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The Announcement
They came, the brothers, and took two chairsIn their usual quiet way;And for a time we did not thinkThey had much to say.And they began and talked awhileOf ordinary things,Till spread that silence in the roomA pent thought brings.And then they said: "The end has come.Yes: it has come at last."And we looked down, and knew that dayA spirit had passed.
Thomas Hardy
To W.C. Macready
1851Farewell, Macready, since to-night we part;Full-handed thunders often have confessedThy power, well-used to move the public breast.We thank thee with our voice, and from the heart.Farewell, Macready, since this night we part,Go, take thine honors home; rank with the best,Garrick and statelier Kemble, and the restWho made a nation purer through their art.Thine is it that our drama did not die,Nor flicker down to brainless pantomine,And those gilt gauds men-children swarm to see.Farewell, Macready, moral, grave, sublime;Our Shakespeares bland and universal eyeDwells pleased, through twice a hundred years, on thee.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The "Mary Gloster"
I've paid for your sickest fancies; I've humoured your crackedest whim,Dick, it's your daddy, dying; you've got to listen to him!Good for a fortnight, am I? The doctor told you? He lied.I shall go under by morning, and, Put that nurse outside.'Never seen death yet, Dickie? Well, now is your time to learn,And you'll wish you held my record before it comes to your turn.Not counting the Line and the Foundry, the yards and the village, too,I've made myself and a million; but I'm damned if I made you.Master at two-and-twenty, and married at twenty-three,Ten thousand men on the pay-roll, and forty freighters at sealFifty years between'em, and every year of it fight,And now I'm Sir Anthony Gloster, dying, a baronite:For I lunched with his Royal 'Ighness, what was it the pape...
Rudyard
To Anne. [1]
1Oh say not, sweet Anne, that the Fates have decreedThe heart which adores you should wish to dissever;Such Fates were to me most unkind ones indeed, -To bear me from Love and from Beauty for ever.2.Your frowns, lovely girl, are the Fates which aloneCould bid me from fond admiration refrain;By these, every hope, every wish were o'erthrown,Till smiles should restore me to rapture again.3.As the ivy and oak, in the forest entwin'd,The rage of the tempest united must weather;My love and my life were by nature design'dTo flourish alike, or to perish together.4.Then say not, sweet Anne, that the Fates have decreedYour lover should bid you a lasting adieu:Till Fate can ordain tha...
George Gordon Byron
Another on "On The University Carrier who sickn'd in the time of his vacancy, being forbid to go to London, by reason of the plague."
Here lieth one who did most truly prove,That he could never die while he could move,So hung his destiny never to rotWhile he might still jogg on, and keep his trot,Made of sphear-metal, never to decayUntill his revolution was at stay.Time numbers motion, yet (without a crime'Gainst old truth) motion number'd out his time:And like an Engin mov'd with wheel and waight,His principles being ceast, he ended strait.Rest that gives all men life, gave him his death,And too much breathing put him out of breath;Nor were it contradiction to affirmToo long vacation hastned on his term.Meerly to drive the time away he sickn'd,Fainted, and died, nor would with Ale be quickn'd;Nay, quoth he, on his swooning bed out-stretch'd,If I may not carry, sure Ile...
John Milton
The Infanticide
She took her babe, the child of shame and sin,And wrapped it warmly in her shawl and wentFrom house to house for work. Propriety bentA look of wonder on her; raised a dinOf Christian outrage. None would take her in.All that she had was gone; had long been spent.Penniless and hungry by the road she leant,No friend to go to and no one of kin.The babe at last began to cry for food.Her breasts were dry; she had no milk to give.She was so tired and cold. What could she do?... The next day in a pool within a woodThey found the babe.... 'Twas hard enough to live,She found, for one; impossible for two.
Madison Julius Cawein
Grief
As the funeral train with its honoured dead On its mournful way went sweeping,While a sorrowful nation bowed its head And the whole world joined in weeping,I thought, as I looked on the solemn sight, Of the one fond heart despairing,And I said to myself, as in truth I might, "How sad must be this SHARING."To share the living with even Fame, For a heart that is only human,Is hard, when Glory asserts her claim Like a bold, insistent woman;Yet a great, grand passion can put aside Or stay each selfish emotion,And watch, with a pleasure that springs from pride, Its rival - the world's devotion.But Death should render to love its own, And my heart bowed down and sorrowedFor the stricken woman who wep...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Dead.
There's something quieter than sleepWithin this inner room!It wears a sprig upon its breast,And will not tell its name.Some touch it and some kiss it,Some chafe its idle hand;It has a simple gravityI do not understand!While simple-hearted neighborsChat of the 'early dead,'We, prone to periphrasis,Remark that birds have fled!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Dream Of A Curious Man
for F.N.Do you, as I do, know a zesty grief,And is it said of you, 'curious man!'I dreamed of dying; in my spirit's heatDesire and horror mixed, a strange mischance;Anguish and ardent hope were tightly knit;The more the fatal glass was drained of sandThe more I suffered, and I savoured it;My heart pulled out of the familiar, andI was a child, eager to see a play,Hating the curtain standing in the way...At last the chilling verity came on:Yes, I was dead, and in the dreadful dawnWas wrapped. And what! That's all there is to tell?The screen was raised, and I was waiting still.
Charles Baudelaire
Feud.
