Page:The poems of Edmund Clarence Stedman, 1908.djvu/468

VARIOUS POEMS Methinks, had Shakespeare lightly walked

Anear him in the minster old,

He would have heard,—his sleep had stirred

With dreams of wonders manifold;

Even though no sad vibration told

His ear when sounded Mary's knell,—

Though, when the mask on Charles laid hold,

He slumbered well.

In climes beyond his calendar

The latest century's splendors grow;

London is great,—the Abbey's state

A young world's eager wanderers know;

New songs, new minstrels, come and go;

Naught as of old outside his cell,—

Just as of old, within it low,

He slumbers well.

And now, when hawthorn is in flower,

And throstles sing as once sang he,

In this last age, on pilgrimage

Like mine from lands that distant be,

Come youths and maidens, summer-free,

Where shades of bards and warriors dwell,

And say, "The sire of minstrelsy

Here slumbers well";

And say, "While London's Abbey stands

No less shall England's strength endure!"

Ay, though its old wall crumbling fall,

Shall last her song's sweet overture;

Some purling stream shall flow, be sure,

From out the ivied heap, to tell

That here the fount of English pure

Long slumbered well.

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