FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   >>  
Dragon of Wantley. Our Dragon here is a bigger beast Than LAMBTON slew, or MORE did; On poor men's bodies he doth feast, And ill-got gold long hoarded. He hath iron claws, and from his jaws Foul fumings are emitted. The folks, his prey, who cross his way, Are sorely to be pitied. Have you not heard how the Trojan horse Held seventy men inside him? _This_ Dragon's bigger, and of such force That none may rein or ride him. Men hour by hour he doth devour, And would they with him grapple, At one big sup he'll gobble them up, As schoolboys munch an apple. All sorts of prey this Dragon doth eat; But his favourite food's poor people, But he 'd swallow a city, street by street, From cottage to church steeple. Like the Worm of Wear, this Dragon drear, Hath grown, and grown, and grown, Sir, And many a lair of dim despair The Worm hath made its own, Sir. In Bethnal Green our Laidly Worm Hath made a loathly den, And there hath fed for a weary term On the bodies and souls of men. There doth it writhe, and ramp, and slower, Whilst in its coils close prest Are the things it thrives on--"Landlord Power," And "Vested Interest." Now, who shall tackle this Dragon bold? Lo! a champion appears. He seems but small, and he looks not old-- A youth of scarce three years. But "he hath put on his coat of mail, Thick set with razors all," And a blade as big as a thresher's nail, On that Dragon's crest to fall. And like young LAMBTON, or young MORE, He to the fight advances. Yet looks to that Slum Dragon o'er, With caution in his glances. If he make shift that sword to lift, And smite that Dragon dead, No hero young song yet hath sung A fouler pest hath sped. Now guard ye, guard ye, young County C.! That two-edged blade is big, Sir! That Dragon's so spiky, he well might be "Some Egyptian porcupig," Sir, (As the singer of Wantley's Dragon says, In his quaint and curious story.) If this Dragon he slays, he shall win men's praise, And legendary glory. When London's streets are haunts of health (Ah! happy if distant, when) And the death-rate ruleth low, and Wealth Feeds not on the filthy den; The men to this champion's memory Shall lift the brimming flagon, And drink with glee to young County C, Who slew the Grim Slum Dr
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   >>  



Top keywords:

Dragon

 

County

 
street
 
champion
 
LAMBTON
 

bigger

 

Wantley

 

bodies

 

glances

 

caution


scarce

 

appears

 

thresher

 

razors

 

advances

 
distant
 

London

 
streets
 

haunts

 
health

ruleth

 

flagon

 
brimming
 

Wealth

 

filthy

 

memory

 

legendary

 

fouler

 

curious

 

praise


quaint

 
Egyptian
 

porcupig

 

singer

 

loathly

 

inside

 

seventy

 

Trojan

 

gobble

 

grapple


devour

 

hoarded

 

sorely

 

pitied

 

emitted

 

fumings

 
schoolboys
 
Laidly
 
writhe
 

Landlord