The poems of Madison Cawein | ||
406
DEAD AND GONE
Can you tell me how he rests,
Flowers, growing o'er him there?
His a right warm heart, my sweets,—
So, cover it with care.
Flowers, growing o'er him there?
His a right warm heart, my sweets,—
So, cover it with care.
Can you tell me how he lies
Such nights out in the cold,
O cricket, with your plaintive call,
O glow-worm, with your gold?
Such nights out in the cold,
O cricket, with your plaintive call,
O glow-worm, with your gold?
If my eyes are sorrowful,
Well may they weep, I trow,—
Since his dead eyes gazed into them,
They have been sad enow.
Well may they weep, I trow,—
Since his dead eyes gazed into them,
They have been sad enow.
If my heart make moan and ache,
Well may it break, I'm sure—
For his dead love is more, ah me!
More than it can endure.
Well may it break, I'm sure—
For his dead love is more, ah me!
More than it can endure.
The poems of Madison Cawein | ||