UNEASY REFLECTIONS

DETERMINEDLY peppered with signs,

The omnibus ambles without curiosity.

Southampton Row, Malborne Road, Charing Cross—

These names have no relation

To the buildings they partition

If one mutters, “I shall go to Euston Road,”

Imagination is relieved of all errands

And, decently ticketed, enters the omnibus.

If one muttered, “I shall go to protesting angles,

Surreptitiously middle-aged,

And find a reticent line to play with,”

One would violate

The hasty convenience of labels

And seriously examine one’s destination.

If poplar-trees, brief violets and green glades

On any country road had each received

An incongruous name—Smith’s Tree,

C. Jackson’s Clump, or Ferguson’s Depression—

And city streets had never known a label,

Most poets would have turned their fluid obsession

On lamp-posts and the grandeur of ash-cans.

It would be grimly realistic now

To write about a violet or a cow.