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The Drunkard's Vision

Topics: classic

A public parlour in the slums,     The haunt of vice and villainy,     Where things are said unfit to hear,     And things are done unfit to see;     Mid ribald jest and reckless song,     That mock at all thats pure and right,     The drunkard drinks the whole day long,     And raves through half the dreadful night.     And in the morning now he sits,     With staring eyes and trembling limb;     The harbour in the sunlight laughs,     But morning is as night to him.     And, staring blankly at the wall,     He sees the tragedy complete,     He sees the man he used to be     Go striding proudly up the street.     He turns the corner with a swing,     And, at the vine-framed cottage gate,     The father sees, with laughing eyes,     His little son and daughter wait:     They race to meet him as he comes,     And, Oh! this memory is worst,     Her dimpled arms go round his neck,     She pants, I dot my daddy first!     He sees his bright-eyed little wife;     He sees the cottage neat and clean,     He sees the wrecking of his life     And all the things that might have been!     And, sunk in hopeless, black despair,     That drink no more has power to drown,     Upon the beer-stained table there     The drunkards ruined head goes down.     But even I, a fearful wreck,     Have drifted long before the storm:     I know, when all seems lost on earth,     How hard it can be to reform.     I, too, have sinned, and we have both     Drunk to the dregs the bitter cup,     Give me your hand, Oh brother mine,     And even I might help you up.

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"A public parlour in the slums,..."

Henry Lawson's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "The Drunkard's Vision"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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