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The Death Of The Duke Of Clarence And Avondale
To the Mourners.The bridal garland falls upon the bier,The shadow of a crown, that oer him hung,Has vanishd in the shadow cast by Death.So princely, tender, truthful, reverent, pureMourn! That a world-wide Empire mourns with you,That all the Thrones are clouded by your loss,Were slender solace. Yet be comforted;For if this earth be ruled by Perfect Love,Then, after his brief range of blameless days,The toll of funeral in an Angel earSounds happier than the merriest marriage-bell.The face of Death is toward the Sun of Life,His shadow darkens earth: his truer nameIs Onward, no discordance in the rollAnd march of that Eternal HarmonyWhereto the worlds beat time, tho faintly heardUntil the great Hereafter. Mourn in hope!
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Dying Hymn.
The hour-glass speeds its final sands, In splendor sinks the golden sun, So men must yield to death's demands When human life its course has run. We view the ruins of the past, We stand surrounded by decay, Our transient hours are speeding fast And, e'er we think, have passed away. Weep not, nor mourn with idle tearThat hour, inevitable and sure; We move, our sojourn finished here, To nobler realms which shall endure.
Alfred Castner King
The Dream
Thou scarest me with dreams. -JOB.When Night's last hours, like haunting spirits, creepWith listening terrors round the couch of sleep,And Midnight, brooding in its deepest dye,Seizes on Fear with dismal sympathy,"I dreamed a dream" something akin to fate,Which Superstition's blackest thoughts create--Something half natural to the grave that seems,Which Death's long trance of slumber haply dreams;A dream of staggering horrors and of dread,Whose shadows fled not when the vision fled,But clung to Memory with their gloomy view,Till Doubt and Fancy half believed it true.That time was come, or seem'd as it was come,When Death no longer makes the grave his home;When waking spirits leave their earthly restTo mix for ever with the ...
John Clare
Apparent Death.
WEEP, maiden, weep here o'er the tomb of Love;He died of nothing by mere chance was slain.But is he really dead? oh, that I cannot prove:A nothing, a mere chance, oft gives him life again.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Death and Birth
Death and birth should dwell not near together:Wealth keeps house not, even for shame, with dearth:Fate doth ill to link in one brief tetherDeath and birth.Harsh the yoke that binds them, strange the girthSeems that girds them each with each: yet whetherDeath be best, who knows, or life on earth?Ill the rose-red and the sable featherBlend in one crown's plume, as grief with mirth:Ill met still are warm and wintry weather,Death and birth.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
In Memoriam 82: I Wage Not Any Feud With Death
I wage not any feud with DeathFor changes wrought on form and face;No lower life that earth's embraceMay breed with him, can fright my faith.Eternal process moving on,From state to state the spirit walks;And these are but the shatter'd stalks,Or ruin'd chrysalis of one.Nor blame I Death, because he bareThe use of virtue out of earth:I know transplanted human worthWill bloom to profit, otherwhere.For this alone on Death I wreakThe wrath that garners in my heart;He put our lives so far apartWe cannot hear each other speak.
Death
When I am dead a few poor souls shall grieveAs I grieved for my brother long ago.Scarce did my eyes grow dim,I had forgotten him;I was far-off hearing the spring winds blow,And many summers burnedWhen, though still reeling with my eyes aflame,I heard that faded nameWhispered one Spring amid the hurrying worldFrom which, years gone, he turned.I looked up at my windows and I sawThe trees, thin spectres sucked forth by the moon.The air was very stillAbove a distant hill;It was the hour of night's full silver moon.'O are thou there my brother?' my soul cried;And all the pale stars down bright rivers wept,As my heart sadly creptAbout the empty hills, bathed in that lightThat lapped him when he died.Ah! it was cold...
