Magically awakened to a strange, brown night
The streets lie cold. A hush of heavy gloom
Dulls the noise of the wheels to a murmur dead:
Near and sudden the passing figures loom;
And out of darkness steep on startled sight
The topless walls in apparition emerge.
Nothing revealing but their own thin flames,
The rayless lamps burn faint and bleared and red:
Link--boys' cries, and the shuffle of horses led,
Pierce the thick air; and like a distant dirge,
Melancholy horns wail from the shrouded Thames.
Long the blind morning hooded the dumb town;
Till lo! in an instant winds arose, and the air
Lifted: at once, from a cold and spectral sky
Appears the sun, and laughs in mockery down
On groping travellers far from where they deem,
In unconjectured roads; the dwindled stream
Of traffic in slow confusion crawling by:
The baffled hive of helpless man laid bare.
Fog
Robert Laurence Binyon
(1)
Poem topics: night, red, sky, sun, long, town, brown, morning, confusion, blind, noise, heavy, slow, strange, stream, steep, cold, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
About Fog
Fog is a poem by Robert Laurence Binyon. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
Write your comment about Fog poem by Robert Laurence Binyon
Best Poems of Robert Laurence Binyon