The Poetry Corner

Summer Portents

By John Kendall (Dum-Dum)

Come, let us quaff the brimming cup Of sorrow, bitterness, and pain; For clearly, things are warming up Again. Observe with what awakened powers The vulgar Sun resumes the right Of rising in the hallowed hours Of night. Bound to the village water-wheel, The motive bullock bows his crest, And signals forth a mute appeal For rest. His neck is galled beneath the yoke: His patient eyes are very dim: Life is a dismal sort of joke To him. Yet one there is, to whom the ox Is kin; who knows, as habitat, The cold, unsympathetic box, Or mat; Who urges on, with wearied arms, The punkah's rhythmic, laboured sweep, Nor dares to contemplate the charms Of sleep. Now 'mid a host of lesser things That pasture through the heaving nights, The sharp mosquito flaps his wings, And bites; With other Anthropophagi, Such as that microscopic brand The common Sand-fly (or the fly Of sand), Who, with a hideous lust uncurbed By clappings of the frequent palm, Devours one's ankles, undisturbed, And calm. The scorpion nips one unaware: The lizard flops upon the head: And cobras, uninvited, share One's bed. Oh, if I only had the luck To feel the grand Olympic fire That thrilled the Greater when they struck The lyre! When Homer wrote of this and that: When Dante sang like one possessed: When Milton groaned and laboured at His Best! Had I the swelling rise and fall, Whereof the Bo'sun's quivering moan Derives a breezy fragrance all Its own: Oh, I would pour such passion out - Good gracious me! - I would so sing That you should know the facts about This thing! Then w-w-wake, my Lyre! O halting lilt! O miserable, broken lay! It may not be: I am not built That way. Yet other gifts the gods bestow. I do not weep, I do not grieve. Far from it. I shall simply go On leave.