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Waiting For Death.
Di morte certo. My death must come; but when, I do not know: Life's short, and little life remains for me: Fain would my flesh abide; my soul would flee Heavenward, for still she calls on me to go. Blind is the world; and evil here below O'erwhelms and triumphs over honesty: The light is quenched; quenched too is bravery: Lies reign, and truth hath ceased her face to show. When will that day dawn, Lord, for which he waits Who trusts in Thee? Lo, this prolonged delay Destroys all hope and robs the soul of life. Why streams the light from those celestial gates, If death prevent the day of grace, and stay Our souls for ever in...
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
Autumn: A Dirge.
1.The warm sun is failing, the bleak wind is wailing,The bare boughs are sighing, the pale flowers are dying,And the YearOn the earth her death-bed, in a shroud of leaves dead,Is lying.Come, Months, come away,From November to May,In your saddest array;Follow the bierOf the dead cold Year,And like dim shadows watch by her sepulchre.2.The chill rain is falling, the nipped worm is crawling,The rivers are swelling, the thunder is knellingFor the Year;The blithe swallows are flown, and the lizards each goneTo his dwelling;Come, Months, come away;Put on white, black, and gray;Let your light sisters play -Ye, follow the bierOf the dead cold Year,And make her grave green with tear on tear.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Fare Well
When I lie where shades of darknessShall no more assail mine eyes,Nor the rain make lamentationWhen the wind sighs;How will fare the world whose wonderWas the very proof of me?Memory fades, must the rememberedPerishing be?Oh, when this my dust surrendersHand, foot, lip, to dust again,May these loved and loving facesPlease other men!May the rustling harvest hedgerowStill the Traveller's Joy entwine,And as happy children gatherPosies once mine.Look thy last on all things lovely,Every hour. Let no nightSeal thy sense in deathly slumberTill to delightThou have paid thy utmost blessing;Since that all things thou wouldst praiseBeauty took from those who loved themIn other days.
Walter De La Mare
Lines Suggested By The Conversation Of A Brother And Sister In The Chamber Of A Deceased And Highly Valued Parent.
My father! Oh! I cannot dwellOn hours when we shall meet again;I only feel, I only knowThat all my prayers for thee were vain."Come, brother, take a last farewell;Soon, soon they'll bear him far away.""No, sister, no, he is not there,I parted with him yesterday."Our father is in Heaven now,Forever free from care and pain;And, if a half-formed wish could bringHis sainted spirit back again,"The selfish wish I would not breathe;'Twould cloud with woe that placid brow,Round which a seraph seems to wreatheA crown of glory even now."How deep the gloom that mantled there!How sweetly, too, 'twas all withdrawn!Thus, ever thus, night's darkest hourPrecedes the day's triumphant dawn."Oh! while h...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
Maktoob
A shell surprised our post one dayAnd killed a comrade at my side.My heart was sick to see the way He suffered as he died.I dug about the place he fell,And found, no bigger than my thumb,A fragment of the splintered shell In warm aluminum.I melted it, and made a mould,And poured it in the opening,And worked it, when the cast was cold, Into a shapely ring.And when my ring was smooth and bright,Holding it on a rounded stick,For seal, I bade a Turco write 'Maktoob' in Arabic.'Maktoob!' "'Tis written!" . . . So they think,These children of the desert, whoFrom its immense expanses drink Some of its grandeur too.Within the book of Destiny,Whose leaves are time, whose cover, sp...
Alan Seeger
The Dying Adrian To His Soul
Poor, little, pretty, fluttering thing,Must we no longer live together?And dost thou prune thy trembling wing,To take thy flight thou know'st not whither?Thy humorous vein, thy pleasing folly,Lies all neglected, all forgot:And pensive, wavering, melancholy,Thou dread'st and hop'st thou know'st not what.
Matthew Prior
In Memory Of John And Robert Ware
No mystic charm, no mortal art,Can bid our loved companions stay;The bands that clasp them to our heartSnap in death's frost and fall apart;Like shadows fading with the day,They pass away.The young are stricken in their pride,The old, long tottering, faint and fall;Master and scholar, side by side,Through the dark portals silent glide,That open in life's mouldering wallAnd close on all.Our friend's, our teacher's task was done,When Mercy called him from on high;A little cloud had dimmed the sun,The saddening hours had just begun,And darker days were drawing nigh:'T was time to die.A whiter soul, a fairer mind,A life with purer course and aim,A gentler eye, a voice more kind,We may not look on eart...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Fragment. Trionfo Della Morte.
Now since nor grief nor fear was longer there,Each thought on her fair face was clear to see,Composed into the calmness of despair -Not like a flame extinguished violently,But one consuming of its proper light.Even so, in peace, serene of soul, passed she.Even as a lamp, so lucid, softly-bright,Whose sustenance doth fail by slow degrees,Wearing unto the end, its wonted plight.Not pale, but whiter than the snow one seesFlaking a hillside through the windless air.Like one o'erwearied, she reposed in peaceAs 't were a sweet sleep filled each lovely eye,The soul already having fled from there.And this is what dull fools have named to die.Upon her fair face death itself seemed fair.
