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The Dying Year
With dirge-like music, low,Sounds forth again the solemn harp of Time;Mass for the buried hours, a funeral chimeO'er human joy and woe.The sere leaves wail around thy passing bier,Speed to thy dreamless rest, departing year!Yet, ere thy sable pallCross the wide threshold of the mighty Past,Give back the treasures on thy bosom cast;Earth would her gems recall:Give back the lily's bloom and violet's breath,The summer leaves that bowed before the reaper Death.Give back the dreams of fame,The aspirations strong for glory won;Hopes that went out perchance when set thy sun,Nor left nor trace nor name:Give back the wasted hours, half-uttered prayer,The high resolves forgot that stained thine annals fair.Give back the flow...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
The Custer Wail.
Dead! Where the bold and braveBlend in one bloody grave;Dead! With no coward clayWeltering in gore that day.Dead! Dead! Ah! - Dead to me.Dead! With his boys in blue,Baptized in bloody dew.Dead! Where his enemyFled from his fearless eye.Dead! Dead! Ah! - Dead to me.Dead! Like a meteor,Flashed o'er the field of war.Dead! With immortal pride,Glorious and glorified.Dead! Dead! Ah! - Dead to me.Dead! Where the captives singSaved by his rifle's ring.Dead! Where the painted braveBled by his gory glaive.Dead! Dead! Ah! - Dead to me.Dead! Where the feathered gameFell at his deadly aim.Dead! Where the buffaloFound him a gallant foe.Dead! Dead! Ah! - Dead to me.Dead! Where...
A. H. Laidlaw
Elegy On Newstead Abbey. [1]
"It is the voice of years, that are gone! they roll before me, with all their deeds."Ossian.1.NEWSTEAD! fast-falling, once-resplendent dome!Religion's shrine! repentant HENRY'S [2] pride!Of Warriors, Monks, and Dames the cloister'd tomb,Whose pensive shades around thy ruins glide,2.Hail to thy pile! more honour'd in thy fall,Than modern mansions, in their pillar'd state;Proudly majestic frowns thy vaulted hall,Scowling defiance on the blasts of fate.3.No mail-clad Serfs, [3] obedient to their Lord,In grim array, the crimson cross [4] demand;Or gay assemble round the festive board,Their chief's retainers, an immortal band.4....
George Gordon Byron
The Dead Day
The west builds high a sepulcherOf cloudy granite and of gold,Where twilight's priestly hours interThe Day like some great king of old.A censer, rimmed with silver fire,The new moon swings above his tomb;While, organ-stops of God's own choir,Star after star throbs in the gloom.And Night draws near, the sadly sweet -A nun whose face is calm and fair -And kneeling at the dead Day's feetHer soul goes up in mists like prayer.In prayer, we feel through dewy gleamAnd flowery fragrance, and - aboveAll earth - the ecstasy and dreamThat haunt the mystic heart of love.
Madison Julius Cawein
An "Immurata" Sister.
Life flows down to death; we cannot bindThat current that it should not flee:Life flows down to death, as rivers findThe inevitable sea.Men work and think, but women feel;And so (for I'm a woman, I)And so I should be glad to dieAnd cease from impotence of zeal,And cease from hope, and cease from dread,And cease from yearnings without gain,And cease from all this world of pain,And be at peace among the dead.Hearts that die, by death renew their youth,Lightened of this life that doubts and dies;Silent and contented, while the TruthUnveiled makes them wise.Why should I seek and never findThat something which I have not had?Fair and unutterably sadThe world hath sought time out of mind;The world hath sought...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Reminiscences Of The Departed.
His mission soon accomplished,His race on earth soon run,He passed to realms of glory,Above the rising sun.So beautiful that infant,When in death's arms he lay;It seemed like peaceful slumber,That morn might chase away.But morning light was powerless,Those eyelids to unclose;And sunshine saw and left him,In undisturbed repose.The light of those blue orbsThat drank the sunbeams in,Now yields to night, and darknessHolds undisputed reign.That little form so graceful,The light brown chestnut hair;Those half formed words when uttered,That face so sweet and fair;All, all his ways so winning,Were impotent to saveHis life, when called to yield itBy Him that life who gave.
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
Lalage.
What were sweet life without herWho maketh all things sweetWith smiles that dream about her,With dreams that come and fleet!Soft moods that end in languor;Soft words that end in sighs;Curved frownings as of anger;Cold silence of her eyes.Sweet eyes born but for slaying,Deep violet-dark and lostIn dreams of whilom MayingIn climes unstung of frost.Wild eyes shot through with fireGod's light in godless years,Brimmed wine-dark with desire,A birth for dreams and tears.Dear tears as sweet as laughter,Low laughter sweet as loveUnwound in ripples afterSad tears we knew not of.What if the day be lawless,What if the heart be dead,Such tears would make it flawless,Such laughter make it red....
Death At The Window
This morning, while we sat in talk Of spring and apple-bloom,Lo! Death stood in the garden walk, And peered into the room.Your back was turned, you did not see The shadow that he made.He bent his head and looked at me; It made my soul afraid.The words I had begun to speak Fell broken in the air.You saw the pallor of my cheek, And turned--but none was there.He came as sudden as a thought, And so departed too.What made him leave his task unwrought? It was the sight of you.Though Death but seldom turns aside From those he means to take,He would not yet our hearts divide, For love and pity's sake.
Robert Fuller Murray
Cloud
A fog has destroyed the world so gently.Bloodless trees dissolve in smoke.And shadows hover where shrieks are heard.Burning beasts evaporate like breath.Captured flies are the gas lanterns.And each flickers, still attempting to escape.But to one side, high in the distance, the poisonous moon,The fat fog-spider, lies in wait, smoldering.We, however, loathsome, suited for death,Trample along, crunching this desert splendor.And silently stab the white eyes of miseryLike spears into the swollen night.
