Med Poetry Healing through Words

In Hospital

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    The morning mists still haunt the stony street;

    The northern summer air is shrill and cold;

    And lo, the Hospital, grey, quiet, old,

    Where Life and Death like friendly chafferers meet.

    Thro’ the loud spaciousness and draughty gloom

    A small, strange child – so aged yet so young! –

    Her little arm besplinted and beslung,

    Precedes me gravely to the waiting-room.

    I limp behind, my confidence all gone.

    The grey-haired soldier-porter waves me on,

    And on I crawl, and still my spirits fail:

    A tragic meanness seems so to environ

    These corridors and stairs of stone and iron,

    Cold, naked, clean – half-workhouse and half-jail.

William Ernest Henley

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