A global city, one of the world’s great cities, this place we call and know
as London. It has given birth to empire and great literature, houses the oldest
continuing monarchy, has created innovative office architecture (The Shard, the
Gherkin and the Walkie-Talkie, to mention three) to decorate its skyline, and
expresses itself as a contemporary metropolis while more than 2,000 years of
history lie beneath it.
It
is only fitting that London should have a collection of poems devoted to it. Jane
McMorland Hunter’s Ode
to London: Poems to Celebrate the City is a small volume but with
exactly the right poems to recognize and celebrate the city.
McMorland
is a writer and gardener, and works at Slightly
Foxed Books on Gloucester Road in west London. She’s published three
additional poetry anthologies: First
World War Poems, Favorite
Poems of England, and Classic
Readings & Poems: For Weddings, Christenings, Funerals and All Occasions,
in addition to several books on gardening.
Published
in 2012, Ode to London includes poems
and writers familiar and unfamiliar, historical and contemporary, all of whom
celebrate the city. The poems are not in chronological order but rather organized
by six categories – its industry, shipping and the Thames, nature,
architecture, seasons and people (McMorland gives each section more poetic
titles).
Jane McMorland Hunter |
The
poets include Lord Byron, John Dryden, Mary Robinson, William Blake, Rudyard
Kipling, Wilfred Owen, Eleanor Farjeon, Robert Herrick, John Donne, Alfred
Noyes, Carrie, Etter, T.S. Eliot, W.H. Auden, John Betjeman, A.A. Milne, and William
Wordsworth. They write of summer mornings, arriving in London, the Great Fire
(1666), the streets, riding a bus, the Thames and its bridges, the gardens and
trees, the weather, Londoners, the statues of Buckingham Palace, and cats (in
the case of T.S. Eliot).
The
book’s numerous illustrations are all taken from posters published over the
years by Transport for London, the government
agency that runs the city’s underground and bus systems. Many of the posters
are available through the London Transport Museum.
Here
is one familiar poem from the collection:
Composed Upon Westminster Bridge
By
William Wordsworth
September
3, 1802
Written in the roof of a coach, on my
way to France
Earth
has not anything to show more fair:
Dull
would he be of soul who could pass by
A
sight so touching in its majesty:
This
City now doth, like a garment, wear
The
beauty of the morning; silent, bare,
Ships,
towers, domes, Theatres, and temples lie
Open
unto the fields, and to the sky;
All
bright and glimmering in the smokeless air.
Never
did sun more beautifully steep
In
his first splendor, valley, rock, or hill;
Ne’er
saw I, never felt, a calm so deep!
The
river glideth at his own sweet will:
Dear
God! The very houses seem asleep;
And
all that mighty heart is lying still!
Ode to London is a small,
readable collection of poems that celebrate a great city.
Photograph: Westminster Bridge, London.
1 comment:
I don't read much poetry, but this sounds like a lovely book to read in anticipation of a trip. We were in London a year ago Christmastime and I would love to go back.
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