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Lost city

Chapter 7: MAY TERM, 1916
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About This Book

A collection of lyric poems rooted in Cambridge and its fenlands, blending pastoral observation with elegiac reflection. The verses move between close depictions of river courts, chestnut avenues, college streets and the quiet of fields, and meditations on memory, dreams, and bereavement. Mythic imagery of the underworld appears alongside intimate scenes of loss, mourning, and the persistence of vanished companionship. Recurrent themes include landscape as repository of recollection, the friction between public ritual and private grief, and a desire for renewal or new roads amid enduring sorrow.

AFTER

MAY TERM, 1916

I have come back in a rich hour of May
My heart, to this gray town of yours and mine,
To the grave gardens by the river’s line
Where scents rise softly at the end of day
—Back from hot city pavements worlds away,
Where life flows outwards in a ceaseless line,
Where soul treads hard on soul and makes no sign.
—To the dear smell of lawns, and the branches sway.
Gold of the sky, black boughs, and the rooks call
The evening stillness rises like a tide—
Across the cobbled court I hush my tread;
There is your window, lamplight on your wall,
There is a shadow on the blind inside—
But you are dead, my dear, but you are dead.