Page:Landon in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1836.pdf/82

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82



SCENES IN LONDON: OXFORD STREET.


A moment, and all sounds were mute,
    For awe was over all;
You heard the soldier's measured foot,
    The bugle's wailing call.

The gloves were laid upon the bier,
    The helmet and the sword,
The drooping war-horse followed near,
    As he, too, mourned his lord.

Slowly—I followed too—they led
    To where a church arose,
And flung a shadow o’er the dead,
    Deep as their own repose.

Green trees were there—beneath the shade
    Of one, was made a grave;
And there to his last rest was laid
    The weary and the brave.

They fired a volley o’er the bed,
    Of an unconscious ear;
The birds sprang fluttering over-head,
    Struck with a sudden fear.

All left the ground, the bugles died
    Away upon the wind;
Only the tree’s green branches sighed
    O’er him they left behind.

Again, all filled with light and breath,
    I passed the crowded street—
Oh, great extremes of life and death,
    How strangely do ye meet!