The Sunday Poem: Building the Globe
We heft the oak beams, one two three, each count
A sturdy truss; smooth hewn and splintered, blunt
And heavy, painted gaily marbled, dun
And costumeless. By numbers shall we know
Their place, when Southwark greets our lumber load;
The Theatre is no more, and soon weโll have a Globe.
In Shoreditch now there stands a hole, on lease-
Land Burbage didnโt own. And past the trees,
By open fields, his Men will have a Streete-
Built O, wherein proud Oberon will prance
And Lear cry out his woe; where faery dance
For groundlingsโ sake, and Puck plays out his pranks.
Weโll sift the straw and lay it straight on top,
And paint anew the spangled sky aloft
Above prosceniumโs boards. Weโll stop
The crowd with good stout rails, so high-pitch boys
Can stain their lips and flounce their tails, and raise
A ruckus to the skies, the center of our noise.
But first, we must dismantle, first we take
Apart. If all the worldโs a stage and planks
Are how itโs made, then for our Good Lordโs sake
I hope he spent his seven days as well,
Assembling worlds in beams of thirty ells,
A Shakespere for his script, Queen Bess, and all
A-toiling midst the sound of Londonโs bells.

Annotations: Read More “The Sunday Poem: Building the Globe”
