The Poetry Corner

A Glimpse Of China. In A Chair.

By Francis William Lauderdale Adams

(Foo-chow.) From the bright and blinding sunshine, From the whirling locust's song, Into the dark and narrow fissures Of the streets I am borne along. Here and there dusky-beaming A sun-shaft broadens and drops On the brown bare crowd slow-passing The crowd of the open shops. We move on over the bridges With their straight-hewn blocks of stone. And their quaint grey animal figures, And the booths the hucksters own. Behind a linen awning Sits an ancient wight half-dead, And a little dear of a girl is Examining - his head. On a bended bamboo shouldered, Bearing a block of stone, Two worn-out coolies half-naked Utter their grunting groan. Children, almond-eyed beauties, Impossibly mangy curs, Take part in the motley stream of Insouciant passengers. This is the dream, the vision That comes to me and greets - The vision of Retribution In the labyrinthine streets!