Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 153, October 31, 1917 by Various
page 31 of 57 (54%)
page 31 of 57 (54%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
It was a woven breeze, a melody
Constrained by seams from melting in the air, A summer perfume tethered to a stud, The cool of evening cut to lit my form-- And I shall wear it now no more, no more! There came a day we took it to be washed, I and my batman, after due debate. A little cottage stood hard by the road Whose one small window said, in manuscript, "Wasching for soldiers and for officers," And there we left my shirt with anxious fears And fond injunctions to the Belgian dame. So it was washed. I marked it as I passed Waving svelte arms beneath the kindly sun As if it semaphored to its own shade That answered from the grass. I saw it fill And plunge against its bonds--methought it yearned To join its tameless kin, the airy clouds. And as I saw it so, I sang aloud, "To-morrow I shall wear thee! Haste, O Time!" Fond, futile dream! That very afternoon, Her washing taken in and folded up (My shirt, my shirt I mourn for, with the rest), The frugal creature locked and left her cot To cut a cabbage from a neighbour's field. Then, without warning, from the empurpled sky, Swift with grim dreadful purpose, swooped a shell (Perishing Percy was the name he bore Amongst, the irreverent soldiery), ah me! |
|