Poets •
Biographies •
Poems by Themes •
Random Poem •
The Rating of Poets • The Rating of Poems |
||
|
Poem by Thomas Cooper To Lincoln Cathedral HAIL, awful pile! Child of Time's midnight age, Now Mother in its youth renewed! The tomb Of regal priests who banqueted on joys Wrung from the peasants' woes: disciples strange Of Him whose coat was woven without a seam Throughout; who had not where to lay His head! Great sepulchre of haughty gloom and grandeur— Bestriding earth, like as thy shrinèd dead, While living, did bestride the human mind— Thy veritable being, which thy frown Stamps on our consciousness so solemnly, Would seem, like shapes in fables of thy times, A phantom too unreal for our belief, Were we not witnesses that oft the mind, Disordered and oppressed by strong disease, Creates, in throes of thought, its images Of gorgeous dress and stature giantlike— Dwarfing the voluntary portraitures Sketched by Thought's pencil in the hours of health. Thomas Cooper Thomas Cooper's other poems: 1285 Views |
|
English Poetry. E-mail eng-poetry.ru@yandex.ru |