THE STREETS

By John Freeman

Marlboro’ and Waterloo and Trafalgar,

Tuileries, Talavera, Valenciennes,

Were strange names all, and all familiar;

For down their streets I went, early and late

( Is there a street where I have never been

Of all those hundreds, narrow, skyless, straight? ) —

Early and late, they were my woods and meadows;

The rain upon their dust my summer smell;

Their scant herb and brown sparrows and harsh shadows

Were all my spring. Was there another spring?

I knew their noisy desolation well,

Drinking it up as a child drinks everything,

Knowing no other world than brick and stone,

With one rich memory of the earth all bright.

Now all is fallen into oblivion —

All that I was, in years of school and play,

Things that I hated, things that were delight,

Are all forgotten, or shut all away

Behind a creaking door that opens slow.

But there's a child that walks those streets of war,

Hearing his running footsteps as they go

Echoed from house to house, and wondering

At Marlboro’, Waterloo and Trafalgar;

And at night, when the yellow gas lamps fling

Unsteady shadows, singing for company;

Yet loving the lighted dark, and any star

Caught by sharp roofs in a narrow net of sky.