A Mile of lane, hedged high with iron-weedsAnd dying daisies, white with sun, that leadsDownward into a wood; through which a streamSteals like a shadow; over which is laidA bridge of logs, worn deep by many a team,Sunk in the tangled shade.Far off a wood-dove lifts its lonely cry;And in the sleepy silver of the skyA gray hawk wheels scarce larger than a hand.From point to point the road grows worse and worse,Until that place is reached where all the landSeems burdened with some curse.A ragged fence of pickets, warped and sprung,On which the fragments of a gate are hung,Divides a hill, the fox and ground-hog haunt,A wilderness of briers; o'er whose topsA battered barn is seen, low-roofed and gaunt,'Mid fields that know no crop...
Shivratri (the Night of Shiva)
(While the procession passed at Ramesram)Nearer and nearer cometh the carWhere the Golden Goddess towers,Sweeter and sweeter grows the airFrom a thousand trampled flowers.We two rest in the Temple shadeSafe from the pilgrim flood,This path of the Gods in olden daysRan royally red with blood.Louder and louder and louder yetThrobs the sorrowful drum -That is the tortured world's despair,Never a moment dumb.Shriller and shriller shriek the flutes,Nature's passionate need -Paler and paler grow my lips,And still thou bid'st them bleed.Deeper and deeper and deeper still,Never a pause for pain -Darker and darker falls the nightThat golden torches stain.Closer, ah! closer, and still more close,
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Mutilation
A thick mist-sheet lies over the broken wheat.I walk up to my neck in mist, holding my mouth up.Across there, a discoloured moon burns itself out.I hold the night in horror;I dare not turn round.To-night I have left her alone.They would have it I have left her for ever.Oh my God, how it achesWhere she is cut off from me!Perhaps she will go back to England.Perhaps she will go back,Perhaps we are parted for ever.If I go on walking through the whole breadth of GermanyI come to the North Sea, or the Baltic.Over there is Russia - Austria, Switzerland, France, in a circle!I here in the undermist on the Bavarian road.It aches in me.What is England or France, far off,But a name she might take?...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Pensive And Faltering
Pensive and faltering,The words, the dead, I write;For living are the Dead;(Haply the only living, only real,And I the apparition - I the spectre.)
Walt Whitman
Epitaph On General Gorges,[1] And Lady Meath[2]
Under this stone lies Dick and Dolly.Doll dying first, Dick grew melancholy;For Dick without Doll thought living a folly.Dick lost in Doll a wife tender and dear:But Dick lost by Doll twelve hundred a-year;A loss that Dick thought no mortal could bear.Dick sigh'd for his Doll, and his mournful arms cross'd;Thought much of his Doll, and the jointure he lost;The first vex'd him much, the other vex'd most.Thus loaded with grief, Dick sigh'd and he cried:To live without both full three days he tried;But liked neither loss, and so quietly died.Dick left a pattern few will copy after:Then, reader, pray shed some tears of salt water;For so sad a tale is no subject of laughter.Meath smiles for the jointure, though gotten so late...
Jonathan Swift
Giorno Dei Morti
Along the avenue of cypressesAll in their scarlet cloaks, and surplicesOf linen go the chanting choristers,The priests in gold and black, the villagers. . . .And all along the path to the cemeteryThe round dark heads of men crowd silently,And black-scarved faces of women-folk, wistfullyWatch at the banner of death, and the mystery.And at the foot of a grave a father standsWith sunken head, and forgotten, folded hands;And at the foot of a grave a mother kneelsWith pale shut face, nor either hears nor feelsThe coming of the chanting choristersBetween the avenue of cypresses,The silence of the many villagers,The candle-flames beside the surplices.
The Grave Of Howard
Spirit of Death! whose outstretched pennons dreadWave o'er the world beneath their shadow spread;Who darkly speedest on thy destined way,Midst shrieks and cries, and sounds of dire dismay;Spirit! behold thy victory! AssumeA form more terrible, an ampler plume;For he, who wandered o'er the world alone,Listening to Misery's universal moan;He who, sustained by Virtue's arm sublime,Tended the sick and poor from clime to clime,Low in the dust is laid, thy noblest spoil!And Mercy ceases from her awful toil!'Twas where the pestilence at thy commandArose to desolate the sickening land,When many a mingled cry and dying prayerResounded to the listening midnight air,When deep dismay heard not the frequent knell,And the wan carcase festered as it fel...
William Lisle Bowles
The Ruin.
I know a cliff, whose steep and craggy browO'erlooks the troubled ocean, and spurns backThe advancing billow from its rugged base;Yet many a goodly rood of land lies deepBeneath the wild wave buried, which rolls onIts course exulting o'er the prostrate towersOf high cathedral--church--and abbey fair,--Lifting its loud and everlasting voiceOver the ruins, which its depths enshroud,As if it called on Time, to render backThe things that were, and give to life againAll that in dark oblivion sleeps below:--Perched on the summit of that lofty cliffA time-worn edifice o'erlooks the wave,"Which greets the fisher's home-returning bark,"And the young seaman checks his blithesome songTo hail the lonely ruin from the deep. Majestic in decay,...
Susanna Moodie
Lines ["The death of men is not the death"]
The death of men is not the deathOf rights that urged them to the fray; For men may yield On battle-fieldA noble life with stainless shield, And swords may rust Above their dust, But still, and still The touch and thrillOf freedom's vivifying breath Will nerve a heart and rouse a will In some hour, in the days to be,To win back triumphs from defeat;And those who blame us then will greet Right's glorious eternity.For right lives in a thousand things; Its cradle is its martyr's grave,Wherein it rests awhile until The life that heroisms gaveWill rise again, at God's own will, And right the wrong, Which long and longDid reign above the true and just;And thro' the...
Abram Joseph Ryan