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To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXIV.
Spinse amor e dolor ove ir non debbe.REFLECTING THAT LAURA IS IN HEAVEN, HE REPENTS HIS EXCESSIVE GRIEF, AND IS CONSOLED. Sorrow and Love encouraged my poor tongue,Discreet in sadness, where it should not go,To speak of her for whom I burn'd and sung,What, even were it true, 'twere wrong to show.That blessèd saint my miserable stateMight surely soothe, and ease my spirit's strife,Since she in heaven is now domesticateWith Him who ever ruled her heart in life.Wherefore I am contented and consoled,Nor would again in life her form behold;Nay, I prefer to die, and live alone.Fairer than ever to my mental eye,I see her soaring with the angels high,Before our Lord, her maker and my own.MACGREGOR. ...
Francesco Petrarca
Early Adieux
Adieu to kindred hearts and home,To pleasure, joy, and mirth,A fitter foot than mine to roamCould scarcely tread the earth;For they are now so few indeed(Not more than three in all),Who eer will think of me or heedWhat fate may me befall.For I through pleasures paths have runMy headlong goal to win,Nor pleasures snares have cared to shunWhen pleasure sweetened sin.Let those who will their failings mask,To mine I frankly own;But for them pardon will I askOf none, save Heaven alone.From carping friends I turn aside;At foes defiance frown;Yet time may tame my stubborn pride,And break my spirit down.Still, if to error I incline,Truth whispers comfort strong,That never reckless act of mineEer...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Saint Edmond's Eve.
Oh! did you observe the Black Canon pass,And did you observe his frown?He goeth to say the midnight mass,In holy St. Edmond's town.He goeth to sing the burial chaunt,And to lay the wandering sprite,Whose shadowy, restless form doth haunt,The Abbey's drear aisle this night.It saith it will not its wailing cease,'Till that holy man come near,'Till he pour o'er its grave the prayer of peace,And sprinkle the hallowed tear.The Canon's horse is stout and strongThe road is plain and fair,But the Canon slowly wends along,And his brow is gloomed with care.Who is it thus late at the Abbey-gate?Sullen echoes the portal bell,It sounds like the whispering voice of fate,It sounds like a funeral knell.The ...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Face At The Casement
If ever joy leaveAn abiding sting of sorrow,So befell it on the morrow Of that May eve . . . The travelled sun droppedTo the north-west, low and lower,The pony's trot grew slower, And then we stopped. "This cosy house just byI must call at for a minute,A sick man lies within it Who soon will die. "He wished to marry me,So I am bound, when I drive near him,To inquire, if but to cheer him, How he may be." A message was sent in,And wordlessly we waited,Till some one came and stated The bulletin. And that the sufferer said,For her call no words could thank her;As his angel he must rank her Till life's spark fled. Slowly we dro...
Thomas Hardy
From Fleeting Pleasures.
A REQUIEM FOR ONE ALIVE.From fleeting pleasures and abiding cares,From sin's seductions and from Satan's snares,From woes and wrath to penitence and prayers,Veni in pace!Sweet absolution thy sad spirit heal;To godly cares that end in endless weal,To joys man cannot think or speak or feel,Vade in pace!From this world's ways and being led by them,From floods of evil thy youth could not stem,From tents of Kedar to Jerusalem,Veni in pace!Blest be thy worldly loss to thy soul's gain,Blest be the blow that freed thee from thy chain,Blest be the tears that wash thy spirit's stain,Vade in pace!Oh, dead, and yet alive! Oh, lost and found!Salvation's walls now compass thee around,Thy weary feet are se...
Juliana Horatia Ewing
The Past
The debt is paid,The verdict said,The Furies laid,The plague is stayed.All fortunes made;Turn the key and bolt the door,Sweet is death forevermore.Nor haughty hope, nor swart chagrin,Nor murdering hate, can enter in.All is now secure and fast;Not the gods can shake the Past;Flies-to the adamantine doorBolted down forevermore.None can reënter there,--No thief so politic,No Satan with a royal trickSteal in by window, chink, or hole,To bind or unbind, add what lacked,Insert a leaf, or forge a name,New-face or finish what is packed,Alter or mend eternal Fact.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Debtor
So long as my spirit stillIs glad of breathAnd lifts its plumes of prideIn the dark face of death;While I am curious stillOf love and fame,Keeping my heart too highFor the years to tame,How can I quarrel with fateSince I can seeI am a debtor to life,Not life to me?
Sara Teasdale
Archibald Lowell
Archibald Lowell, owner of the Times Lived six months of the year at Sunnyside, His Gothic castle near LeRoy, so named Because no sun was in him, it may be. His wife was much away when on this earth At cures, in travel, fighting psychic ills, Approaching madness, dying nerves. They said Her heart was starved for living with a man So cold and silent. Thirty years she lived Bound to this man, in restless agony, And as she could not free her life from his, Nor keep it living with him, on a day She stuck a gas hose in her mouth and drank Her lungs full of the lethal stuff and died. That was the very day the hunter found Elenor Murray's body near the river. A servant saw this Mrs. Lowell lyi...
Edgar Lee Masters
A Face In The Street.
Poor, withered face, that yet was once so fair, Grown ashen-old in the wild fires of lust - Thy star-like beauty, dimm'd with earthly dust, Yet breathing of a purer native air; -They who whilom, cursed vultures, sought a share Of thy dead womanhood, their greed unjust Have satisfied, have stripped and left thee bare. Still, like a leaf warped by the autumn gust,And driving to the end, thou wrapp'st in flame And perfume all thy hollow-eyed decay,Feigning on those gray cheeks the blush that Shame Took with her when she fled long since away. Ah God! rain fire upon this foul-souled city That gives such death, and spares its men, - for pity!
