Share:
  Guess poet | Poets | Poets timeline | Isles | Contacts

Robert Laurence Binyon - The EscapeRobert Laurence Binyon - The Escape
Work rating: Low


Destiny drives a crooked plough And sows a careless seed; Now through a heart she cuts, and now She helps a helpless need. To--night from London`s roaring sea She brings a girl and boy; For two hearts used to misery, Opens a door of joy. Wandering from hateful homes they came, Till by this fate they meet. Then out of ashes springs a flame; Suddenly life is sweet. Together, where the city ends, And looks on Thames`s stream, That under Surrey willows bends And floats into a dream, Softly in one another`s ear They murmur childish speech; Love that is deeper and more dear For words it cannot reach. Above them the June night is still: Only with sighs half--heard Dark leaves above them flutter and thrill, As with their longing stirred; And by the old brick wall below Rustling, the river glides; Like their full hearts, that deeply glow, Is the swell of his full tides. To the farther shore the girl`s pale brow Turns with desiring eyes: ``Annie, what is it you`re wishing now?`` She lifts her head and sighs. ``Willie, how peaceful `tis and soft Across the water! See, The trees are sleeping, and stars aloft Beckon to you and me. I think it must be good to walk In the fields, and have no care; With trees and not with men to talk. O, Willie, take me there!`` Now hand in hand up to the Night They gaze; and she looks down With large mild eyes of grave delight, The mother they have not known. Older than sorrow she appears, Yet than themselves more young; She understood their childish tears, Knew how their love was sprung. The simple perfume of the grass Comes to them like a call. Obeying in a dream they pass Along the old brick wall; By flickering lamp and shadowy door, Across the muddy creek, Warm with their joy to the heart`s core, With joy afraid to speak. At last the open road they gain, And by the Bridge, that looms With giant arch and sloping chain Over the river`s glooms, They pause: above, the northern skies Are pale with a furnace light. London with upcast, sleepless eyes Possesses the brief night. The wind flaps in the lamp; and hark! A noise of wheels, that come At drowsy pace; along the dark A waggon lumbers home. Slow--footed, with a weary ease, The patient horses step; The rein relaxed upon his knees, The waggoner nods asleep. ``Annie, it goes the country way, `Tis meant for me and you: It goes to fields, and trees, and hay, Come, it shall take us too!`` He lifts her in his arms, as past The great wheels groaning ride, And on the straw he sets her fast, And lightly climbs beside. The waggoner nods his drowsy head, He hears no sound: awhile Softly they listen in sweet dread, Then to each other smile. Odours of dimly flowering June, The starry stillness deep, Possess their wondering spirits; soon, Like children tired, they sleep. The waggon creaks, the horses plod By hedges clearer seen, Down the familiar dusty road, And past a village green. The morning star shines in the pond: A cock crows loud, and bright The dawn springs in the sky beyond; The birds applaud the light. But on into the summer morn Beneath the gazing East, The sleepers move, serenely borne: The world for them has ceased.
Source

The script ran 0.001 seconds.