The Imported Servant
The Imported Servant - meaning Summary
Nostalgia for London Streets
A speaker recently transplanted to Australia mourns the loss of familiar London urban life. Despite beautiful landscapes and kind treatment, he feels lonely and out of place, longing for foggy alleys, Saturday-night fried fish stalls, coster barrows and chapel Sunday mornings. The poem contrasts luminous Australian scenery with sensory memories of London and explores homesickness, cultural dislocation, and the difficulty of replacing rooted social and classed routines.
Read Complete AnalysesThe Blue Sky arches o’er mountain and valley, The scene is as fair as a scene can be, But I’m breaking my heart for a London alley, And fogs that shall never come back to me. I choke with tears when the day is dying The sunsets grand and the stars are bright; But it’s O! for the smell of the fried fish frying By the flaring stalls on a Saturday night. And this, oh, this is the lonely sequel Of all I pictured would come to pass! They are treating me here as a friend and equal, But they’d say in London that they’re no class. When I think of their kindness my tears flow faster The girls are free and the chaps are grand: It’s the boss and the missus for mistress and master, And they may be right But I don’t understand. I see the air in its warm pulsation On sandstone cliffs where the ocean dips, But I’m miles and miles from the railway station Where trains run down to the wharves and ships. Those streets are dingy and dark and narrow, The soot comes down with the rain and sleet; But, O! for the sight of a coster’s barrow, And Sunday morning in Chapel Street!
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