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Home  »  Rudyard Kipling’s Verse  »  The Moon of Other Days

Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936). Verse: 1885–1918. 1922.

The Moon of Other Days

BENEATH the deep verandah’s shade,

When bats begin to fly,

I sit me down and watch—alas!

Another evening die.

Blood-red behind the sere ferash

She rises through the haze.

Sainted Diana! can that be

The Moon of Other Days!

Ah! shade of little Kitty Smith,

Sweet Saint of Kensington!

Say, was it ever thus at Home

The Moon of August shone,

When arm in arm we wandered long

Through Putney’s evening haze,

And Hammersmith was Heaven beneath

The Moon of Other Days?

But Wandle’s stream is Sutlej now,

And Putney’s evening haze

The dust that half a hundred kine

Before my window raise.

Unkempt, unclean, athwart the mist

The seething city looms,

In place of Putney’s golden gorse

The sickly babul blooms.

Glare down, old Hecate, through the dust,

And bid the pie-dog yell,

Draw from the drain its typhoid-germ,

From each bazaar its smell;

Yea, suck the fever from the tank

And sap my strength therewith:

Thank Heaven, you show a smiling face

To little Kitty Smith!