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November 1836
Even so for me a Vision sanctifiedThe sway of Death; long ere mine eyes had seenThy countenance, the still rapture of thy mienWhen thou, dear Sister! wert become Death's Bride:No trace of pain or languor could abideThat change: age on thy brow was smoothed thy coldWan cheek at once was privileged to unfoldA loveliness to living youth denied.Oh! if within me hope should e'er decline,The lamp of faith, lost Friend! too faintly burn;Then may that heaven-revealing smile of thine,The bright assurance, visibly return:And let my spirit in that power divineRejoice, as, through that power, it ceased to mourn.
William Wordsworth
Sorrow. Song.
To me this world's a dreary blank,All hopes in life are gone and fled,My high strung energies are sank,And all my blissful hopes lie dead. -The world once smiling to my view,Showed scenes of endless bliss and joy;The world I then but little knew,Ah! little knew how pleasures cloy;All then was jocund, all was gay,No thought beyond the present hour,I danced in pleasure's fading ray,Fading alas! as drooping flower.Nor do the heedless in the throng,One thought beyond the morrow give[,]They court the feast, the dance, the song,Nor think how short their time to live.The heart that bears deep sorrow's trace,What earthly comfort can console,It drags a dull and lengthened pace,'Till friendly death its woes enrol...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Etheline
The heart that once was rich with light,And happy in your grace,Now lieth cold beneath the scornThat gathers on your face;And every joy it knew before,And every templed dream,Is paler than the dying flashOn yonder mountain stream.The soul, regretting foundered blissAmid the wreck of years,Hath mourned it with intensityToo deep for human tears!The forest fadeth underneathThe blast that rushes byThe dripping leaves are white with death,But Love will never die!We both have seen the starry mossThat clings where Ruin reigns,And one must know his lonely breastAffection still retains;Through all the sweetest hopes of life,That clustered round and round,Are lying now, like withered things,Forsaken on the ...
Henry Kendall
The Jewish Cemetery At Newport
How strange it seems! These Hebrews in their graves, Close by the street of this fair seaport town,Silent beside the never-silent waves, At rest in all this moving up and down!The trees are white with dust, that o'er their sleep Wave their broad curtains in the south-wind's breath,While underneath such leafy tents they keep The long, mysterious Exodus of Death.And these sepulchral stones, so old and brown, That pave with level flags their burial-place,Seem like the tablets of the Law, thrown down And broken by Moses at the mountain's base.The very names recorded here are strange, Of foreign accent, and of different climes;Alvares and Rivera interchange With Abraham and Jacob of old times."Bless...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Death Of Lovers
We will have beds imbued with mildest scent,And couches, deep as tombs, in which to lie,Flowers around us, strange and opulent,Blooming on shelves under the finest skies.Approaching equally their final light,Our twin hearts will be two great flaming brandsThat will be double in each other's sightOur souls the mirrors where the image stands.One evening made of rose and mystic blueWe will flare out, in an epiphanyLike a long sob, charged with our last adieus.And later, opening the doors, will beAn Angel, who will joyfully reglazeThe tarnished mirrors, and relight the blaze.
Charles Baudelaire
Lord, Save Their Souls Alive!
Lord, save their souls alive!And--for the rest,--We leave it all to Thee;Thou knowest best.Whether they live or die,Safely they'll rest,Every true soul of them,Thy Chosen Guest.Whether they live or die,They chose the best,They sprang to Duty's call,They stood the test.If they come back to us--How grateful we!If not,--we may not grieve;They are with Thee.No soul of them shall fail,Whate'er the past.Who dies for Thee and ThineWins Thee at last.Who, through the fiery gates,Enter Thy rest,Greet them as conquerors,--Bravest and best!Every white soul of them,Ransomed and blest,--Wear them as living gems,Bear them as living flames,High on Thy br...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
The Sanctuary: A Dramatic Sketch.
In this wise the Duke of Gloucester took upon himself the order and governance of the young King, whom, with much honour and humble reverence, he conveyed towards London. But the tidings of this matter came hastily to the Queen, a little before the midnight following; and that, in secret wise, her son was taken, her brother and other friends arrested, and sent no man wist whither, to be done with God wot what. With which tidings the Queen, with great heaviness, bewailed her child's reign, her friend's mischance, and her own misfortune, damning the time that ever she dissuaded the gathering of powers about the King; got herself, in all haste possible, with her young son and her daughter, out of the palace of Westminster, in which they then lay, into the Sanctuary; lodging herself and company there in the Abbott's place. - Speed's "History ...
William Lisle Bowles
On A Picture Of Seneca Dying In A Bath, By Jordain
While cruel Nero only drainsThe moral Spaniard's ebbing veins,By study worn, and slack with age,How dull, how thoughtless is his rage!Heighten'd revenge he should have took,He should have burnt his tutor's book;And long have reign's supreme in vice;One noble wretch can only rise;'Tis he whose fury shall defaceThe Stoic's Image in this piece,For, while unhurt, divine Jordain,Thy work and Seneca's remain,He still has body, still has soul,And lives and speaks restored and whole.
Matthew Prior
Z---------'s Dream
I dreamt last night; and in that dreamMy boyhood's heart was mine again;These latter years did nothing seemWith all their mingled joy and pain,Their thousand deeds of good and ill,Their hopes which time did not fulfil,Their glorious moments of success,Their love that closed in bitterness,Their hate that grew with growing strength,Their darling projects, dropped at length,And higher aims that still prevail,For I must perish ere they fail,That crowning object of my life,The end of all my toil and strife,Source of my virtues and my crimes,For which I've toiled and striven in vain,But, if I fail a thousand times,Still I will toil and strive again:Yet even this was then forgot;My present heart and soul were not:All the rough ...
