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AS I stand at the lichened gate 
With warring worlds on either hand— 
To left the black and budless trees, 
The empty sties, the barns that stand 
Like tumbling skeletons—and to right 
The factory-towers, white and clear 
Like distant, glittering cities seen 
From a ship’s rail—as I stand here, 
I feel, and with a sharper pang, 
My mortal sickness; how I give 
My heart to weak and stuffless ghosts, 
And with the living cannot live. 
The acid smoke has soured the fields, 
And browned the few and windworn flowers; 
But there, where steel and concrete soar 
In dizzy, geometric towers— 
There, where the tapering cranes sweep round, 
And great wheels turn, and trains roar by 
Like strong, low-headed brutes of steel— 
There is my world, my home; yet why 
So alien still? For I can neither 
Dwell in that world, nor turn again 
To scythe and spade, but only loiter 
Among the trees the smoke has slain. 
Yet when the trees were young, men still 
Could choose their path—the winged soul, 
Not cursed with double doubts, could fly, 
Arrow-like to a foreseen goal; 
And they who planned those soaring towers, 
They too have set their spirit free; 
To them their glittering world can bring 
Faith, and accepted destiny; 
But none to me as I stand here 
Between two countries, both-ways torn, 
And moveless still, like Buridan’s donkey 
Between the water and the corn. 
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