Saving
a
Train
by
William
Topaz
MacGonagall
'Twas
in
the
year
of
1869,
and
on
the
19th
of
November,
Which
the
people
in
Southern
Germany
will
long
remember,
The
great
rain-storm
which
for
twenty
hours
did
pour
down,
That
the
rivers
were
overflowed
and
petty
streams
all
around.
The
rain
fell
in
such
torrents
as
had
never
been
seen
before,
That
it
seemed
like
a second
deluge,
the
mighty
torrents'
roar,
At
nine
o'clock
at
night
the
storm
did
rage
and
moan
When
Carl
Springel
set
out
on
his
crutches
all
alone
--
From
the
handsome
little
hut
in
which
he
dwelt,
With
some
food
to
his
father,
for
whom
he
greatly
felt,
Who
was
watching
at
the
railway
bridge,
Which
was
built
upon
a perpendicular
rocky
ridge.
The
bridge
was
composed
of
iron
and
wooden
blocks,
And
crossed
o'er
the
Devil's
Gulch,
an
immense
cleft
of
rocks,
Two
hundred
feet
wide
and
one
hundred
and
fifty
feet
deep,
And
enough
to
make
one's
flesh
to
creep.
Far
beneath
the
bridge
a
mountain-stream
did
boil
and
rumble,
And
on
that
night
did
madly
toss
and
tumble;
Oh!
it
must
have
been
an
awful
sight
To
see
the
great
cataract
falling
from
such
a height.
It
was
the
duty
of
Carl's
father
to
watch
the
bridge
on
stormy
nights,
And
warn
the
on-coming
trains
of
danger
with
the
red
lights;
So,
on
this
stormy
night,
the
boy
Carl
hobbled
along
Slowly
and
fearlessly
upon
his
crutches,
because
he
wasn't
strong.
He
struggled
on
manfully
with
all
his
might
Through
the
fearful
darkness
of
the
night,
And
half-blinded
by
the
heavy
rain,
But
still
resolved
the
bridge
to
gain.
But
when
within
one
hundred
yards
of
the
bridge,
it
gave
way
with
an
awful
crash,
And
fell
into
the
roaring
flood
below,
and
made
a fearful
splash,
Which
rose
high
above
the
din
of
the
storm,
The
like
brave
Carl
never
heard
since
he
was
born.
Then;
'Father!
father!'
cried
Carl
in
his
loudest
tone,
'Father!
father!'
he
shouted
again
in
very
pitiful
moans;
But
no
answering
voice
did
reply,
Which
caused
him
to
heave
a deep-fetched
sigh.
And
now
to
brave
Carl
the
truth
was
clear
That
he
had
lost
his
father
dear,
And
he
cried,
'My
poor
father's
lost,
and
cannot
be
found,
He's
gone
down
with
the
bridge,
and
has
been
drowned.'
But
he
resolves
to
save
the
oncoming
train,
So
every
nerve
and
muscle
he
does
strain,
And
he
trudges
along
dauntlessly
on
his
crutches,
And
tenaciously
to
them
he
clutches.
And
just
in
time
he
reaches
his
father's
car
To
save
the
oncoming
train
from
afar,
So
he
seizes
the
red
light,
and
swings
it
round,
And
cried
with
all
his
might,
'The
bridge
is
down!
The
bridge
is
down!'
So
forward
his
father's
car
he
drives,
Determined
to
save
the
passengers'
lives,
Struggling
hard
with
might
and
main,
Hoping
his
struggle
won't
prove
in
vain.
So
on
comes
the
iron-horse
snorting
and
rumbling,
And
the
mountain-torrent
at
the
bridge
kept
roaring
and
tumbling;
While
brave
Carl
keeps
shouting,
'The
bridge
is
down!
The
bridge
is
down!'
He
cried
with
a pitiful
wail
and
sound.
But,
thank
heaven,
the
engine-driver
sees
the
red
light
That
Carl
keeps
swinging
round
his
head
with
all
his
might;
But
bang!
bang!
goes
the
engine
with
a terrible
crash,
And
the
car
is
dashed
all
to
smash.
But
the
breaking
of
the
car
stops
the
train,
And
poor
Carl's
struggle
is
not
in
vain;
But,
poor
soul,
he
was
found
stark
dead,
Crushed
and
mangled
from
foot
to
head!
And
the
passengers
were
all
loud
in
Carl's
praise,
And
from
the
cold
wet
ground
they
did
him
raise,
And
tears
for
brave
Carl
fell
silently
around,
Because
he
had
saved
two
hundred
passengers
from
being
drowned.
In
a
quiet
village
cemetery
he
now
sleeps
among
the
silent
dead,
In
the
south
of
Germany,
with
a tombstone
at
his
head,
Erected
by
the
passengers
he
saved
in
the
train,
And
which
to
his
memory
will
long
remain.
