26 JANUARY 1895, Page 33

POETRY.

CHARLES LAMB AT ENFIELD.

["Yet in this saf•condemned oblivion, in ;he stagnation, some molesting yearnings of life, not quite killed, rise prompting me that there was a Loudon, and that I was of that o d Jerusalem. In dreams I am in Fleet Market, but I wake, and cry to sleep again."—Lamm to WORDSWORTH, 1830.] THOUGIS yet no blossom stars the hedge, nor light

Of daisies twinkles from the barren lawn, Here is no death, for, like the sun by night., Spring waits below the earth her hour of dawn.

But cold to this mute life that never dies, This dull, indifferent Nature old and dread, Under these leafless boughs and alien skies I wander ghost-like from a life that's dead : That's dead to me, self-banished from the ways Whose walls hold all of heaven I have known, Whose phantoms haunt me through my nights and days With unforgotten touch, and look, and tone.

I tread no more the city that I love, And though its far-off streets be peopled yet And roofed with their grey slips of sky above, For me they only live in my regret—

Those roaring streets that glared in sunny noons,

And gloomed in lamp-lit eves of plashy rain, Or slept enchanted under dreamful moons—

Their life goes on without me; and in vain

I strive elsewhere to gather aught of good,

To quite forget them, dwelling here apart, I cannot make them strangers if I would, Nor close my ears against them, nor my heart : Old echoes from the very stones I trod Call to me with a human voice, and then

I sadden in these lonely fields of God,

Grown home-sick for the crowded world of men.

A. ST. JOHN ADCOCK.