shakespeare

  • 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 weโ€™ll have a Globe.
    In Shoreditch now there stands a hole, on lease-
    Land Burbage didnโ€™t 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.
    Weโ€™ll sift the straw and lay it straight on top,
    And paint anew the spangled sky aloft
    Above prosceniumโ€™s boards. Weโ€™ll 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 worldโ€™s a stage and planks
    Are how itโ€™s made, then for our Good Lordโ€™s 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 Londonโ€™s bells.

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