's Tír Eoghain
'S mura n-athraí mé béasaí 's mé n' t-oidhr'
ar Chontae Mhaigh Eo

Rachaidh mé 'márach ag dhéanamh leanna fán choill
Gan choite gan bád gan gráinnín brach' ar bith liom
Ach duilliúr na gcraobh mar éadaigh leapa os mo chionn
'S óró sheacht m'anam déag thú 's tú 'féachaint orm anall

Buachailleacht bó, mo leo, nár chleacht mise ariamh
Ach ag imirt 's ag ól le h'ógmhná deasa an tsliabh
Má chaill mé mo stór ní moide gur chaill mé mo chiall
A's ní mó liom do phóg ná'n bhróg atáim ag caitheamh le bliain
Ballad of the Alamo


In the southern part of Texas, in the town of San Antone,
There's a fortress all in ruin that the weeds have overgrown.
You may look in vain for crosses and you'll never see a one,
But sometime between the setting and the rising of the sun,
You can hear a ghostly bugle as the men go marching by;
You can hear them as they answer to that roll call in the sky:
Colonel Travis, Davy Crockett and a hundred eighty more;
Captain Dickenson, Jim Bowie, present and accounted for.

Back in 1836, Houston said to Travis:
"Get some volunteers and go fortify the Alamo."
Well, the men came from Texas and from old Tennessee,
And they joined up with Travis just to fight for the right to be free.

Indian scouts with squirrel guns, men with muzzle loaders,
Stood together heel and toe to defend the Alamo.
"You may never see your loved ones," Travis told them that day.
"Those that want to can leave now, those who'll fight to the death, let 'em stay."

In the sand he drew a line with his army sabre,
Out of a hundred eighty five, not a soldier crossed the line.
With his banners a-dancin' in the dawn's golden light,
Santa Anna came prancin' on a horse that was black as the night.

He sent an officer to tell Travis to surrender.
Travis answered with a shell and a rousin' rebel yell.
Santa Anna turned scarlet: "Play Degüello," he roared.
"I will show them no quarter, everyone will be put to the sword."

One hundred and eighty five holdin' back five thousand.
Five days, six days, eight days, ten; Travis held and held again.
Then he sent for replacements for his wounded and lame,
But the troops that were comin' never came, never came, never came.

Twice he charged, then blew recall. On the fatal third time,
Santa Anna breached the wall and he killed them one and all.
Now the bugles are silent and there's rust on each sword,
And the small band of soldiers lie asleep in the arms of The Lord.

In the southern part of Texas, near the town of San Antone,
Like a statue on his Pinto rides a cowboy all alone.
And he sees the cattle grazin' where a century before,
Santa Anna's guns were blazin' and the cannons used to roar.
And his eyes turn sort of misty, and his heart begins to glow,
And he takes his hat off slowly to the men of Alamo.
To the thirteen days of glory at the siege of Alamo.



Dimitri Tiomkin / Paul Francis Webster

Friday, 19 April 2013

Harry Morant

Harry Morant was a friend I had
In the years long passed away,
A chivalrous, wild and reckless lad,
A knight born out of his day.

Full of romance and void of fears,
With a love of the world’s applause,
He should have been one of the cavaliers
Who fought in King Charles’s cause.

He loved a girl, and he loved a horse,
And he never let down a friend,
And reckless he was, but he rode his course
With courage up to the end.

“Breaker Morant” was the name he earned,
For no bucking horse could throw
This Englishman who had lived and learned
As much as the bushmen know.

Many a mile have we crossed together,
Out where the great plains lie,
To the clink of bit and the creak of leather –
Harry Morant and I.

Time and again we would challenge Fate
With some wild and reckless “dare”,
Shoving some green colt over a gate
As though with a neck to spare.

At times in a wilder mood than most
We would face them at naked wire,
Trusting the sight of a gidyea post
Would lift them a half-foot higher.

And once we galloped a steeplechase
For a bet – ’twas a short half-mile
While one jump only, the stiffest place
In a fence of the old bush style.

A barrier built of blue-gum rails
As thick as a big man’s thigh,
And mortised into the posts – no nails –
Unbreakable, four foot high.

Since both our horses were young and green
And had never jumped or raced,
Were we men who had tired of this earthly scene
We could scarce have been better placed.

“Off” cried “The Breaker”, and off we went
And he stole a length of lead,
Over the neck of the grey I bent
And we charged the fence full speed.

The brown horse slowed and tried to swerve,
But his rider with master hand
And flaming courage and iron nerve
Made him lift and leap and land.

He rapped it hard with every foot
And was nearly down on his nose;
Then I spurred the grey and followed suit
And, praise to the gods – he rose!

He carried a splinter with both his knees
And a hind-leg left some skin,
But we caught them up at the wilga trees
Sitting down for the short run-in.

They grey was game and he carried on
But the brown had a bit to spare;
The post was passed, my pound was gone,
And a laugh was all my share.

“The Breaker” is sleeping in some far place
Where the Boer War heroes lie,
And we’ll meet no more in a steeplechase –
Harry Morant and I.


 

William Henry Ogilvie