Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
England: Vols. I–IV. 1876–79.
Poets Corner
By Robert Leighton (18221869)O
But sorrow and the finger of the scorner?
And, dead, the highest honor you can give
Is burial in a corner.
Disprove that mean, yet prevalent conception.
Once in an age that may be; but the rule
Is proved by the exception.
To all your benefices a poor foreigner;
Considered well rewarded if he gains
At last rest in a corner.
Some two-three kings usurp one half the Abbey,
Whole generations of the poets share
This nook so dim and shabby.
The needy vergers of the Abbey wait us;
And while we pay to see the royal scions,
We see the poets gratis.
While others, who in body are not near it,
Are here as in the pages of a book,—
Present only in spirit.
His sword of cutting humor in its scabbard;
And, sooth, he did not find such quiet rest
In Southwark at the Tabard!
And Shakespeare over all the host commanding;
And rare Ben Jonson, who got scanty room,
And so was buried standing.
Filled with the glamour of some dreamy notion,
Admired the more that half his “Faerie Queen”
Was lost in middle ocean.
And Guy, with face and cowl round as a saucer;
And Dryden, who, some think, should be put out
Because he murdered Chaucer.
Is here with look of sweet, yet strong decision,—
John Milton, with the soft poetic locks
And supernatural vision.
And Cowley, metaphysical and lyric;
And Addison, the elegant and clear;
And Butler, all satiric.
His churchyard in the country rather lonely,
Lies with the rest in this more classic ground,
Although in spirit only.
Comes here with tender heart and rugged feature,
And mingles through this wilderness of stones
His milky human nature.
And so is Johnson, who discovered “Winter,”
And Garrick, too, who had poetic lore
Enough to bid him enter.
Of prose and verse a progeny plethoric,—
And he that sung the lays of ancient Rome,—
Macaulay, the historic.
He for a national song eclipsed by no land;
And in whose grave the patriotic Pole
Sprinkled the earth of Poland.
And think of many from their non-appearance;
Byron, for one, who was denied a place
Through priestly interference.
A few, perhaps, on little else than quackery;
But all in all, they are a glorious band,
From Chaucer down to Thackeray.