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The Descent into Hell
1O Night and death, to whom we grudged him then,When in man's sight he stood not yet undone,Your king, your priest, your saviour, and your son,We grudge not now, who know that not againShall this curse come upon the sins of men,Nor this face look upon the living sunThat shall behold not so abhorred an oneIn all the days whereof his eye takes ken.The bond is cancelled, and the prayer is heardThat seemed so long but weak and wasted breath;Take him, for he is yours, O night and death.Hell yawns on him whose life was as a wordUttered by death in hate of heaven and light,A curse now dumb upon the lips of night.2What shapes are these and shadows without endThat fill the night full as a storm of rainWith myriads of ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
I Think When I Stand in the Presence of Death.
I think when I stand in the presence of Death, How futile is earthy endeavor,If it be, with the flight of the last labored breath, The tongue has been silenced forever.For no message is flashed from the lustreless eyes, When clos-ed so languid and weary,And no voice from the darkness re-echoes our cries, In response to the agonized query!We gaze at the solemn mysterious shroud With a vague and insatiate yearning,And perceive but the sombre exterior cloud, With our vision of no discerning.Not a whispering sound, not a glimmer of light, From that shadowy strand uncertain;But He who ordained the day and night, Framed also Death's silent curtain.
Alfred Castner King
Death
The awful seers of old, who wrote in wordsLike drops of blood great thoughts that through the nightOf ages burn, as eyes of lions lightDeep jungle-dusks; who smote with songs like swordsThe soul of man on its most secret chords,And made the heart of him a harp to smite,Where are they? where that old man lorn of sight,The king of song among these laurelled lords?But where are all the ancient singing-spheresThat burst through chaos like the summers breathThrough ice-bound seas where never seaman steers?Burnt out. Gone down. No star rememberethThese stars and seers well-silenced through the yearsThe songless years of everlasting death.
Victor James Daley
Death.
I am the outer gate of life where sit Faith and Unfaith, those two interpretersThat spell in diverse ways what God has writ In symbols on the archway of the years.Backward I swing for many feet to pass; Some come in stormy haste, some grave and slow,And all like windy shadows on the grass: Beyond my pale I know not where they go.
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
The Judgment Of The Dead.
Diodorus has recorded an impressive Egyptian ceremonial, the judgment of the dead by the living. When the corpse, duly embalmed, had been placed by the margin of the Acherusian Lake, and before consigning it to the bark that was to bear it across the waters to its final resting-place, it was permitted to the appointed judges to hear all accusations against the past life of the deceased, and if proved, to deprive the corpse of the rites of sepulture. From this singular law not even kings were exempt.With sable plume and nodding crest,They bore him to his dreamless rest, A cold and abject thing;Before the whisper of whose nameStrong hearts had quailed in fear and shame, While nations knelt to flingThe victor's laurel at his feet;Now gorgeous pall and winding-sheet,
Mary Gardiner Horsford
Death. It is the joy, it is the zest of life, To know that Death, ungainly to the vile, Is not a traitor with a reckless knife, And not a serpent with a look of guile, But one who greets us with a seraph's smile, - An angel - guest to tend us after strife, And keep us true to God when fears are rife, And sceptic thought would daunt us or defile. He walks the world as one empower'd to fill The fields of space for Father and for Son. He is our friend, though morbidly we shun His tender touch, - a cure fo...
Eric Mackay
Ginevra.
Wild, pale, and wonder-stricken, even as oneWho staggers forth into the air and sunFrom the dark chamber of a mortal fever,Bewildered, and incapable, and everFancying strange comments in her dizzy brainOf usual shapes, till the familiar trainOf objects and of persons passed like thingsStrange as a dreamer's mad imaginings,Ginevra from the nuptial altar went;The vows to which her lips had sworn assentRung in her brain still with a jarring din,Deafening the lost intelligence within.And so she moved under the bridal veil,Which made the paleness of her cheek more pale,And deepened the faint crimson of her mouth,And darkened her dark locks, as moonlight doth, -And of the gold and jewels glittering thereShe scarce felt conscious, - but th...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Via Dolorosa
The days of a man are threescore years and ten.The days of his life were half a man's, whom weLament, and would yet not bid him back, to bePartaker of all the woes and ways of men.Life sent him enough of sorrow: not againWould anguish of love, beholding him set free,Bring back the beloved to suffer life and seeNo light but the fire of grief that scathed him then.We know not at all: we hope, and do not fear.We shall not again behold him, late so near,Who now from afar above, with eyes alightAnd spirit enkindled, haply toward us hereLooks down unforgetful yet of days like nightAnd love that has yet his sightless face in sight.ITRANSFIGURATIONBut half a man's days, and his days were nights.What hearts were ours who loved him, sho...
Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust.
Is there a Death? The light of dayAt eventide shall fade away;From out the sod's eternal gloomThe flowers, in their season, bloom;Bud, bloom and fade, and soon the spotWhereon they flourished knows them not;Blighted by chill, autumnal frost;"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust!"Is there a Death? Pale forms of menTo formless clay resolve again;Sarcophagus of graven stone,Nor solitary grave, unknown,Mausoleum, or funeral urn,No answer to our cries return;Nor silent lips disclose their trust;"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust!"Is there a Death? All forms of claySuccessively shall pass away;But, as the joyous days of springWitness the glad awakeningOf nature's forces, may not men,In some due season, rise again?Th...
