London Types Beef-Eater
His beat lies knee-high through a dust of story— A dust of terror and torture, grief and crime;
Ghosts that are England's wonder, and shame, and glory Throng where he walks, an antic of old time;
A sense of long immedicable tears Were ever with him, could his ears but heed;
The stern Hic Jacets of our bloodiest years Are for his reading, had he eyes to read,
But here, where Crookback raged, and Cranmer trimmed,
And More and Strafford faced the axe's proving,
He shows that Crown the desperate Colonel nimmed,
Or simply keeps the Country Cousin moving,
Or stays such Cockney pencillers as would shame The wall where some dead Queen hath traced her name.
William Ernest Henley
Другие работы автора
Visitor
Her little face is like a walnut With wrinkling lines; her soft, white hair Her withered brows in quaint, straight curls, like horns; And all about her clings an old, sweet smell
London Types Drum-Major
Who says Drum-Major says a man of mould, Shaking the meek earth with tremendous tread, And pacing still, a triumph to behold, Of his own spine at least two yards ahead
Children Private Ward
Here in this dim, dull, double-bedded room, I play the father to a brace of boys, Ailing but apt for every sort of noise, Bedfast but brilliant yet with health and bloom
London Types Mounted Police
Army Reserve; a worshipper of Bobs, With whom he stripped the smock from Candahar; Neat as his mount, that neatest among cobs; Whenever pageants pass, or meetings are,