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<h2> A STRANGE CITY </h2>
<p>A wondrous city, that had temples there<br/>
More rich than that one built by David's son,<br/>
Which called forth Ophir's gold, when Israel<br/>
Made Lebanon half naked for her sake.<br/>
I saw white towers where so-called traitors died—<br/>
True men whose tongues were bells to honest hearts,<br/>
And rang out boldly in false monarch's ears.<br/>
Saw old black gateways, on whose arches crouched<br/>
Stone lions with their bodies gnawed by age.<br/>
I looked with awe on iron gates that could<br/>
Tell bloody stones if they had our tongues.<br/>
I saw tall mounted spires shine in the sun,<br/>
That stood amidst their army of low streets.<br/>
I saw in buildings pictures, statues rare,<br/>
Made in those days when Rome was young, and new<br/>
In marble quarried from Carrara's hills;<br/>
Statues by sculptors that could almost make<br/>
Fine cobwebs out of stone—so light they worked.<br/>
Pictures that breathe in us a living soul,<br/>
Such as we seldom feel come from that life<br/>
The artist copies. Many a lovely sight—<br/>
Such as the half sunk barge with bales of hay,<br/>
Or sparkling coals—employed my wondering eyes.<br/>
I saw old Thames, whose ripples swarmed with stars<br/>
Bred by the sun on that fine summer's day;<br/>
I saw in fancy fowl and green banks there,<br/>
And Liza's barge rowed past a thousand swans.<br/>
I walked in parks and heard sweet music cry<br/>
In solemn courtyards, midst the men-at-arms;<br/>
Which suddenly would leap those stony walls<br/>
And spring up with loud laughter into trees.<br/>
I walked in busy streets where music oft<br/>
Went on the march with men; and ofttimes heard<br/>
The organ in cathedral, when the boys<br/>
Like nightingales sang in that thunderstorm;<br/>
The organ, with its rich and solemn tones—<br/>
As near a God's voice as a man conceives;<br/>
Nor ever dreamt the silent misery<br/>
That solemn organ brought to homeless men.<br/>
I heard the drums and soft brass instruments,<br/>
Led by the silver cornets clear and high—<br/>
Whose sounds turned playing children into stones.<br/>
<br/>
I saw at night the City's lights shine bright,<br/>
A greater milky way; how in its spell<br/>
It fascinated with ten thousand eyes;<br/>
Like those sweet wiles of an enchantress who<br/>
Would still detain her knight gone cold in love;<br/>
It was an iceberg with long arms unseen,<br/>
That felt the deep for vessels far away.<br/>
All things seemed strange, I stared like any child<br/>
That pores on some old face and sees a world<br/>
Which its familiar granddad and his dame<br/>
Hid with their love and laughter until then.<br/>
My feet had not yet felt the cruel rocks<br/>
Beneath the pleasant moss I seemed to tread.<br/>
But soon my ears grew weary of that din,<br/>
My eyes grew tired of all that flesh and stone;<br/>
And, as a snail that crawls on a smooth stalk,<br/>
Will reach the end and find a sharpened thorn—<br/>
So did I reach the cruel end at last.<br/>
I saw the starving mother and her child,<br/>
Who feared that Death would surely end its sleep,<br/>
And cursed the wolf of Hunger with her moans.<br/>
And yet, methought, when first I entered there,<br/>
Into that city with my wondering mind,<br/>
How marvellous its many sights and sounds;<br/>
The traffic with its sound of heavy seas<br/>
That have and would again unseat the rocks.<br/>
How common then seemed Nature's hills and fields<br/>
Compared with these high domes and even streets,<br/>
And churches with white towers and bodies black.<br/>
The traffic's sound was music to my ears;<br/>
A sound of where the white waves, hour by hour,<br/>
Attack a reef of coral rising yet;<br/>
Or where a mighty warship in a fog,<br/>
Steams into a large fleet of little boats.<br/>
Aye, and that fog was strange and wonderful,<br/>
That made men blind and grope their way at noon.<br/>
I saw that City with fierce human surge,<br/>
With millions of dark waves that still spread out<br/>
To swallow more of their green boundaries.<br/>
Then came a day that noise so stirred my soul,<br/>
I called them hellish sounds, and thought red war<br/>
Was better far than peace in such a town.<br/>
<br/>
To hear that din all day, sometimes my mind<br/>
Went crazed, and it seemed strange, as I were lost<br/>
In some vast forest full of chattering apes.<br/>
How sick I grew to hear that lasting noise,<br/>
And all those people forced across my sight,<br/>
Knowing the acres of green fields and woods<br/>
That in some country parts outnumbered men;<br/>
In half an hour ten thousand men I passed—<br/>
More than nine thousand should have been green trees.<br/>
There on a summer's day I saw such crowds<br/>
That where there was no man man's shadow was;<br/>
Millions all cramped together in one hive,<br/>
Storing, methought, more bitter stuff than sweet.<br/>
The air was foul and stale; from their green homes<br/>
Young blood had brought its fresh and rosy cheeks,<br/>
Which soon turned colour, like blue streams in flood.<br/>
Aye, solitude, black solitude indeed,<br/>
To meet a million souls and know not one;<br/>
This world must soon grow stale to one compelled<br/>
To look all day at faces strange and cold.<br/>
Oft full of smoke that town; its summer's day<br/>
Was darker than a summer's night at sea;<br/>
Poison was there, and still men rushed for it,<br/>
Like cows for acorns that have made them sick.<br/>
That town was rich and old; man's flesh was cheap,<br/>
But common earth was dear to buy one foot.<br/>
If I must be fenced in, then let my fence<br/>
Be some green hedgerow; under its green sprays,<br/>
That shake suspended, let me walk in joy—<br/>
As I do now, in these dear months I love.<br/></p>
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