FLAT SUBURBS, S.W., IN THE MORNING
THE new red houses spring like
plants
In level rows
Of reddish herbage that
bristles and slants
Its square
shadows.
The pink young houses show one side
bright
Flatly assuming the
sun,
And one side
shadow, half in sight,
Half-hiding
the pavement-run;
Where hastening creatures pass
intent
On their level way,
Threading like ants that can
never relent
And have nothing to
say.
Bare stems of street-lamps stiffly
stand
At random, desolate
twigs,
To testify to
a blight on the land
That has stripped their
sprigs.