Page:The Yellow Book - 05.djvu/336

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
304
Fleet Street Eclogue
Of sad, gay girls who ply for hire;
I hear the gibbering of the mad;
Sinister workhouse folk I note;
I mark the sable ironclad
In every sound and channel float,
The growl of armies, bound in chains
Of parchment peace that chafes and frets
Their seven-leagued limbs and bristled manes
Of glittering bayonets,
The glowing blast, the fire-shot smoke,
Where guns are forged and armour-plate,
The mammoth hammer's pounding stroke—
The din of our dread iron date;
And always divers undertones
Within the roaring tempest throb—
The chink of gold, the labourer's groans,
The infant's wail, the woman's sob:
Hoarsely they beg of Fate to give
A little lightening of their woe,
A little time to love, to live,
A little time to think and know.
I see where in the East may rise
Some unexpected dreadful dawn—
The gleam of steeled and scowling eyes,
A flash of women's faces wan!

Basil.
This is St. George's Day.

Menzies.
St. George? A wretched thief, I vow.

Herbert.