Page:Punch (Volume 147).pdf/146

142 

, in this great fight to which you go
 * Because, where Honour calls you, go you must,

Be glad, whatever comes, at least to know
 * You have your quarrel just.

Peace was your care; before the nations' bar
 * Her cause you pleaded and her ends you sought;

But not for her sake, being what you are,
 * Could you be bribed and bought.

Others may spurn the pledge of land to land,
 * May with the brute sword stain a gallant past;

But by the seal to which you set your hand,
 * Thank God, you still stand fast!

Forth, then, to front that peril of the deep
 * With smiling lips and in your eyes the light,

Stedfast and confident, of those who keep
 * Their storied scutcheon bright.

And we, whose burden is to watch and wait—
 * High-hearted ever, strong in faith and prayer,

We ask what offering we may consecrate,
 * What humble service share?

To steel our souls against the lust of ease;
 * To find our welfare in the general good;

To hold together, merging all degrees
 * In one wide brotherhood;—

To teach that he who saves himself is lost;
 * To bear in silence though our hearts may bleed;
 * To spend ourselves, and never count the cost,

For others' greater need;—

To go our quiet ways, subdued and sane;
 * To hush all vulgar clamour of the street;

With level calm to face alike the strain
 * Of triumph or defeat;—

This be our part, for so we serve you best,
 * So best confirm their prowess and their pride,

Your warrior sons, to whom in this high test
 * Our fortunes we confide.

O. S.

 

more peaceful than the outward aspect of the Isle of Wight, as I have seen it from Totland Bay during the last week, it would be impossible to conceive. For the most part the sun has been shining from a blue sky on a blue and brilliant sea; men, women and children have been swimming and splashing joyfully in a most mixed manner, and the whole landscape has had its usual holiday air. These, however, are deceptive appearances. We have felt and are feeling the imminence of war, and, though our judgments are firm and patriotic and prepared for sacrifice, our minds are clouded with a heavy anxiety. Our newspapers arrive at about 11 o'clock, and at that hour there is a concentrated rush to the book-shop. There we make our way through stacked volumes of cheap reprints to the counter where two ladies are struggling womanfully against the serried phalanx of purchasers. These two dive headfirst from time to time into a great pile of the morning's news and emerge triumphantly with The Times for Prospect House or The Telegraph for Orville Lodge, and so on through the crowd of applicants until all are satisfied. This is the great event of our day. At the grocery stores on the opposite side of the road, news telegrams are shown on a board, and with these we eke out the knowledge of our fluctuating fate. Close by, too, is posted up a proclamation by the officer commanding the troops in the Island. He bids us not to walk too near a fort or to convey to any casual person such knowledge as we may have gained about the movements of troops, and we are commanded "to at once report" any thing suspicious. I am sure the gallant officer will display as much vigour in the battering of his country's foes as has shown in the splitting of the infinitives. Going for my newspaper this morning I saw at distance an elderly gentleman of a serious aspect revolving steadily round and round a tall iron post. It was not until I came closer that I realised the meaning of his strange gyrations. The proclamation had been inconsiderately pasted round the post and he was endeavouring to read it.

On Thursday last, nearly a week before the actual proclamation of war, the wildest rumours were afloat here. A motherly lady assured me with a smile that the German fleet might be expected at any moment. "The British fleet," she told me, "has been overwhelmed and sunk in the North Sea. The Germans have determined to capture the Isle of Wight, so we are none of us safe." I asked her where she had heard this dreadful news. "Oh, it's all over the village." Thereupon she moved calmly into a bathing cabin and had a patriotic dip. In another quarter I was told that the Island could not fail to be cut off, and awful things were prophesied as to what would happen to us unless we made our way to the mainland with the utmost promptitude. The supply of eggs was to run short; meat was to go up to famine prices or be reserved entirely for the soldiery, our intrepid defenders; bread was to become a luxury obtainable only by millionaires. All this was reported on the authority of a a man who had it from another man who had it from a banker who was in close touch with the War Office in London. So far what is true is that steamers no longer come to Totland Bay, and anyone who wants to visit us here can get no nearer by boat Yarmouth—not, of course, the home of the bloater, but our own little island Yarmouth, round the corner. In the meantime a good deal of patriotic self-denial amongst the juvenile population. A friend of mine, aged seven, hearing the talk about all the coming privations, has decided to remove chocolates, buns and sponge-cakes from his dietary, and several young ladies have agreed to take milk instead of cream with their breakfast porridge.

This morning we were brought face to face with the grimmest reality of war we have so far experienced. A boy-scout called at the house and produced an official paper asking for the names and addresses of any aliens who might be residing in the house. We have one such alien, a German maid for the children, a most unwarlike and inoffensive alien. Her name was entered on the form and the boy-scout disappeared to call at other houses. Since then, at intervals of about half-an-hour, other boy-scouts have called and produced similar forms. I have just dismissed a party of three, telling them that they seemed to be overlapping. They smiled and said, "Thank you," and retired. I look out of the window and behold two more approaching. They are doing the thing thoroughly.

P.S.—Another notice is out warning us that it is known there are a lot of spies in the Island, and that we must not loiter near a fort lest we be shot. It is rumoured that soldiers are to be billeted on us (enthusiastic cheers from the younger members of the family).

R. C. L.

 "'Turnip, beef, carrots, and onions, if of suitable variety, would in a favourable autumn yield fair-sized bulbs.'—Manchester Evening News."

New Song. "When father carved the bulb."