HOXTON


LONDON JUNE

Rank odours ride on every breeze;

Skyward a hundred towers loom;

And factories throb and workshops wheeze,

And children pine in secret gloom.

To squabbling birds the roofs declaim

Their little tale of misery;

And, smiling over murk and shame,

A wild rose blows by Bermondsey.

Where every traffic-thridden street

Is ribboned o'er with shade and shine,

And webbed with wire and choked with heat;

Where smokes with fouler smokes entwine;

And where, at evening, darkling lanes

Fume with a sickly ribaldry—

Above the squalors and the pains,

A wild rose blows by Bermondsey.

Somewhere beneath a nest of tiles

My little garret window squats,

Staring across the cruel miles,

And wondering of kindlier spots.

An organ, just across the way,

Sobs out its ragtime melody;

But in my heart it seems to play:

A wild rose blows by Bermondsey!

And dreams of happy morning hills

And woodlands laced with greenest boughs

Are mine to-day amid the ills

Of Tooley Street and wharfside sloughs,

Though Cherry Gardens reek and roar,

And engines gasp their horrid glee;

I mark their ugliness no more:

A wild rose blows by Bermondsey.