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Euthanasia
"O Life, O Beyond,Thou art strange, thou art sweet!"--Mrs. Browning.Dread phantom, with pale finger on thy lips, Who dost unclose the awful doors for each, That ope but once, and are unclosed no more, Turn the key gently in the mystic ward, And silently unloose the silver cord; Lay thy chill seal of silence upon speech, And mutely beckon through the soundless doorTo endless night, and silence and eclipse.Even now the soul unfettered may explore On its swift wing beyond the gates of morn, (Unravelled all the weary round of years) And stand, unfenced of time and crowding space, With love's fond instinct in that primal place, The distant north...
Kate Seymour Maclean
On Death.
O life, thy name to me's a galling sound,A sound I fain would wish to breathe no more;One only peace for me my hopes have found,When thy existence and wild race is o'er;When Death, with one, heals every other wound,And lays my aching head in the cold ground.O happy hour! I only wish to haveAnother moment's gasp, and then the grave.I only wish for one departing sigh,A welcome farewel take of all, and die.Thou'st given me little, world, for thanks' return,Thou tempst me little with thee still to 'bide:One only cause in leaving thee I mourn,--That I had e'er been born, nor in the cradle died.
John Clare
Life And Death. A Quatrain.
Of our own selves God makes a glass, whereinTwo shadows image them as might a breath:And one is Life, whose other name is Sin;And one is Love, whose other name is Death.
Madison Julius Cawein
A Death-Bed
"This is the State above the Law.The State exists for the State alone."[This is a gland at the back of the jaw,And an answering lump by the collar-bone.],Some die shouting in gas or fire;Some die silent, by shell and shot.Some die desperate, caught on the wire;Some die suddenly.This will not."Regis suprema voluntas Lex"[It will follow the regular course of throats.]Some die pinned by the broken decks,Some die sobbing between the boats.Some die eloquent, pressed to deathBy the sliding trench, as their friends can hear.Some die wholly in half a breath.Some give trouble for half a year."There is neither Evil nor Good in lifeExcept as the needs of the State ordain."[Since it is rather too late for the knife,All we can do is ...
Rudyard
On An Old Sepulchral Bas-Relief.
Where Is Seen A Young Maiden, Dead, In The Act Of Departing, Taking Leave Of Her Family. Where goest thou? Who calls Thee from my dear ones far away? Most lovely maiden, say! Alone, a wanderer, dost thou leave Thy father's roof so soon? Wilt thou unto its threshold e'er return? Wilt thou make glad one day, Those, who now round thee, weeping, mourn? Fearless thine eye, and spirited thy act; And yet thou, too, art sad. If pleasant or unpleasant be the road, If gay or gloomy be the new abode, To which thou journeyest, indeed, In that grave face, how difficult to read! Ah, hard to me the problem still hath seemed; Not hath the world, perhaps, yet understood, If thou beloved,...
Giacomo Leopardi
On Death
ICan death be sleep, when life is but a dream,And scenes of bliss pass as a phantom by?The transient pleasures as a vision seem,And yet we think the greatest pain's to die.IIHow strange it is that man on earth should roam,And lead a life of woe, but not forsakeHis rugged path; nor dare he view aloneHis future doom which is but to awake.
John Keats
A Dead King
Ferdinand II entered Malebolge May 22nd, 1859.Go down to hell. This end is good to see;The breath is lightened and the sense at easeBecause thou art not; sense nor breath there isIn what thy body was, whose soul shall beChief nerve of hell's pained heart eternally.Thou art abolished from the midst of theseThat are what thou wast: Pius from his kneesBlows off the dust that flecked them, bowed for thee.Yea, now the long-tongued slack-lipped litaniesFail, and the priest has no more prayer to sellNow the last Jesuit found about thee isThe beast that made thy fouler flesh his cellTime lays his finger on thee, saying, "Cease;Here is no room for thee; go down to hell."
Algernon Charles Swinburne
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXXI.
Non può far morte il dolce viso amaro.SINCE HER DEATH HE HAS CEASED TO LIVE. Death cannot make that beauteous face less fair,But that sweet face may lend to death a grace;My spirit's guide! from her each good I trace;Who learns to die, may seek his lesson there.That holy one! who not his blood would spare,But did the dark Tartarean bolts unbrace;He, too, doth from my soul death's terrors chase:Then welcome, death! thy impress I would wear.And linger not! 'tis time that I had fled;Alas! my stay hath little here avail'd,Since she, my Laura blest, resign'd her breath:Life's spring in me hath since that hour lain dead,In her I lived, my life in hers exhaled,The hour she died I felt within me death!WOLLASTON.
Francesco Petrarca
Death Song Of The Enfants Perdus.
'Tis here we invade the valley,Away from the realms of breath,And, in most successful sally,We enter the gates of death;So, stand in the last line steady,'Tis here our true glory lies;Hurrah for the dead already!Three cheers for the next who dies!Though here, the wet eyes of womanWill fill with the falling tear,Yet, facing old Death, our foeman,We shout our reviving cheer.Though high beat the hearts we cherish,The dead we most highly prize:Hurrah for the first to perish!Three cheers for the next who dies!The earth we now leave behind us,The heavens now beckon before,Though dust of the dead may blind us,We march for the shining shore;No more can our Hope deceive us,Our heart to it now replies,Hurra...
A. H. Laidlaw
White Death
Methought the world was bound with final frost; The sun, made hueless as with fear and awe, Illumined yet the lands it could not thaw. Then on my road, with instant evening crost, Death stood, and in its shadowy films enwound, Mine eyes forgot the light, until I came Where poured the inseparate, unshadowed flame Of phantom suns in self-irradiance drowned. Death lay revealed in all its haggardness - Immitigable wastes horizonless; Profundities that held nor bar nor veil; All hues wherewith the suns and worlds were dyed In light invariable nullified; All darkness rendered shelterless and pale.
