Page:A Selection of Original Songs, Scraps, Etc., by Ned Farmer (1st ed.).djvu/42

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
34
Ned Farmer's Scrap Book.

The Norton Elm.

Upon the green, in the centre of the town of
Chipping Norton,
for two centuries at least, had stood a wide spreading colossal elm tree. A market hall being held desirable, it was, by the "powers that be" decided to have the old tree cut down, and the present glorious structure erected on the spot where it stood.

Two hundred years at least, had seen
This Monarch Elm on Norton Green,
The noisy rooks its boughs among,
Had built their nests and reared their young.
The sparrows claimed a vested right
To chirrup on its topmost height;
The starling, in its hollow arm
Had built, for years, its nest so warm.
[Though, lying useless, all around
Was lots of fitting vacant ground,]
The poor old tree was doomed to fall,
And rooks and starlings banished all.