Type into the gaps to complete the poem. To reset the game, click on the "Reset Game" button located below the poem. This will clear all the words you've placed in the blanks, and resetting the poem to its original state with empty blanks. If you prefer to drag and drop words, click the Drag & Drop button below. You can also print out the poem for use in the classroom.
Do you not father me, nor the erected arm
my tall tower’s sake cast in her stone?
Do not mother me, nor, as I am,
The lovers’ house, lie suffering my stain?
Do you not sister me, the erected crime
For my tall turrets carry as sin?
Do you not brother me, nor, as you climb,
Adore my windows for their summer scene?
Am I father, too, and the ascending boy,
The boy of and the wanton starer
Marking the flesh and summer the bay?
Am I not sister, too, who is saviour?
Am I not all of you by the sea
Where bird and shell are babbling in my tower?
Am I not you who front the tidy shore,
Nor roof of sand, nor yet the towering tiler?
are all these, said she who gave me the suck,
All these, he said who sacked the children’s town,
Up rose the Abraham-man, mad for my sake,
They said, who hacked and humoured, they were mine.
I am, tower told, felled by a timeless stroke,
Who razed wooden folly stands aghast,
For man-begetters in the dry-as-paste,
ringed-sea ghost, rise grimly from the wrack.
Do you father me on the destroying sand?
You are your sisters’ sire, said seaweedy,
The salt sucked dam and darlings the land
Who play the proper gentleman and lady.
I still be love’s house on the widdershin earth,
to the windy masons at my shelter?
Love’s house, answer, and the tower death
Lie all unknowing of grave sin-eater.