Clark Ashton Smith
A Fragment.[73]
Could I remount the river of my yearsTo the first fountain of our smiles and tears,I would not trace again the stream of hoursBetween their outworn banks of withered flowers,But bid it flow as now - until it glidesInto the number of the nameless tides.* * * * *What is this Death? - a quiet of the heart?The whole of that of which we are a part?For Life is but a vision - what I seeOf all which lives alone is Life to me,And being so - the absent are the dead,Who haunt us from tranquillity, and spreadA dreary shroud around us, and investWith sad remembrancers our hours of rest.The absent are the dead - for they are cold,And ne'er can be what once we did behold;And they are changed, and cheerless, - or if yetThe unforgotten d...
George Gordon Byron
To Death.
Death! where is thy victory?To triumph whilst I die,To triumph whilst thine ebon wingEnfolds my shuddering soul?O Death! where is thy sting?Not when the tides of murder roll,When nations groan, that kings may bask in bliss,Death! canst thou boast a victory such as this -When in his hour of pomp and powerHis blow the mightiest murderer gave,Mid Nature's cries the sacrificeOf millions to glut the grave;When sunk the Tyrant Desolation's slave;Or Freedom's life-blood streamed upon thy shrine;Stern Tyrant, couldst thou boast a victory such as mine?To know in dissolution's voidThat mortals' baubles sunk decay;That everything, but Love, destroyedMust perish with its kindred clay, -Perish Ambition's crown,Perish her sceptr...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Dying Christian To His Soul
Vital spark of heav'nly flame,Quit, oh, quit, this mortal frame!Trembling, hoping, ling'ring, flying,Oh, the pain, the bliss of dying!Cease, fond Nature, cease thy strife,And let me languish into life!Hark! they whisper; Angels say,Sister Spirit, come away.What is this absorbs me quite,Steals my senses, shuts my sight,Drowns my spirits, draws my breath?Tell me, my Soul! can this be Death?The world recedes; it disappears;Heav'n opens on my eyes; my earsWith sounds seraphic ring:Lend, lend your wings! I mount! I fly!O Grave! where is thy Victory?O Death! where is thy Sting?
Alexander Pope
A Wish
I ask not that my bed of deathFrom bands of greedy heirs be free;For these besiege the latest breathOf fortune's favoured sons, not me.I ask not each kind soul to keepTearless, when of my death he hears;Let those who will, if any, weep!There are worse plagues on earth than tears.I ask but that my death may findThe freedom to my life denied;Ask but the folly of mankind,Then, at last, to quit my side.Spare me the whispering, crowded room,The friends who come, and gape, and go;The ceremonious air of gloom -All which makes death a hideous show!Nor bring, to see me cease to live,Some doctor full of phrase and fame,To shake his sapient head and giveThe ill he cannot cure a name.Nor fetch, to take ...
Matthew Arnold
Sonnet. Death.
It is not death, that sometime in a sighThis eloquent breath shall take its speechless flight;That sometime these bright stars, that now replyIn sunlight to the sun, shall set in night;That warm conscious flesh shall perish quite,And all life's ruddy springs forget to flow;That thoughts shall cease, and the immortal spriteBe lapp'd in alien clay and laid below;It is not death to know this, - but to knowThat pious thoughts, which visit at new gravesIn tender pilgrimage, will cease to goSo duly and so oft, - and when grass wavesOver the past-away, there may be thenNo resurrection in the minds of men.
Thomas Hood
The Vision Of Life.
Death and I, On a hill so high,Stood side by side: And we saw below, Running to and fro,All things that be in the world so wide. Ten thousand cries From the gulf did rise,With a wild discordant sound; Laughter and wailing, Prayer and railing,As the ball spun round and round. And over all Hung a floating pallOf dark and gory veils: 'Tis the blood of years, And the sighs and tears,Which this noisome marsh exhales. All this did seem Like a fearful dream,Till Death cried with a joyful cry: "Look down! look down! It is all mine own,Here comes life's pageant by!"Like to a masque in ancient revelries,With mingling sound of tho...
Frances Anne Kemble
Unto This Last
They brought my fair love out upon a bier,Out from the dwelling that her smile made sweet,Out from the life that her life made complete,Into the glitter of the garish street,And no man wept, save I, for that dead dear.And then the dark procession wound along,Like a black serpent with a snow-white birdHeld in its fangs. I think God said a wordTo death, as He in His chill heaven heardHer voice so sweeter than His seraphs song.And so Death took away her flower-sweet breathOne darkest day of days in a dark year,And brought to that strong God who had no fearMy own dear love. Ah, closed eyes without peer!Ah, red lips pressed on the blue lips of Death!
Victor James Daley
A Farewell
Oft have I mused, but now at length I findWhy those that die, men say, they do depart:Depart: a word so gentle to my mind,Weakly did seem to paint Death's ugly dart.But now the stars, with their strange course, do bindMe one to leave, with whom I leave my heart;I hear a cry of spirits faint and blind,That parting thus, my chiefest part I part.Part of my life, the loathed part to me,Lives to impart my weary clay some breath;But that good part wherein all comforts be,Now dead, doth show departure is a death:Yea, worse than death, death parts both woe and joy,From joy I part, still living in annoy.* * *Finding those beams, which I must ever love,To mar my mind, and with my hurt to please,I deemed it best, som...
Philip Sidney