Once a thronged throughfare that wound afar By shining streams, and waving fields and woods, And festal cities and sweet solitudes, All whither, onward to the utmost star: Now a blind alley, lurking by the shore Of stagnant ditches, walled with reeking crags, Where one old heavy-hearted vagrant lags, Footsore, at nightfall limping to Death's door. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LOVELINESS OF LOVE by GEORGE DARLEY DEATH IN THE KITCHEN by THOMAS HOOD A BALLAD OF LONDON (TO H.W. MASSINGHAM) by RICHARD THOMAS LE GALLIENNE THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF THE OLD GREY MARE by MOTHER GOOSE THE WATER-LILY by JOHN BANISTER TABB COMMUNION by DOROTHY P. ALBAUGH FIRST CYCLE OF LOVE POEMS: 1 by GEORGE BARKER |