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Collected poems

By Austin Dobson: Ninth edition
  

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150

THE FORGOTTEN GRAVE

A SKETCH IN A CEMETERY

Out from the City's dust and roar,
You wandered through the open door;
Paused at a plaything pail and spade
Across a tiny hillock laid;
Then noted on your dexter side
Some moneyed mourner's “love or pride,”
“Thus much alone we know—Metella died,
The wealthiest Roman's wife: Behold his love or pride!”

Childe Harold, iv. 103.


And so,—beyond a hawthorn-tree,
Showering its rain of rosy bloom
Alike on low and lofty tomb,—
You came upon it—suddenly.
How strange! The very grasses' growth
Around it seemed forlorn and loath;
The very ivy seemed to turn
Askance that wreathed the neighbour urn.
The slab had sunk; the head declined,
And left the rails a wreck behind.
No name; you traced a “6,”—a “7,”
Part of “affliction” and of “Heaven”
And then, in letters sharp and clear,
You read—O Irony austere!—
“Tho' lost to Sight, to Mem'ry dear.’