LII.  Far
in a western brookland  
(from A Shropshire Lad)
Far in a
western brookland
  That bred me long ago
The
poplars stand and tremble
  By pools I used to know.
There,
in the windless night-time,
  The wanderer, marveling why,
Halts on
the bridge to hearken
  How soft the poplars sigh.
He
hears: no more remembered
  In fields where I was known,
Here I
lie down in London
  And turn to rest alone.
There,
by the starlit fences,
  The wanderer halts and hears
My soul
that lingers sighing
  About the glimmering weirs.