W.J. Turner
Sonnets Upon The Punishment Of Death - In Series, 1839 III - The Roman Consul Doomed His Sons To Die
The Roman Consul doomed his sons to dieWho had betrayed their country. The stern wordAfforded (may it through all time afford)A theme for praise and admiration high.Upon the surface of humanityHe rested not; its depths his mind explored;He felt; but his parental bosom's lordWas Duty, Duty calmed his agony.And some, we know, when they by willful actA single human life have wrongly taken,Pass sentence on themselves, confess the fact,And, to atone for it, with soul unshakenKneel at the feet of Justice, and, for faithBroken with all mankind, solicit death.
William Wordsworth
Closing Chords.
I.Death's Eloquence.When I shall goInto the narrow home that leavesNo room for wringing of the hands and hair,And feel the pressing of the walls which bearThe heavy sod upon my heart that grieves,(As the weird earth rolls on),Then I shall knowWhat is the power of destiny. But still,Still while my life, however sad, be mine,I war with memory, striving to divinePhantom to-morrows, to outrun the past;For yet the tears of final, absolute illAnd ruinous knowledge of my fate I shun.Even as the frail, instinctive weedTries, through unending shade, to reach at lastA shining, mellowing, rapture-giving sun;So in the deed of breathing joy's warm breath,Fain to succeed,I, too, in colorless longings, hope til...
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
De Profundis.
Down in the deeps of dark despair and woe; -Of Death expectant; - Hope I put aside;Counting the heartbeats, slowly, yet more slow, -Marking the lazy ebb of life's last tide.Sweet Resignation, with her opiate breath,Spread a light veil, oblivious, o'er the past,And all unwilling handmaid to remorseless Death,Shut out the pain of life's great scene, - the last.When, lo! from out the mist a slender formTook shape and forward pressed and two bright eyesShone as two stars that gleam athwart the storm,Grandly serene, amid the cloud-fleck'd skies."Not yet," she said, "there are some sands to run,Ere he has reached life's limit, and no grainShall lie unused. Then, when his fight is done,Pronounce the verdict, - be it loss or gain."I felt he...
John Hartley
To The Lord Chancellor.
1.Thy country's curse is on thee, darkest crestOf that foul, knotted, many-headed wormWhich rends our Mother's bosom - Priestly Pest!Masked Resurrection of a buried Form!2.Thy country's curse is on thee! Justice sold,Truth trampled, Nature's landmarks overthrown,And heaps of fraud-accumulated gold,Plead, loud as thunder, at Destruction's throne.3.And whilst that sure slow Angel which aye standsWatching the beck of MutabilityDelays to execute her high commands,And, though a nation weeps, spares thine and thee,4.Oh, let a father's curse be on thy soul,And let a daughter's hope be on thy tomb;Be both, on thy gray head, a leaden cowlTo weigh thee down to thine approaching doom.5.I curse thee by ...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LV.
Or hai fatto l' estremo di tua possa.DEATH MAY DEPRIVE HIM OF THE SIGHT OF HER BEAUTIES, BUT NOT OF THE MEMORY OF HER VIRTUES. Now hast thou shown, fell Death! thine utmost might.Through Love's bright realm hast want and darkness spread,Hast now cropp'd beauty's flower, its heavenly lightQuench'd, and enclosed in the grave's narrow bed;Now hast thou life despoil'd of all delight,Its ornament and sovereign honour shed:But fame and worth it is not thine to blight;These mock thy power, and sleep not with the dead.Be thine the mortal part; heaven holds the best,And, glorying in its brightness, brighter glows,While memory still records the great and good.O thou, in thine high triumph, angel blest!Let thy heart yield to pity of my woe...
Francesco Petrarca
Lines Written During The Castlereagh Administration.
