IN the grim dead end he lies, with passionless filmy eyes, English Ned, with a hole in his head, Staring up at the skies. The engine driver swore as often he swore before "I whistled him back from the flamin' track, An' I couldn't do no more." The gaffer spoke through the 'phone "Platelayer Seventy-one Got killed to-day on the six-foot way, By a goods on the city run. "English Ned was his name, No one knows whence he came, He didn't take mind of the road behind And none of us is to blame." They turned the slag in the bed To cover the clotted red, Washed the joints and the crimsoned points, And buried poor English Ned. @3In the drear dead end he lies, With the earth across his eyes, And a stone to say, How he passed away To a shift beyond the skies@1. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LONG AGO by BENJAMIN FRANKLIN TAYLOR NATHAHNI AND SOYAZHE by FRANCES DAVIS ADAMS IN THE HOSPITAL by PATRICK JOHN MCALISTER ANDERSON PLORATA VERIS LACHRYMIS by WILLIAM BARNES POLYHYMNIA: DEDICATION TO THE COUNTESS OF LINDSEY by WILLIAM BASSE TO THE RIVER ARVE by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT THE WANDERER: 2. IN FRANCE: ADIEU, MIGNONNE, MA BELLE by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON |