Song - Fleet Street

John Davidson

CLOSES and courts and lanes,
Devious, clustered thick,
The thoroughfare, mains and drains.
People and mortar and brick.
Wood, metal, machinery, brains.
Pen and composing-stick:

Fleet Street, but exquisite flame
In the nebula once ere day and night
Began their travail, or earth became.
And all was passionate light.

Networks of wire overland,
Conduits under the sea.
Aerial message from strand to strand
By lightning that travels free.

Hither in haste to hand
Tidings of destiny:
These tingling nerves of the world's affairs
Deliver remorseless, rendering still
The fall of empires, the price of shares,
The record of good and ill.

Tidal the traffic goes
Citywards out of the town ;
Townwards the evening ebb o'erflows
This highway of old renown.
When the fog-woven curtains close.
And the urban night comes down.

Where souls are spilt and intellects spent
O'er news vociferant near and far,
From Hesperus hard to the Orient,
From dawn to the evening star.

This is the royal refrain
That burdens the boom and the thud
Of omnibus, mobus, wain.
And the hoofs on the beaten mud,
From the Griffin at Chancery Lane
To the portal of old King Lud —

Fleet Street, diligent night and day,
Of news the mart and the burnished hearth,
Seven hundred paces of narrow way,
A notable bit of the earth.

Ludd is said to be the ancient British king after whom London is named. Ludgate was westernmost of the ancient city gates.