Days and Hours By Frederick Tennyson |
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TO SORROW. |
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TO SORROW.
I
O Sorrow, whose inviolable soulThe God of all things made his dwelling-place,
Sorrow, whom all must look on face to face
Between their mortal barriers and the goal,
Whose is the infant's plaint, the funeral knell,
Thy voice is better than a marriage bell.
II
Better it is to sit awhile with thee,And listen to thy melancholy shell,
Than sound of festal harpings, and the swell
Of choral triumphs waxing like a sea;
Better it is to hear thy still small voice
Than Pæans thunder'd forth when Kings rejoice!
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III
O holy Sorrow, whom the iron FatesAlone on earth pass by without a frown,
When I behold how rebel years discrown
Imperial Youth; how lordly Pleasure waits
To pass beneath Affiction's dungeon door;
I'll sit with thee, though thou be old and poor.
IV
How Hope's blue eyes grow dim and blind with tears;How Love unplumed, and crazy Mirth forlorn
Halt after winged Time pursued by Scorn;
How Vanity the last of Youth's frail peers
Arm'd with a crooked crutch, and wither'd wreath
Goes with Despair to fight the strength of Death;
V
How Glory hears the echoes of his nameDie down the wind, that wafteth swiftly on
The thundering sound of victories newly won,
And triumphs louder in the throat of Fame;
Sorrow, in thy deep bower I'll sit with thee,
And hear thee sing of Immortality.
Days and Hours | ||