Alfred Lichtenstein
A Dirge
A bell tolls on in my heartAs though in my ears a knellHad ceased for awhile to swell,But the sense of it would not partFrom the spirit that bears its partIn the chime of the soundless bell.Ah dear dead singer of sorrow,The burden is now not thineThat grief bade sound for a signThrough the songs of the night whose morrowHas risen, and I may not borrowA beam from its radiant shrine.The burden has dropped from theeThat grief on thy life bound fast;The winter is over and pastWhose end thou wast fain to see.Shall sorrow not comfort meThat is thine no longer, at last?Good day, good night, and good morrow,Men living and mourning say.For thee we could only prayThat night of the day might borrowSuch comfort as dreams...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Interim
The room is full of you!--As I came in And closed the door behind me, all at once A something in the air, intangible, Yet stiff with meaning, struck my senses sick!-- Sharp, unfamiliar odors have destroyed Each other room's dear personality. The heavy scent of damp, funereal flowers,-- The very essence, hush-distilled, of Death-- Has strangled that habitual breath of home Whose expiration leaves all houses dead; And wheresoe'er I look is hideous change. Save here. Here 'twas as if a weed-choked gate Had opened at my touch, and I had stepped Into some long-forgot, enchanted, strange, Sweet garden of a thousand years ago And suddenly thought, "I have been here before!" You are not...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
The Town Without A Market
There lies afar behind a western hillThe Town without a Market, white and still;For six feet long and not a third as highAre those small habitations. There stood I,Waiting to hear the citizens beneathMurmur and sigh and speak through tongueless teeth.When all the world lay burning in the sunI heard their voices speak to me. Said one:"Bright lights I loved and colours, I who findThat death is darkness, and has struck me blind."Another cried: "I used to sing and play,But here the world is silent, day by day."And one: "On earth I could not see or hear,But with my fingers touched what I was near,And knew things round and soft, and brass from gold,And dipped my hand in water, to feel cold,And thought the grave would cure me, and was gladWhen t...
James Elroy Flecker
Dora
She knelt upon her brother's grave,My little girl of six years old,He used to be so good and brave,The sweetest lamb of all our fold;He used to shout, he used to sing,Of all our tribe the little king,And so unto the turf her ear she laid,To hark if still in that dark place he play'd.No sound! no sound!Death's silence was profound;And horror creptInto her aching heart, and Dora wept.If this is as it ought to be,My God, I leave it unto Thee.
Thomas Edward Brown
Early Death And Fame
For him who must see many years,I praise the life which slips awayOut of the light and mutely; which avoidsFame, and her less fair followers, envy, strife,Stupid detraction, jealousy, cabal,Insincere praises; which descendsThe quiet mossy track to age.But, when immature deathBeckons too early the guestFrom the half-tried banquet of life,Young, in the bloom of his days;Leaves no leisure to press,Slow and surely, the sweetsOf a tranquil life in the shade;Fuller for him be the hours!Give him emotion, though pain!Let him live, let him feel: I have lived!Heap up his moments with life,Triple his pulses with fame!
Matthew Arnold
The House Of Dust: Part 03: 08: Coffins: Interlude
Wind blows. Snow falls. The great clock in its towerTicks with reverberant coil and tolls the hour:At the deep sudden stroke the pigeons fly . . .The fine snow flutes the cracks between the flagstones.We close our coats, and hurry, and search the sky.We are like music, each voice of it pursuingA golden separate dream, remote, persistent,Climbing to fire, receding to hoarse despair.What do you whisper, brother? What do you tell me? . . .We pass each other, are lost, and do not care.One mounts up to beauty, serenely singing,Forgetful of the steps that cry behind him;One drifts slowly down from a waking dream.One, foreseeing, lingers forever unmoving . . .Upward and downward, past him there, we stream.One has death in his eyes: and wal...
Conrad Aiken
Daniel
Down into the darkness at last, Daniel, down into the darkness at last;Laid in the lap of our Mother, Daniel, sleeping the dreamless sleep,Sleeping the sleep of the babe unborn the pure and the perfect rest:Aye, and is it not better than this fitful fever and pain?Aye, and is it not better, if only the dead soul knew?Joy was there in the spring-time and hope like a blossoming rose,When the wine-blood of youth ran tingling and throbbing in every vein;Chirrup of robin and blue-bird in the white-blossomed apple and pear;Carpets of green on the meadows spangled with dandelions;Lowing of kine in the valleys, bleating of lambs on the hills;Babble of brooks and the prattle of fountains that flashed in the sun;Glad, merry voices, ripples of laughter, snatches of music and son...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Evil Influence
'Tis not the violent hands alone that bringThe curse, the ravage, and the downward doom,Although to these full oft the yawning tombOwes deadly surfeit; but a keener sting,A more immortal agony will clingTo the half fashioned sin which would assumeFair Virtue's garb; the eye that sows the gloomWith quiet seeds of Death henceforth to springWhat time the sun of passion burning fierceBreaks through the kindly cloud of circumstance;The bitter word, and the unkindly glance,The crust and canker coming with the years,Are liker Death than arrows and the lanceWhich through the living heart at once doth pierce.
George MacDonald
Dust To Dust
Heavenly Archer, bend thy bow;Now the flame of life burns low,Youth is gone; I, too, would go.Even Fortune leads to this:Harsh or kind, at last she isMurderess of all ecstasies.Yet the spirit, dark, alone,Bound in sense, still hearkens onFor tidings of a bliss foregone.Sleep is well for dreamless head,At no breath astonishèd,From the Gardens of the Dead.I the immortal harps hear ring,By Babylon's river languishing.Heavenly Archer, loose thy string.
Walter De La Mare