The Poetical Works of Thomas Chatterton with an essay on the Rowley poems by the Rev. Walter W. Skeat and a memoir by Edward Bell |
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The Poetical Works of Thomas Chatterton | ||
242
ON THE MYNSTER.
I.
With daitive steppe Religyon dyghte in greie,Her face of doleful hue,
Swyfte as a takel thro'we bryght heav'n tooke her waie,
And ofte and ere anon dyd saie,
“Aie! mee! what shall I doe;
See Brystoe citie, whyche I nowe doe kenne,
Arysynge to mie view,
Thycke throng'd wythe soldyers and wythe traffyck-menne;
Butte saynctes I seen few.”
II.
Fytz-Hardynge rose!—he rose lyke bryghte sonne in the morne,243
Let alle thie greefe bee myne,
For I wylle rere thee uppe a Mynster hie,
The toppe whereof shall reech ynto the skie;
And wyll a Monke be shorne;”
Thenne dyd the dame replie,
“I shall ne be forelourne;
Here wyll I take a cherysaunied reste,
And spend mie daies upon Fytz-Hardynges breste.”
The Poetical Works of Thomas Chatterton | ||