George Parsons Lathrop
The Funeral.
That short, potential stirThat each can make but once,That bustle so illustrious'T is almost consequence,Is the eclat of death.Oh, thou unknown renownThat not a beggar would accept,Had he the power to spurn!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Written Under An Elegant Drawing Of A Dead Canary Bird,
By Miss A.M. TURNER, Daughter of the Eminent Engraver.Death to the very life! not the closed eye,Not those small paralytic limbs alone,But every feather tells so mournfullyThy fate, and that thy little life has flown.Manhood forbids that I should weep, and yetSadness comes o'er my spirit, and I standGazing intensely, and with mute regret,Turn from the wonder of the artist's hand.Exquisite artist! could I praise thee moreThan by the silent admiration? no!And now I try to praise I must deploreHow feeble is the verse that tells thee so;But thou art gaining for thyself a fameWorthy thyself, thy sex, and thy dear father's name!
Thomas Gent
Lament XVI
Misfortune hath constrained meTo leave the lute and poetry,Nor can I from their easing borrow Sleep for my sorrow.Do I see true, or hath a dreamFlown forth from ivory gates to gleamIn phantom gold, before forsaking Its poor cheat, waking?Oh, mad, mistaken humankind,'Tis easy triumph for the mindWhile yet no ill adventure strikes us And naught mislikes us.In plenty we praise poverty,'Mid pleasures we hold grief to be(And even death, ere it shall stifle Our breath) a trifle.But when the grudging spinner scantsHer thread and fate no surcease grantsFrom grief most deep and need most wearing, Less calm our bearing.Ah, Tully, thou didst flee from RomeWith w...
Jan Kochanowski
In Hospital - XIV - Ave Caeser!
From the winter's grey despair,From the summer's golden languor,Death, the lover of Life,Frees us for ever.Inevitable, silent, unseen,Everywhere always,Shadow by night and as light in the day,Signs she at last to her chosen;And, as she waves them forth,Sorrow and JoyLay by their looks and their voices,Set down their hopes, and are madeOne in the dim Forever.Into the winter's grey delight,Into the summer's golden dream,Holy and high and impartial,Death, the mother of Life,Mingles all men for ever.
William Ernest Henley
To Harriet.
It is not blasphemy to hope that HeavenMore perfectly will give those nameless joysWhich throb within the pulses of the bloodAnd sweeten all that bitterness which EarthInfuses in the heaven-born soul. O thouWhose dear love gleamed upon the gloomy pathWhich this lone spirit travelled, drear and cold,Yet swiftly leading to those awful limitsWhich mark the bounds of Time and of the spaceWhen Time shall be no more; wilt thou not turnThose spirit-beaming eyes and look on me,Until I be assured that Earth is Heaven,And Heaven is Earth? - will not thy glowing cheek,Glowing with soft suffusion, rest on mine,And breathe magnetic sweetness through the frameOf my corporeal nature, through the soulNow knit with these fine fibres? I would giveThe longe...
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - March.
1. THE song birds that come to me night and morn, Fly oft away and vanish if I sleep, Nor to my fowling-net will one return: Is the thing ever ours we cannot keep?-- But their souls go not out into the deep. What matter if with changed song they come back? Old strength nor yet fresh beauty shall they lack. 2. Gloriously wasteful, O my Lord, art thou! Sunset faints after sunset into the night, Splendorously dying from thy window-sill-- For ever. Sad our poverty doth bow Before the riches of thy making might: Sweep from thy space thy systems at thy will-- In thee the sun sets every sunset still. 3.<...
George MacDonald
A Fallen Leaf
When Death has crossed my name from out the rollOf dreaming children serving in this War;And with these earthly eyes I gaze no moreUpon sweet England's grace - perhaps my soulWill visit streets down which I used to strollAt sunset-charmèd dusks, when London's roarLike ebbing surf on some Atlantic shoreWould trance the ear. Then may I hear no tollOf heavy bells to burden all the airWith tuneless grief: for happy will I be! -What place on earth could ever be more fairThan God's own presence? - Mourn not then for me,Nor write, I pray, "He gave" - upon my clod -"His life to England," but "his soul to God."Isle of Sheppey, 1917.
Paul Bewsher
Feelings Of A Noble Biscayan At One Of Those Funerals
Yet, yet, Biscayans! we must meet our FoesWith firmer soul, yet labour to regainOur ancient freedom; else 'twere worse than vainTo gather round the bier these festal shows.A garland fashioned of the pure white roseBecomes not one whose father is a slave:Oh, bear the infant covered to his grave!These venerable mountains now encloseA people sunk in apathy and fear.If this endure, farewell, for us, all good!The awful light of heavenly innocenceWill fail to illuminate the infant's bier;And guilt and shame, from which is no defense,Descend on all that issues from our blood.
William Wordsworth
Lines Upon A Lady Dying Soon After She Had Been Wrecked On The Cornish Coast, Leaving A Little Infant Behind Her.
Sweet stranger! tho' the merc'less stormHere sternly cast thy fainting form,What tho' no kindred hand was nearTo wipe away Affliction's tear,Yet shall thy gentle spirit own,Amidst these sea-girt shores unknown,That Pity pour'd her balmy store,And kindred hands could do no more.Ne'er shall that pang disturb thy rest,That moves the parted mother's breast;The object of thy dying fearShall want no father's fondness here.Oft shall his little lips proclaim,With April-tears, thy treasur'd name;His little hands, when summers bloom,Shall gather flow'rs to deck thy tomb.
John Carr