As some cathedral vast, whose lofty spire Is ever pointing upward to the sky, Whose grand proportions, transept, nave, and choir, Impress with awe, and charm by symmetry, Stupendous pile, where sister arts with grave And loving tenderness mould form and frieze, Adorn entablature and architrave, And touch with life the marble effigies, So, great tone-master, strength and sweetness dwell In thee, close-knit in interwoven chain Of harmony, by whose resistless spell, Uplifted to sublime, supernal strain, The soul shall reach the noble, true, and pure, Strong to achieve, and faithful to endure! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SELLING HER ENGAGEMENT RING by KAREN SWENSON THE LOVE SONNETS OF PROTEUS: 60. FAREWELL TO JULIET (9) by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT THE HOMERIC HEXAMETER [DESCRIBED AND EXEMPLIFIED] by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE A VALEDICTION: OF MY NAME IN THE WINDOW by JOHN DONNE MORAL ESSAYS: EPISTLE 4. TO RICHARD BOYLE, EARL BURLINGTON by ALEXANDER POPE ON RECEIVING [THE FIRST] NEWS OF THE WAR by ISAAC ROSENBERG MUSIC, FR. TWELFTH NIGHT by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE IMITATRIX ALES by AULUS LICINIUS ARCHIAS SAME COTTAGE - BUT ANOTHER SONG, OF ANOTHER SEASON by HENRY MAXIMILIAN BEERBOHM |