Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes. England: Vols. IIV. 187679. | | | | Thames, the River | | The Thames | | Michael Drayton (15631631) |
| | From Poly-Olbion BUT now this mighty flood, upon his voyage prest | |
| (That found how with his strength his beauties still increased, | |
| From where brave Windsor stood on tiptoe to behold | |
| The fair and goodly Thames, so far as ere he could, | |
| With kingly houses crowned, of more than earthly pride, | 5 |
| Upon his either banks, as he along doth glide) | |
| With wonderful delight doth his long course pursue, | |
| Where Oatlands, Hampton Court, and Richmond he doth view, | |
| Then Westminster the next great Thames doth entertain; | |
| That vaunts her palace large, and her most sumptuous fane: | 10 |
| The lands tribunal seat that challengeth for hers, | |
| The crowning of our kings, their famous sepulchres. | |
| Then goes he on along by that more beauteous strand, | |
| Expressing both the wealth and bravery of the land. | |
| (So many sumptuous bowers within so little space | 15 |
| The all-beholding sun scarce sees in all his race.) | |
| And on by London leads, which like a crescent lies, | |
| Whose windows seem to mock the star-befreckled skies; | |
| Besides her rising spires, so thick themselves that show, | |
| As do the bristling reeds within his banks that grow. | 20 |
| There sees his crowded wharfs, and people-pestered shores, | |
| His bosom overspread with shoals of laboring oars: | |
| With that most costly bridge that doth him most renown, | |
| By which he clearly puts all other rivers down. | | | | |
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