Anne Bronte
Burial-Song For Sumner.
Now the last wreath of snow That melts, in mist exhalesWhite aspiration, and our deep-voiced galesIn chorus chant the measured march of spring, Whom griefs of life and death Are burdening! Slow, slow - With half-held breath -Tread slow, O mourners, that all men may know What hero here lies low! O music, sweep From some deep cave, and bearTo us that gasp in this so meagre air Sweet ministeringsAnd consolations of contorted sound, With agonies profoundOf nobly warring and enduring chords That lie, close-bound,Unstirred as yet 'neath thy wide, wakening wings;So that our hearts break not in broken words. O music, that hast power...
George Parsons Lathrop
Destruction
The Fiend is at my side without a rest;He swirls around me like a subtle breeze;I swallow him, and burning fills my breast,And calls me to desire's shameful needs.Knowing my love of Art, he may selectA woman's form - most perfect, most corruptAnd under sanctimonious pretextBring to my lips the potion of her lust.Thus does he lead me, far from sight of God,Broken and gasping, out into the broadAnd wasted plains of Ennui, deep and still,Then throws before my staring eyes some gownsAnd bloody garments stained by open wounds,And dripping engines of Destruction's will!
Sonnets Upon The Punishment Of Death - In Series, 1839 - XIV - Apology
The formal World relaxes her cold chainFor One who speaks in numbers; ampler scopeHis utterance finds; and, conscious of the gain,Imagination works with bolder hopeThe cause of grateful reason to sustain;And, serving Truth, the heart more strongly beatsAgainst all barriers which his labour meetsIn lofty place, or humble Life's domain.Enough; before us lay a painful road,And guidance have I sought in duteous loveFrom Wisdom's heavenly Father. Hence hath flowedPatience, with trust that, whatsoe'er the wayEach takes in this high matter, all may moveCheered with the prospect of a brighter day.
The Solitary.
1.Dar'st thou amid the varied multitudeTo live alone, an isolated thing?To see the busy beings round thee spring,And care for none; in thy calm solitude,A flower that scarce breathes in the desert rudeTo Zephyr's passing wing?2.Not the swart Pariah in some Indian grove,Lone, lean, and hunted by his brother's hate,Hath drunk so deep the cup of bitter fateAs that poor wretch who cannot, cannot love:He bears a load which nothing can remove,A killing, withering weight.3.He smiles - 'tis sorrow's deadliest mockery;He speaks - the cold words flow not from his soul;He acts like others, drains the genial bowl, -Yet, yet he longs - although he fears - to die;He pants to reach what yet he seems to fly,Dull life's extre...
A Commonplace Day
The day is turning ghost,And scuttles from the kalendar in fits and furtively,To join the anonymous hostOf those that throng oblivion; ceding his place, maybe,To one of like degree.I part the fire-gnawed logs,Rake forth the embers, spoil the busy flames, and lay the endsUpon the shining dogs;Further and further from the nooks the twilight's stride extends,And beamless black impends.Nothing of tiniest worthHave I wrought, pondered, planned; no one thing asking blame or praise,Since the pale corpse-like birthOf this diurnal unit, bearing blanks in all its rays -Dullest of dull-hued Days!Wanly upon the panesThe rain slides as have slid since morn my colourless thoughts; and yetHere, while Day's presence wanes,And over...
Thomas Hardy
O Living Always - Always Dying
O living always - always dying!O the burials of me, past and present!O me, while I stride ahead, material, visible, imperious as ever!O me, what I was for years, now dead, (I lament not - I am content;)O to disengage myself from those corpses of me, which I turn and look at, where I cast them!To pass on, (O living! always living!) and leave the corpses behind!
Walt Whitman
Despondency.
Slow figures in some live remorseless frieze,The approaching days escapeless and unguessed,With mask and shroud impenetrably dressed;Time, whose inexorable destiniesBear down upon us like impending seas;And the huge presence of this world, at bestA sightless giant wandering without rest,Agèd and mad with many miseries.The weight and measure of these things who knows?Resting at times beside life's thought-swept stream,Sobered and stunned with unexpected blows,We scarcely hear the uproar; life doth seem,Save for the certain nearness of its woes,Vain and phantasmal as a sick man's dream.
Archibald Lampman
Leaves Have Their Time To Fall.
FELICIA HEMANS.Leaves have their time to fall,And flowers to wither at the North-wind's breath,And stars to set: but all,Thou hast all seasons for thine own, O Death!Day is for mortal care,Eve for glad meetings at the joyous hearth,Night for the dreams of sleep, the voice of prayer,But all for thee, thou mightiest of the earth!The banquet has its hour,The feverish hour of mirth and song and wine:There comes a day for grief's overwhelming shower,A time for softer tears: but all are thine.Youth and the opening roseMay look like things too glorious for decay,And smile at thee! - but thou art not of thoseThat wait the ripen'd bloom to seize their prey!"FRONDES EST UBI DECIDANT."
Charles Stuart Calverley
When The Dark Comes
When the dark comes,Is this the end? I pray,No answer from the night,And then once more the day.I take the world againUpon my neck and goPace with the serious hours.Since fate will have it so,Begone dead man, unclaspYour hands from round my heart,I and my burden pass,You and your peace depart.
Dora Sigerson Shorter