Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
England: Vols. I–IV. 1876–79.
Oxford Street
By Letitia Elizabeth Landon (18021838)L
The busy and the gay;
Faces that seemed too young and fair
To ever know decay.
Led forth its glittering train;
And Poverty’s pale face beside
Asked aid, and asked in vain.
Toys, silks, and gems, and flowers;
The patient work of many hands,
The hope of many hours.
There was a sigh of death;
There rose a melancholy sound,
The bugle’s wailing breath.
That on its native hill
Had caught the notes the night-winds bear
From weeping leaf and rill.
Its warning music shed,
Rising above life’s busy train,
In memory of the dead.
In sad procession by;
Reversed the musket in each hand,
And downcast every eye.
The sympathizing crowd
Divided like a parted wave
By some dark vessel ploughed.
For awe was over all;
You heard the soldier’s measured foot,
The bugle’s wailing call.
The helmet and the sword;
The drooping war-horse followed near,
As he, too, mourned his lord.
To where a church arose,
And flung a shadow o’er the dead,
Deep as their own repose.
Of one was made a grave;
And there to his last rest was laid
The weary and the brave.
Of an unconscious ear;
The birds sprang fluttering overhead,
Struck with a sudden fear.
Away upon the wind;
Only the tree’s green branches sighed
O’er him they left behind.
I passed the crowded street:
O great extremes of life and death,
How strangely do ye meet!