Theirs is the house whose windows—every pane—
Are made of darkly stained or clouded glass:
Sometimes you come upon them in the lane,
The saddest crowd that you will ever pass.
But still we merry town or village folk
Throw to their scattered stare a kindly grin,
And think no shame to stop and crack a joke
With the incarnate wages of man’s sin.
None but ourselves in our long gallery we meet.
The moor-hen stepping from her reeds with dainty feet,
The hare-bell bowing on his stem,
Dance not with us; their pulses beat
To fainter music; nor do we to them
Make their life sweet.
The gayest crowd that they will ever pass
Are we to brother-shadows in the lane:
Our windows, too, are clouded glass
To them, yes, every pane!
| About the poet |
|
| By the same poet |
| Sea Love |
| On the Road to the Sea |
| The Peddler |
| To a Child in Death |
| Madeleine in Church |
| The Farmer’s Bride |
| The Trees are Down |
| Ken |
| In Nunhead Cemetery |
| The Cenotaph |
| June, 1915 |
| The Call |
| I Have Been Through the Gates |
| Beside the Bed |
| Related books |
| Charlotte Mew at amazon.co.uk |
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