Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The Worlds Best Poetry. Volume VII. Descriptive: Narrative. 1904. | | | | Descriptive Poems: III. Places | | London | | John Davidson (18571909) |
| | | ATHWART the sky a lowly sigh | |
| From west to east the sweet wind carried; | |
| The sun stood still on Primrose Hill; | |
| His light in all the city tarried: | |
| The clouds on viewless columns bloomed | 5 |
| Like smouldering lilies unconsumed. | |
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| O sweetheart, see! how shadowy, | |
| Of some occult magicians rearing, | |
| Or swung in space of heavens grace | |
| Dissolving, dimly reappearing, | 10 |
| Afloat upon ethereal tides, | |
| St. Pauls above the city rides! | |
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| A rumor broke through the thin smoke | |
| Enwreathing abbey, tower, and palace, | |
| The parks, the squares, the thoroughfares, | 15 |
| The million-peopled lanes and alleys, | |
| An ever-muttering prisoned storm, | |
| The heart of London beating warm. | | | | |
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