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A Ghost
Ghosts walk the Earth, that rise not from the grave.The Dead Past hath its living dead. We seeAll suddenly, at times, and shudder then,Their faces pale, and sad accusing eyes.Last night, within the crowded street, I sawA Phantom from the Past, with pallid faceAnd hollow eyes, and pale, cold lips, and hairFaded from that imperial hue of goldWhich was my pride in days that are no more.That pallid face I knew in its young bloom,A radiant lily with a rose-flushed heart,Most beautiful, a vision of delight;And seeing it again, so changed, so changed,I felt as if the icy hand of DeathHad touched my forehead and his voice said Come!Ah, pale, cold lips that once were rosy-red!Lips I have kissed on golden afternoons,Past, past, ...
Victor James Daley
Spectres That Grieve
"It is not death that harrows us," they lipped,"The soundless cell is in itself relief,For life is an unfenced flower, benumbed and nippedAt unawares, and at its best but brief."The speakers, sundry phantoms of the gone,Had risen like filmy flames of phosphor dye,As if the palest of sheet lightnings shoneFrom the sward near me, as from a nether sky.And much surprised was I that, spent and dead,They should not, like the many, be at rest,But stray as apparitions; hence I said,"Why, having slipped life, hark you back distressed?"We are among the few death sets not free,The hurt, misrepresented names, who comeAt each year's brink, and cry to HistoryTo do them justice, or go past them dumb."We are stript of rights; our shames...
Thomas Hardy
Heaven And Earth.
Turn from the grave, turn from the grave,There's fearful mystery there;Descend not to the shadowy tomb,If thou wouldst shun despair.It tells a tale of severed tiesTo break the bleeding heart,And from the "canopy of dust"Would make it death to part.Oh! lift the eye of faith to worldsWhere death shall never come,And there behold "the pure in heart"Whom God has gathered home,Beyond the changing things of time,Beyond the reach of care.How sweet to view the ransomed onesIn dazzling glory there!They seem to whisper to the lovedWho smoothed their path below,"Weep not for us, our tears have allForever ceased to flow."Take from the grave, take from the grave,Those bright, but withering; flowers,The spiri...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
Fragment: Apostrophe To Silence.
Silence! Oh, well are Death and Sleep and ThouThree brethren named, the guardians gloomy-wingedOf one abyss, where life, and truth, and joyAre swallowed up - yet spare me, Spirit, pity me,Until the sounds I hear become my soul,And it has left these faint and weary limbs,To track along the lapses of the airThis wandering melody until it restsAmong lone mountains in some...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Epitaphs Of The War
EQUALITY OF SACRIFICEA. I was a Have. B. I was a have-not.(Together.) What hast thou given which I gave not?A SERVANTWe were together since the War began.He was my servant, and the better man.A SONMy son was killed while laughing at some jest. I would I knewWhat it was, and it might serve me in a time when jests are few.AN ONLY SONI have slain none except my Mother.She (Blessing her slayer) died of grief for me.EX-CLERKPity not! The Army gaveFreedom to a timid slave:In which Freedom did he findStrength of body, will, and mind:By which strength he came to proveMirth, Companionship, and Love:For which Love to Death he went:In which Death he lies content....
Rudyard
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXXVIII.
Spirto felice, che sì dolcemente.BEHOLDING IN FANCY THE SHADE OF LAURA, HE TELLS HER THE LOSS THAT THE WORLD SUSTAINED IN HER DEPARTURE. Blest spirit, that with beams so sweetly clearThose eyes didst bend on me, than stars more bright,And sighs didst breathe, and words which could delightDespair; and which in fancy still I hear;--I see thee now, radiant from thy pure sphereO'er the soft grass, and violet's purple light,Move, as an angel to my wondering sight;More present than earth gave thee to appear.Yet to the Cause Supreme thou art return'd:And left, here to dissolve, that beauteous veilIn which indulgent Heaven invested thee.Th' impoverish'd world at thy departure mourn'd:For love departed, and the sun grew pale,And de...
Francesco Petrarca
Sonnets: Idea XLVI
Plain-pathed experience, the unlearnèd's guide,Her simple followers evidently showsSometimes what schoolmen scarcely can decide,Nor yet wise reason absolutely knows; In making trial of a murder wrought,If the vile actors of the heinous deedNear the dead body happily be brought,Oft 't hath been proved the breathless corse will bleed. She coming near, that my poor heart hath slain,Long since departed, to the world no more,The ancient wounds no longer can contain,But fall to bleeding as they did before. But what of this? Should she to death be led, It furthers justice but helps not the dead.
Michael Drayton
To Laura In Death. Sonnet I.
Oimè il bel viso! oimè il soave sguardo!ON THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE DEATH OF LAURA. Woe for the 'witching look of that fair face!The port where ease with dignity combined!Woe for those accents, that each savage mindTo softness tuned, to noblest thoughts the base!And the sweet smile, from whence the dart I trace,Which now leaves death my only hope behind!Exalted soul, most fit on thrones to 've shined,But that too late she came this earth to grace!For you I still must burn, and breathe in you;For I was ever yours; of you bereft,Full little now I reck all other care.With hope and with desire you thrill'd me through,When last my only joy on earth I left:--But caught by winds each word was lost in air.ANON., OX., 17...
Dead Love
Dead love, by treason slain, lies stark,White as a dead stark-stricken dove:None that pass by him pause to markDead love.His heart, that strained and yearned and stroveAs toward the sundawn strives the lark,Is cold as all the old joy thereof.Dead men, re-risen from dust, may harkWhen rings the trumpet blown above:It will not raise from out the darkDead love.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Humanity's Stream.
