The Poems of Henry Timrod by Henry Timrod
page 19 of 215 (08%)
page 19 of 215 (08%)
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The land is hushed from shore to shore,
It brooks no feebler song! No other voice can charm our ears, None other soothe our pain; Better these echoes lingering yet, Than any ruder strain. For singing, Fate has given sighs, For music we make moan; Oh, who may touch the harp-strings since That whisper -- "HE IS GONE!" See where he lies -- his last sad home Of all memorial bare, Save for a little heap of leaves The winds have gathered there! One fair frail shell from some far sea Lies lone above his breast, Sad emblem and sole epitaph To mark his place of rest. The sweet winds murmur in its heart A music soft and low, As they would bring their secrets still To him who sleeps below. And lo! one tender, tearful bloom Wins upward through the grass, |
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