But, if it were, how soon Jerusalem Should front my homestead with her mountain-hold! And ever-listening hills of Bethlehem Report themselves in colours clear and bold! Then would I summon here old Cheops' tomb, With its broad base to flank my bordering wood - A mighty phantom! pressing for the room It holds in Egypt! next, with change of mood, Fair Athens should be welcomed, and the rest Of those immortal cities, one by one; And, for my latest atmospheric guest, I'd bid that crumbled mound from Babylon Come looming up at sundown, with the moan Of evening winds, and shadows from the west. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONNET UPON HISTORIE OF GEORGE CASTRIOT, ALIAS SCANDERBERG by EDMUND SPENSER RECOLLECTIONS OF THE ARABIAN NIGHTS by ALFRED TENNYSON LONDON SURVEYED AND ILLUSTRATED by JOHANNEM ADAMUS CELESTIAL HEIGHTS by ALFRED AUSTIN THE KNIGHT OF THE BURNING PESTLE by FRANCIS BEAUMONT |