In Book vii of The Prelude Wordsworth chronicles the months he lived in London and concludes with two images for the modern city. Following his feeling that “The face of every one / That passes by me is a mystery,” he sees a blind beggar with his life's history on a card around his neck; this is followed by the spectacle of Bartholomew's Fair. The poet's response to these experiences of urban mystery and multitudinousness is well-known:
O Blank confusion! true epitome
Of what the mighty City is herself
To thousands upon thousands of her sons
Living amid the same perpetual whirl
Of trivial objects, melted and reduced
To one identity, by differences
That have no law, no meaning, and no end -
(Book VII, 11. 722–28)