Here you will find the Poem Graves At Christiania of poet Katharine Lee Bates
WE bore them their own wild heather And ash-boughs jeweled red, There where they sleep together, Greatest of Norway's dead. More than the hush of churches Is the hush where Ibsen lies, Columned by poplars and birches, Vaulted by glorious skies. Over that heart undaunted Soars a shaft of labrador, Black yet beauty-haunted, Marked with the hammer of Thor. But what memorial lifted To Björnson, loved of the folk? We sought till our quest had drifted Where tender voices spoke, Where never a rail encloses That resting-place of fame, A little plot of roses, Nameless nor needing name.