Title: Night Fall in the Ti-Tree Author: Geraldine Rede and Violet Teague Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 E-text prepared by |
Note: | Images of the original pages are available through International Children's Digital Library. See http://www.childrenslibrary.org/icdl/BookPreview?bookid=ntitree_00410005&route=text&lang=English&msg=&ilang=English |
Night Fall in the Ti-Tree
Woodcuts by
Geraldine Rede and Violet Teague.
Salut!
Imprinted now for the first time by hand at the Sign of the Rabbit,
89 Collins Street, the 13th of July, 1905.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Night falls in the Ti-Tree, Dusk fades from the hill— The Frogs on their banjoes Are strumming their fill With a will. |
Banjoes in the near pond Bones in the other— In ecstasy Crickets Outshrill one another. Shrill.... Shrill.... |
The Birds are all hushed now The moon's in the sky— Around and around us The little Bats fly, Waveringly. |
The Rabbits have nibbled Sweet grass on the furrow, Have frisking and flirting Loped to their burrow, Safe on their burrow. |
Safe on their burrow. |
Are you glad, little Rabbits To have played yet a day? Does no foresight show you What may happen some day? Wellaway! | |
For commonest, direst, Of wild folk's mishaps Is to find yourselves caught in Man's merciless traps— Devil's own snaps. |
They set them and lay them In your very door, Then craftily strew them With sand and leaves o'er, Craftily o'er. |
You step out unwitting, Bright moon inviting— Ah! What a spring when You taste its fierce biting; Steel chain affrighting, You scream in your anguish, A mute thing by kind! You make but the search easy When Death comes to find, O easily find! |
Yet God was on your side, Else why did He make Such long ears to hearken? Such bright eyes to wake? |
And so, little Rabbits, In danger some day, Remember Who's for you, Flirt tails and away! |
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