Death And The Unfortunate.[1]
A poor unfortunate, from day to day,Call'd Death to take him from this world away.'O Death' he said, 'to me how fair thy form!Come quick, and end for me life's cruel storm.'Death heard, and with a ghastly grin,Knock'd at his door, and enter'd in'Take out this object from my sight!'The poor man loudly cried.'Its dreadful looks I can't abide;O stay him, stay him' let him come no nigher;O Death! O Death! I pray thee to retire!'A gentleman of noteIn Rome, Maecenas,[2] somewhere wrote: -"Make me the poorest wretch that begs,Sore, hungry, crippled, clothed in rags,In hopeless impotence of arms and legs;Provided, after all, you giveThe one sweet liberty to live:I'll ask of Death no greater favourThan just to stay awa...
Jean de La Fontaine
Lament IV
Thou hast constrained mine eyes, unholy Death,To watch my dear child breathe her dying breath:To watch thee shake the fruit unripe and clingingWhile fear and grief her parents' hearts were wringing.Ah, never, never could my well-loved childHave died and left her father reconciled:Never but with a heart like heavy leadCould I have watched her go, abandoned.And yet at no time could her death have broughtMore cruel ache than now, nor bitterer thought;For had God granted to her ample daysI might have walked with her down flowered waysAnd left this life at last, content, descendingTo realms of dark Persephone, the all-ending,Without such grievous sorrow in my heart,Of which earth holdeth not the counterpart.I marvel not that Niobe, aloneAmid h...
Jan Kochanowski
Through some strange sense of sight or touchI find what all have found before,The presence I have feared so much,The unknown's immaterial door.I seek not and it comes to me:I do not know the thing I find:The fillet of fatalityDrops from my brows that made me blind.Point forward now or backward, light!The way I take I may not choose:Out of the night into the night,And in the night no certain clews.But on the future, dim and vast,And dark with dust and sacrifice,Death's towering ruin from the pastMakes black the land that round me lies.
Madison Julius Cawein
Death Undreaded
Death stands above me, whispering lowI know not what into my ear:Of his strange language all I knowIs, there is not a word of fear.
Walter Savage Landor
Poem On Death
Why should man's high aspiring mind Burn in him with so proud a breath, When all his haughty views can find In this world yields to Death? The fair, the brave, the vain, the wise, The rich, the poor, and great, and small, Are each but worm's anatomies To strew his quiet hall. Power may make many earthly gods, Where gold and bribery's guilt prevails, But Death's unwelcome, honest odds Kick o'er the unequal scales. The flatter'd great may clamours raise Of power, and their own weakness hide, But Death shall find unlooked-for ways To end the farce of pride. An arrow hurtel'd e'er so high, With e'en a giant's sinewy strength, In Time's untraced eternity Goes ...
John Clare
His Vision Of Death
I had a vision in my sleep last night between sleeping and waking. A figure standing beside me, thin, miserable, sad and sorrowful; the shadow of night upon his face, the tracks of the tears down his cheeks. His ribs were bending like the bottom of a riddle; his nose thin that it would go through a cambric needle; his shoulders hard and sharp that they would cut tobacco; his head dark and bushy like the top of a hill; and there is nothing I can liken his fingers to. His poor bones without any kind of covering; a withered rod in his hand, and he looking in my face....Death is a robber who heaps together kings, high princes and country lords; he brings with him the great, the young, and the wise, gripping them by the throat before all the people. Look at him who was yesterday swift & strong, who would leap stone wall, ditch ...
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
'Tis but to fold the arms in peace, To close the tear-dimmed, aching eye,From sin and suffering to cease, And wake to sinless life on high.'Tis but to leave the dusty way Our pilgrim feet so long have pressed,And passon angel-wings away, Forever with the Lord to rest.'Tis but with noiseless step to glide Behind the curtain's mystic screenThat from our mortal gaze doth hide The glories of the world unseen.Tis but to sleep a passing hour, Serene as cradled infants sleep;Then wake in glory and in power, An endless Sabbath day to keep.
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
What is Death!
Looking on a page where stoodGraven of old on old-world woodDeath, and by the graves edge grim,Pale, the young man facing him,Asked my well-beloved of meOnce what strange thing this might be,Gaunt and great of limb.Death, I told him: and, surpriseDeepening more his wildwood eyes(Like some sweet fleet things whose breathSpeaks all spring though nought it saith),Up he turned his rosebright faceGlorious with its seven years grace,Asking, What is death?
O Wholesome Death
O wholesome Death, thy sombre funeral-carLooms ever dimly on the lengthening wayOf life; while, lengthening still, in sad array,My deeds in long procession go, that areAs mourners of the man they helped to mar.I see it all in dreams, such as waylayThe wandering fancy when the solid dayHas fallen in smoldering ruins, and night's star,Aloft there, with its steady point of lightMastering the eye, has wrapped the brain in sleep.Ah, when I die, and planets hold their flightAbove my grave, still let my spirit keepSometimes its vigil of divine remorse,'Midst pity, praise, or blame heaped o'er my corse!
George Parsons Lathrop