Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 99, October 4, 1890 by Various
page 24 of 41 (58%)
page 24 of 41 (58%)
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A trifle stolid, and something gruff,
Yet, though unpolished, of sturdy stuff. With grave grey eyes, and a knitted brow, The glare of sun and the gleam of snow Those eyes have stared on this many a year. The crow's-feet gather in mazes queer About their corners most apt to choke With grime of fuel and fume of smoke. Little to tickle the artist taste-- An oil-can, a fist-full of "cotton waste," The lever's click and the furnace gleam, And the mingled odour of oil and steam; These are the matters that fill the brain Of the Man in charge of the clattering train. Only a Man, but away at his back, In a dozen ears, on the steely track, A hundred passengers place their trust In this fellow of fustian, grease, and dust. They cheerily chat, or they calmly sleep, Sure that the driver _his_ watch will keep On the night-dark track, that he will not fail. So the thud, thud, thud of wheel upon rail The hiss of steam-spurts athwart the dark. Lull them to confident drowsiness. Hark! What is that sound? 'Tis the stertorous breath Of a slumbering man,--and it smacks of death! Full sixteen hours of continuous toil Midst the fume of sulphur, the reek of oil, |
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