Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes. England: Vols. IIV. 187679. | | | | Bristol | | Bristol | | William Lisle Bowles (17621850) |
| | (From Banwell Hill) HOW proud, | |
| Opposed to Waltons silent towers, how proud, | |
| With all her spires and fanes and volumed smoke, | |
| Trailing in columns to the midday sun, | |
| Black, or pale blue, above the cloudy haze, | 5 |
| And the great stir of commerce, and the noise | |
| Of passing and repassing wains, and cars, | |
| And sledges grating in their underpath, | |
| And trades deep murmur, and a street of masts | |
| And pennants from all nations of the earth, | 10 |
| Streaming below the houses, piled aloft, | |
| Hill above hill; and every road below | |
| Gloomy with troops of coal-nymphs, seated high | |
| On their rough pads, in dingy dust serene; | |
| How proudly amid sights and sounds like these, | 15 |
| Bristol, through all whose smoke, dark and aloof, | |
| Stands Redcliffs solemn fane,how proudly girt | |
| With villages, and Cliftons airy rocks, | |
| Bristol, the mistress of the Severn sea, | |
| Bristol, amid her merchant palaces, | 20 |
| That ancient city, sits! | | | | |
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