I stood upon a crowded thoroughfare,Within a city's confines, where were metAll classes and conditions, and surveyed,From a secluded niche or aperture,The various, ever-changing multitudeWhich passed along in restless turbulence,And, as a human river, ebbed and flowedWithin its banks of brick and masonry.Within this vast and heterogeneous throng,One might discern all stages and degrees,From wealth and power to helpless indigence;Extravagance to trenchant penury,And all extremes of want and misery.Some blest by wealth, some cursed by poverty;Some in positions neutral to them both;Some wore a gaunt and ill-conditioned lookWhich told its tale of lack of nourishment;While others showed that irritated airWhich speaks of gout and pa...
Alfred Castner King
To Mary Who Died In This Opinion.
1.Maiden, quench the glare of sorrowStruggling in thine haggard eye:Firmness dare to borrowFrom the wreck of destiny;For the ray morn's bloom revealingCan never boast so bright an hueAs that which mocks concealing,And sheds its loveliest light on you.2.Yet is the tie departedWhich bound thy lovely soul to bliss?Has it left thee broken-heartedIn a world so cold as this?Yet, though, fainting fair one,Sorrow's self thy cup has given,Dream thou'lt meet thy dear one,Never more to part, in Heaven.3.Existence would I barterFor a dream so dear as thine,And smile to die a martyrOn affection's bloodless shrine.Nor would I change for pleasureThat withered hand and ashy cheek,If my heart ens...
Sonnet XLVI.
Dark as the silent stream beneath the night, Thy funeral glides to Life's eternal home, Child of its narrow house! - how late the bloom, The facile smile, the soft eye's crystal light,Each grace of Youth's gay morn, that charms our sight, Play'd o'er that Form! - now sunk in Death's cold gloom, Insensate! ghastly! - for the yawning tomb, Alas! fit Inmate. - Thus we mourn the blightOf Virgin-Beauty, and endowments rare In their glad hours of promise. - O! when Age Drops, like the o'er-blown, faded rose, tho' dearIts long known worth, no stormy sorrows rage; But swell when we behold, unsoil'd by time, Youth's broken Lily perished in its prime.
Anna Seward
Her Passing
The beauty and the lifeOf lifes and beautys fairest paragonO tears! O grief! hung at a feeble threadTo which pale Atropos had set her knife;The soul with many a groanHad left each outward part,And now did take his last leave of the heart:Naught else did want, save death, evn to be dead;When the afflicted band about her bed,Seeing so fair him come in lips, cheeks, eyes,Cried, Ah! and can Death enter Paradise?
William Henry Drummond
Dirge
Stay, Death, Not mine the Christus-wandWherewith to charge thee and command:I plead. Most gently hold the handOf her thou leadest far away;Fear thou to let her naked feetTread ashes--but let mosses sweetHer footing tempt, where'er ye stray.Shun Orcus; win the moonlit landBelulled--the silent meadows lone,Where never any leaf is blownFrom lily-stem in Azrael's hand.There, till her love rejoin her lowly(Pensive, a shade, but all her own)On honey feed her, wild and holy;Or trance her with thy choicest charm.And if, ere yet the lover's free,Some added dusk thy rule decree--That shadow only let it beThrown in the moon-glade by the palm.
Herman Melville
Death In A London Lodging
'Yes, Sir, she's gone at last - 'twas only five minutes agoWe heard her sigh from her corner, - she sat in the kitchen, you know:We were all just busy on breakfast, John cleaning the boots, and IHad just gone into the larder - but you could have heard that sighRight up in the garret, sir, for it seemed to pass one byLike a puff of wind - may be 'twas her soul, who knows -And we all looked up and ran to her - just in time to see her headWas sinking down on her bosom and "she's gone at last," I said.'So Mrs. Pownceby, meeting on the stairsHer second-floor lodger, me, bound citywards,Told of her sister's death, doing her bestTo match her face's colour with the news:While I in listening made a running glossBeneath her speech of all she left unsaid.As - '...
Richard Le Gallienne
Her strong enchantments failing,
Her strong enchantments failing,Her towers of fear in wreck,Her limbecks dried of poisonsAnd the knife at her neck,The Queen of air and darknessBegins to shrill and cry,O young man, O my slayer,To-morrow you shall die.O Queen of air and darkness,I think tis truth you say,And I shall die to-morrow;But you will die to-day.
Alfred Edward Housman
Resurgam
Into the darkness and the deeps My thoughts have strayed, where silence dwells,Where the old world encrypted sleeps,-- Myriads of forms, in myriad cells,Of dead and inorganic things, That neither live, nor move, nor grow, Nor any change of atoms know;That have neither legs, nor arms, nor wings,That have neither heads, nor mouths, nor stings,That have neither roots, nor leaves, nor stems,To hold up flowers like diadems, Growing out of the ground below: But which hold instead The cycles dead,And out of their stony and gloomy foldsShape out new moulds For a new race begun;Shutting within dark pages, furled As in a vast herbarium, The flowers and balms, The pines and palms, The ferns...
Kate Seymour Maclean
The Living Lost.
Matron! the children of whose love,Each to his grave, in youth hath passed,And now the mould is heaped aboveThe dearest and the last!Bride! who dost wear the widow's veilBefore the wedding flowers are pale!Ye deem the human heart enduresNo deeper, bitterer grief than yours.Yet there are pangs of keener wo,Of which the sufferers never speak,Nor to the world's cold pity showThe tears that scald the cheek,Wrung from their eyelids by the shameAnd guilt of those they shrink to name,Whom once they loved with cheerful will,And love, though fallen and branded, still.Weep, ye who sorrow for the dead,Thus breaking hearts their pain relieve;And reverenced are the tears ye shed,And honoured ye who grieve.The praise of th...
William Cullen Bryant