THE YELLOW GAS by Christopher Brennan

The yellow gas is fired from street to street
past rows of heartless homes and hearths unlit,
dead churches, and the unending pavement beat
by crowds - say rather, haggard shades that flit

round nightly haunts of their delusive dream, where'er our paradisal instinct starves: - till on the utmost post, its sinuous gleam crawls in the oily water of the wharves;
where Homer's sea loses his keen breath, hemm'd what place rebellious piles were driven down - the priestlike waters to this task condemn'd to wash the roots of the inhuman town! -
where fat and strange-eyed fish that never saw the outer deep, broad halls of sapphire light, glut in the city's draught each nameless maw: - and there, wide-eyed unto the soulless night,
methinks a drown'd maid's face might fitly show what we have slain, a life that had been free, clean, large, nor thus tormented - even so as are the skies, the salt winds and the sea.
Ay, we had saved our days and kept them whole, to whom no part in our old joy remains, had felt those bright winds sweeping thro' our soul and all the keen sea tumbling in our veins,
had thrill'd to harps of sunrise, when the height whitens, and dawn dissolves in virgin tears, or caught, across the hush'd ambrosial night, the choral music of the swinging spheres,
or drunk the silence if nought else - But no! and from each rotting soul distil in dreams a poison, o'er the old earth creeping slow, that kills the flowers and curdles the live streams,
that taints the fresh breath of re-risen day and reeks across the pale bewildered moon: - shall we be cleans'd and how? I only pray, red flame or deluge, may that end be soon!

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