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Poem by Arthur Henry Adams King Street A morn, a sallow lamp-lit morn, A dawn that never breaks to day! Old, old the faces, and forlorn; The hearts look out, so seared, so grey! It is as if some upturned stone Had flung to light a vermin rout — For things misfeatured, souls unknown, Stagger in blind amaze about. Along their gleaming lines of light The charging trams go, head to ground; Out from the drifting pathways, white The faces flash — like faces drowned! And there with painted features drear, And eyes whose pathos still is sweet, The hunted hunters prowl and peer — Their lair the long, slow-surging street. Arthur Henry Adams Arthur Henry Adams's other poems: ![]() 1327 Views |
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