Title: Punch, Volume 101, September 19, 1891
Author: Francis Burnand
Release Date: November 5, 2004 [EBook #13961]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** Start of this project gutenberg EBOOK punch, volume 101 ***
Produced by Malcolm Farmer, William Flis, and the
Online Distributed
Proofreading Team.
PUNCH,
Or the London charivari.
Vol. 101.
September 19, 1891.
[Illustration: Off duty.
The “Daily Graphic” Weather-Young-Woman gets her “Sundays out."]
* * * * *
Silence and sleep.
(LINES WRITTEN AT COCK-CROW.)
Night-time and silence! O’er
the brooding hill
The last faint whisper of
the zephyr dies;
Meadows and trees and lanes are hushed
and still,
A shroud of mist on the slow
river lies;
And the tall sentry poplars silent keep
Their lonely vigil in a world of sleep.
Yea, all men sleep who toiled throughout
the day
At sport or work, and had
their fill of sound,
The jest and laughter that we mate with
play,
The beat of hoofs, the mill-wheel
grinding round,
The anvil’s note on summer breezes
borne,
The sickle’s sweep in fields of
yellow corn.
And I too, as the hours go softly by,
Lie and forget, and yield
to sleep’s behest,
Leave for a space the world without a
sigh,
And pass through silence into
dreamless rest;
Like a tired swimmer floating tranquilly
Full in the tide upon a peaceful sea.
But hark, that sound! Again and yet
again!
Darkness is cleft, the stricken
silence breaks,
And sleep’s soft veil is rudely
rent in twain,
And weary nature all too soon,
awakes;
Though through the gloom has pierced no
ray of light,
To hail the dawn and bid farewell to night.
Still is it night, the world should yet
sleep on,
And gather strength to meet
the distant morn.
But one there is who, though no ray has
shone,
Waits not, nor sleeps, but
laughs all rest to scorn,
The demon-bird that crows his hideous
jeer,
Restless, remorseless, hateful Chanticleer.
One did I say? Nay, hear them as
they cry;
Six more accept the challenge
of the foe:
From six stretched necks six more must
make reply,
Echo, re-echo and prolong
the crow.
First shrieking singly, then their notes
they mix
In one combined cacophony of six.
Miscalled of poets “herald of the
day,”
Spirit of evil, vain and wanton
bird,
Was there then none to beg a moment’s
stay
Ere for thy being Fate decreed
the word?
Could not ASCLEPIAS, when he ceased to
be,
Take to the realms of death thy tribe
and thee?