Emma Lazarus
All Things Will Die
All Things will DieClearly the blue river chimes in its flowingUnder my eye;Warmly and broadly the south winds are blowingOver the sky.One after another the white clouds are fleeting;Every heart this May morning in joyance is beatingFull merrily;Yet all things must die.The stream will cease to flow;The wind will cease to blow;The clouds will cease to fleet;The heart will cease to beat;For all things must die.All things must die.Spring will come never more.O, vanity!Death waits at the door.See! our friends are all forsakingThe wine and the merrymaking.We are calldwe must go.Laid low, very low,In the dark we must lie.The merry glees are still;The voice of the birdShal...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Grace.
Ill-wrought life we look at as we die!Mistaken, selfish, meagre, and unmeet;So graven on the hearts that cruellyWe have deprived of many an hour sweet:O ill-wrought life we look at as we die!O day of God we look at as we die!Grace, like a river flowing toward our feet;Wide pardon blowing with the breezes by;Love telling us bright tales of the Complete; -While listening, hoping, thanking, lo, we die!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
A Forsaken Garden
In a coign of the cliff between lowland and highland,At the sea-down's edge between windward and lee,Walled round with rocks as an inland island,The ghost of a garden fronts the sea.A girdle of brushwood and thorn enclosesThe steep square slope of the blossomless bedWhere the weeds that grew green from the graves of its rosesNow lie dead.The fields fall southward, abrupt and broken,To the low last edge of the long lone land.If a step should sound or a word be spoken,Would a ghost not rise at the strange guest's hand?So long have the grey bare walks lain guestless,Through branches and briars if a man make way,He shall find no life but the sea-wind's, restlessNight and day.The dense hard passage is blind and stifledThat crawls b...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Soul
An heritage of hopes and fearsAnd dreams and memory,And vices of ten thousand yearsGod gives to thee.A house of clay, the home of Fate,Haunted of Love and Sin,Where Death stands knocking at the gateTo let him in.
Madison Julius Cawein
In Memory Of John Leach Craig
In the midst of Life we are in Death.What is it that has stilled the usual hurry, Checking the eager tread of rapid feet?Why does the business face look sad and sorry Within the place where merchants choose to meet?A something not unusual or strange,One face is missing on the Corn Exchange.Alas! they say he had uncommon merit, High the esteem and confidence he won;He brought to business life a joyous spirit, And mixed commercial tact with boyish fun.We miss his breezy laugh, his pleasant face,The skill that marked him for the foremost place.There is a ship steaming across the billow, That should have brought him to his mother's knee;Did warning dreams hover around her pillow, Of the dear face she never ...
Nora Pembroke
William And Helen
I.From heavy dreams fair Helen rose,And eyed the dawning red:"Alas, my love, thou tarriest long!O art thou false or dead?"II.With gallant Fred'rick's princely powerHe sought the bold Crusade;But not a word from Judah's warsTold Helen how he sped.III.With Paynim and with SaracenAt length a truce was made,And every knight return'd to dryThe tears his love had shed.IV.Our gallant host was homeward boundWith many a song of joy;Green waved the laurel in each plume,The badge of victory.V.And old and young, and sire and son,To meet them crowd the way,With shouts, and mirth, and melody,The debt of love to pay.VI.Full many a maid her true-love met,And sobb'd ...
Walter Scott
The Drudge
Repose upon her soulless face, Dig the grave and leave her; But breathe a prayer that, in his grace, He who so loved this toiling race To endless rest receive her. Oh, can it be the gates ajar Wait not her humble quest, Whose life was but a patient war Against the death that stalked from far With neither haste nor rest; To whom were sun and moon and cloud, The streamlet's pebbly coil, The transient, May-bound, feathered crowd, The storm's frank fury, thunder-browed, But witness of her toil; Whose weary feet knew not the bliss Of dance by jocund reed; Who never dallied ...
John Charles McNeill
A Cameo
There was a graven image of DesirePainted with red blood on a ground of goldPassing between the young men and the old,And by him Pain, whose body shone like fire,And Pleasure with gaunt hands that grasped their hire.Of his left wrist, with fingers clenched and cold,The insatiable Satiety kept hold,Walking with feet unshod that pashed the mire.The senses and the sorrows and the sins,And the strange loves that suck the breasts of HateTill lips and teeth bite in their sharp indenture,Followed like beasts with flap of wings and fins.Death stood aloof behind a gaping grate,Upon whose lock was written Peradventure.
On The Fear Of Death: An Epistle To A Lady.
The Fear Of Death.Thou! whose superior, and aspiring mindCan leave the weakness of thy sex behind;Above its follies, and its fears can rise,Quit the low earth, and gain the distant skies:Whom strength of soul and innocence have taughtTo think of death, nor shudder at the thought;Say! whence the dread, that can alike engageVain thoughtless youth, and deep-reflecting age;Can shake the feeble, and appal the strong;Say! whence the terrors, that to death belong?Guilt must be fearful: but the guiltless tooStart from the grave, and tremble at the view.The blood-stained pirate, who in neighbouring climes,Might fear, lest justice should o'ertake his crimes,Wisely may bear the sea's tempestuous roar,And rather wait the storm, than make the sh...
William Hayley
Death Of A Believer
Yet at the last, ere our spearmen had found him,Yet at the last, ere a sword-thrust could save,Yet at the last, with his masters around him,He spoke of the Faith as a master to slave.Yet at the last, though the Kafirs had maimed him,Broken by bondage and wrecked by the river,Yet at the last, tho' the darkness had claimed him,He called on Allah, and died a Believer!
Rudyard