The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 638 pages of information about The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood.

The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 638 pages of information about The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood.

CCXX.

Gold above, and gold below,
The earth reflected the golden glow,
  From river, and hill, and valley;
Gilt by the golden light of morn,
The Thames—­it look’d like the Golden Horn,
And the Barge, that carried coal or corn,
  Like Cleopatra’s Galley!

CCXXI.

Bright as clusters of Golden-rod,
Suburban poplars began to nod,
  With extempore splendor furnish’d;
While London was bright with glittering clocks,
Golden dragons, and Golden cocks,
    And above them all,
    The dome of St. Paul,
With its Golden Cross and its Golden Ball,
  Shone out as if newly burnished!

CCXXII.

And lo! for Golden Hours and Joys,
Troops of glittering Golden Boys
Danced along with a jocund noise,
  And their gilded emblems carried! 
In short, ’twas the year’s most Golden Day,
By mortals call’d the First of May,
    When Miss Kilmansegg,
    Of the Golden Leg,
  With a Golden Ring was married!

CCXXIII.

And thousands of children, women, and men,
Counted the clock from eight till ten,
  From St. James’s sonorous steeple;
For next to that interesting job,
The hanging of Jack, or Bill, or Bob,
There’s nothing so draws a London mob
  As the noosing of very rich people.

CCXXIV.

And a treat it was for the mob to behold
The Bridal Carriage that blazed with gold! 
And the Footmen tall and the Coachman bold,
  In liveries so resplendent—­
Coats you wonder’d to see in place,
They seem’d so rich with golden lace,
  That they might have been independent.

CCXXV.

Coats, that made those menials proud
Gaze with scorn on the dingy crowd,
  From their gilded elevations;
Not to forget that saucy lad
(Ostentation’s favorite cad);
The Page, who look’d, so splendidly clad,
  Like a Page of the “Wealth of Nations.”

CCXXVI.

But the Coachman carried off the state,
With what was a Lancashire body of late
  Turn’d into a Dresden Figure;
With a bridal Nosegay of early bloom,
About the size of a birchen broom,
And so huge a White Favor, had Gog been Groom
  He need not have worn a bigger.

CCXXVII.

And then to see the Groom! the Count
With Foreign Orders to such an amount,
  And whiskers so wild—­nay, bestial;
He seem’d to have borrow’d the shaggy hair
As well as the Stars of the Polar Bear,
  To make him look celestial!

CCXXVIII.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Poetical Works of Thomas Hood from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.