FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   >>  
erly. * * * * * The Housing Problem. "Three chicken coops, also pigeon-house, for pole; suitable for lady."--_The Lady_. * * * * * The Open-Air Cure. "The _Telegraaf_ learns from its correspondent at the frontier that on yesterday (Monday) afternoon a fresh air attack was made on Zeebrugge."--_Morning Post_. A pleasant change from stuffy shells. * * * * * [Illustration: THE ETERNAL FEMININE. "THAT SHADE. WOULDN'T 'ALF SUIT ME." "LOR LUMMY, LIL! WOT TISTE--AN' YOU A BLONDE!"] * * * * * THE SONG OF THE MILL. [Most of our water-mills have fallen into decay and disuse owing to the unsuitability of their machinery to grind imported grain. Will the revival of English grain production bring about a renewal of their usefulness?] As by the pool I wandered that lies so clear and still With tall old trees about it, hard by the silent mill Whose ancient oaken timbers no longer creak and groan With roar of wheel and water, and grind of stone on stone, The idle mill-race slumbered beneath the mouldering wheel, The pale March sunlight gilded no motes of floating meal, But the stream went singing onward, went singing by the weir-- And this, or something like it, was the song I seemed to hear:-- "By Teviot, Tees and Avon, by Esk and Ure and Tweed, Here's many a trusty henchman would rally to your need; By Itchen, Test and Waveney, by Tamar, Trent and Ouse, Here's many a loyal servant will help you if you choose. "Do they no longer need us who needed us of yore? We stood not still aforetime when England marched to war; Like those our wind-driven brothers, far seen o'er weald and fen, We ground the wheat and barley to feed stout Englishmen. "You call the men of England, their strength, their toil, their gold, But us you have not summoned, who served your sires of old; For service high or humble, for tribute great and small, You call them and they answer--but us you do not call. "Yet we no hoarded fuel of mine or well require, That drives your fleets to battle or lights the poor man's fire; We need no white-hot furnace for tending night and day, No power of harnessed lightnings to speed us on our way. "By Tavy, Dart and Derwent, by Wharfe and Usk and Nidd, Here's many a trusty vass
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   >>  



Top keywords:
England
 

trusty

 

singing

 

longer

 
harnessed
 

servant

 
choose
 

tending

 
needed
 
furnace

Wharfe

 

Derwent

 

Teviot

 

Itchen

 

Waveney

 
lights
 
lightnings
 

henchman

 

aforetime

 
strength

Englishmen

 

barley

 

summoned

 

tribute

 

humble

 

served

 

service

 

hoarded

 
driven
 
marched

answer

 
fleets
 

drives

 

require

 

brothers

 

ground

 

battle

 
sunlight
 

Illustration

 
shells

ETERNAL

 

FEMININE

 

stuffy

 
change
 
Zeebrugge
 

Morning

 

pleasant

 

WOULDN

 

BLONDE

 

attack