If Shakespeare is the Abbey, a shrine and shell Of bygone dynasties and regnal glory, Then Chaucer, licensed by like allegory, Is medieval Southwark's church, whose bell Incited palmer Mirth his tales to tell And drew dan English from his dormitory. Think also what a labyrinth of story The Tower is, which is Spenser; and mark well How Paul's, in sun or mist a Milton, keeps Dome lifted above dome to be light's tent. What else? There's London Bridge that overleaps The warehoused tidewayDickens seeking Kent! Not unespied of the white Monument, That spectre in the City and ghost of Pepys: That pillar upbreathed from heaps Of ashes so renewed that not even Pope Might find there for old sarcasm present scope, But rather nurse the hope That if his own correctness win through war, It shall bewhere the shining Horse Guards are. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE QUILTING by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR WHY I WRITE NOT OF LOVE by BEN JONSON SONNET ON FAME (2) by JOHN KEATS SHE PASSED THIS WAY by ANNA M. ACKERMANN CHOEPHOROI: ORESTES GOES MAD by AESCHYLUS HINDOO FUNERAL SONG by EDWIN ARNOLD |