1.Corpses are cold in the tomb;Stones on the pavement are dumb;Abortions are dead in the womb,And their mothers look pale - like the death-white shoreOf Albion, free no more.2.Her sons are as stones in the way -They are masses of senseless clay -They are trodden, and move not away, -The abortion with which SHE travailethIs Liberty, smitten to death.3.Then trample and dance, thou Oppressor!For thy victim is no redresser;Thou art sole lord and possessorOf her corpses, and clods, and abortions - they paveThy path to the grave.4.Hearest thou the festival dinOf Death, and Destruction, and Sin,And Wealth crying "Havoc!" within?'Tis the bacchanal triumph that makes Truth dumb,Thine Epithalami...
An Ode - Inscribed To The Memory Of The Hon. Colonel George Villiers
Say, dearest Villiers, poor departed friend,(Since fleeting life thus suddenly must end)Say, what did all thy busy hopes avail,That anxious thou from pole to pole didst sail,Ere on thy chin the springing beard beganTo spread a doubtful down and promise man?What profited thy thoughts, and toils, and caresIn vigour more confirmed and riper years,To wake ere morning-dawn to loud alarms,And march till close of night in heavy arms,To scorn the summer's suns and winter's snows,And search through every clime thy country's foes?That thou might'st Fortune to thy side engage,That gentle Peace might quell Bellona's rage,And Anna's bounty crown her soldier's hoary age?In vain we think that free-will'd man has powerTo hasten or protract th' appointed ...
Matthew Prior
Judgment Day
When through our bodies our two spirits burnEscaping, and no more our true eyes turnOutwards, and no more hands to fond hands yearn;Then over those poor grassy heaps we'll meetOne morning, tasting still the morning's sweet,Sensible still of light, dark, rain, cold, heat;And see 'neath the green dust that dust of grayWhich was our useless bodies laid away,Mocked still with menace of a Judgment Day.We then that waiting dust at last will call,Each to the other's,--"Rise up at last, O smallAshes that first-love held loveliest of all!"'Tis Judgment Day, arise!" And they will arise,The dust will lift, and spine, ribs, neck, head, kneesAt the sound remember their old unities,And stand there, yours with mine, as once they stood<...
John Frederick Freeman
Poor Devil!
Well, I was tired of life; the silly folk,The tiresome noises, all the common thingsI loved once, crushed me with an iron yoke.I longed for the cool quiet and the dark,Under the common sod where louts and kingsLie down, serene, unheeding, careless, stark,Never to rise or move or feel again,Filled with the ecstasy of being dead....I put the shining pistol to my headAnd pulled the trigger hard -- I felt no pain,No pain at all; the pistol had missed fireI thought; then, looking at the floor, I sawMy huddled body lying there -- and aweSwept over me. I trembled -- and looked up.About me was -- not that, my heart's desire,That small and dark abode of death and peace --But all from which I sought a vain release!The sky, the people and the ...
Stephen Vincent Benét
Life
Hearken, O dear, now strikes the hour we die;We, who in our strange kissHave proved a dream the world's realities,Turned each from other's darkness with a sigh,Need heed no more of life, waste no more breathOn any other journey, but of death.And yet: Oh, know we wellHow each of us must prove Love's infidel;Still out of ecstasy turn trembling backTo earth's same empty trackOf leaden day by day, and hour by hour, and beOf all things lovely the cold mortuary.
Walter De La Mare
Part Of An Irregular Fragment, Found In A Dark Passage Of The Tower.
ADVERTISEMENT.The following Poem is formed on a very singular and sublime idea. A young gentleman, possessed of an uncommon genius for drawing, on visiting the Tower of London, passing one door of a singular construction, asked what apartment it led to, and expressed a desire to have it opened. The person who shewed the place shook his head, and answered, "Heaven knows what is within that door - it has been shut for ages." - This answer made small impression on the other hearers; but a very deep one on the imagination of this youth. Gracious Heaven! an apartment shut up for ages - and in the Tower! "Ye Towers of Julius! London's lasting shame, By many a foul and midnight murder fed."Genius builds on a slight foundation, and rears beautiful structures on "the baseless fabric of a vision." The...
Helen Maria Williams