Menu Close

XML     PDF

Two Songs

I—London

A THWART the sky a lowly sigh
    From west to east the sweet wind carried ;
The sun stood still on Primrose Hill ;
    His light in all the city tarried :
The clouds on viewless columns bloomed
Like smouldering lilies unconsumed.

“Oh, sweetheart, see, how shadowy,
    Of some occult magician’s rearing,
Or swung in space of Heaven’s grace,
    Dissolving, dimly reappearing,
Afloat upon ethereal tides
St. Paul above the city rides ! “

A rumour broke through the thin smoke
    Enwreathing Abbey, Tower, and Palace,
The parks, the squares, the thoroughfares,
    The million-peopled lanes and alleys,
An ever-muttering prisoned storm,
The heart of London beating warm.

The Yellow Book Vol. I. o

                                                FOXES

                                                                 234
                        Two Songs

II—Down-a-down

FOXES peeped from out their dens,
    Day grew pale and olden ;
Blackbirds, willow- warblers, wrens,
    Staunched their voices golden.

High, oh high, from the opal sky,
    Shouting against the dark,
” Why, why, why must the day go by ? ”
    Fell a passionate lark.

But the cuckoos beat their brazen gongs,
    Sounding, sounding so ;
And the nightingales poured in starry songs
    A galaxy below.

Slowly tolling the vesper bell
    Ushered the stately night.
Down-a-down in a hawthorn dell
    A boy and a girl and love’s delight.

MLA citation:

Davidson, John. “Two Songs.” The Yellow Book, vol. 1, April 1894, pp. 233-34. Yellow Book Digital Edition, edited by Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. https://1890s.ca/YBV1_davidson_twosongs