Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.
The TramWilfrid Wilson Gibson
H
Lumbered and lurched through thunderous gloam,
Bearing us, spent and dumb with the heat,
From office and counter and factory home:
Girls from the laundries, draggled and dank;
Ruddy-faced laborers slouching slack;
A broken actor, grizzled and lank;
A schoolboy whistling under his breath;
An old man crouched in a dreamless nap;
A widow with eyes on the eyes of death;
A soldier in scarlet with waxed moustache;
A drunken trollop in velvet and lace;
All silent in that tense dusk …. when a flash
With shattering brattle the whole sky fell
About us, and rapt to a dazzling doom
We glided on in a timeless spell,
In a magical chariot of streaming glass,
Cut off from our kind and the world’s desire,
Made one by the awe that had come to pass.