The Poetry Corner

Flight.

By Charles Stuart Calverley

O memory! that which I gave thee To guard in thy garner yestreen - Little deeming thou e'er could'st behave thee Thus basely - hath gone from thee clean! Gone, fled, as ere autumn is ended The yellow leaves flee from the oak - I have lost it for ever, my splendid Original joke. What was it? I know I was brushing My hair when the notion occurred: I know that I felt myself blushing As I thought, "How supremely absurd! "How they'll hammer on floor and on table As its drollery dawns on them - how They will quote it" - I wish I were able To quote it just now. I had thought to lead up conversation To the subject - it's easily done - Then let off, as an airy creation Of the moment, that masterly pun. Let it off, with a flash like a rocket's; In the midst of a dazzled conclave, Where I sat, with my hands in my pockets, The only one grave. I had fancied young Titterton's chuckles, And old Bottleby's hearty guffaws As he drove at my ribs with his knuckles, His mode of expressing applause: While Jean Bottleby - queenly Miss Janet - Drew her handkerchief hastily out, In fits at my slyness - what can it Have all been about? I know 'twas the happiest, quaintest Combination of pathos and fun: But I've got no idea - the faintest - Of what was the actual pun. I think it was somehow connected With something I'd recently read - Or heard - or perhaps recollected On going to bed. What HAD I been reading? The Standard: "Double Bigamy;" "Speech of the Mayor." And later - eh? yes! I meandered Through some chapters of Vanity Fair. How it fuses the grave with the festive! Yet e'en there, there is nothing so fine - So playfully, subtly suggestive - As that joke of mine. Did it hinge upon "parting asunder?" No, I don't part my hair with my brush. Was the point of it "hair?" Now I wonder! Stop a bit - I shall think of it - hush! There's HARE, a wild animal - Stuff! It was something a deal more recondite: Of that I am certain enough; And of nothing beyond it. Hair - LOCKS! There are probably many Good things to be said about those. Give me time - that's the best guess of any - "Lock" has several meanings, one knows. Iron locks - IRON-GRAY LOCKS - a "deadlock" - That would set up an everyday wit: Then of course there's the obvious "wedlock;" But that wasn't it. No! mine was a joke for the ages; Full of intricate meaning and pith; A feast for your scholars and sages - How it would have rejoiced Sidney Smith! 'Tis such thoughts that ennoble a mortal; And, singing him out from the herd, Fling wide immortality's portal - But what was the word? Ah me! 'tis a bootless endeavour. As the flight of a bird of the air Is the flight of a joke - you will never See the same one again, you may swear. 'Twas my firstborn, and O how I prized it! My darling, my treasure, my own! This brain and none other devised it - And now it has flown.