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[XLI. A sculptured stone to-day was laid]
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90

[XLI. A sculptured stone to-day was laid]

A sculptured stone to-day was laid,
A sacred cross, above his breast;
And as the masons wrought, I prayed
The heart beneath might lie at rest.
For, turn it as I will, a doubt,
That grieves the spirit, haunts my head,
Lest, haply, this indecent rout
Disturbs the slumber of my dead.
For I would have no harsher noise
Than grasses rustling in the breeze,
Or little birds that sing their joys
Amongst the many-nested trees;
Or the slow river's lulling sound,
Or the low piping of the wind,
To breathe a drowsy song around
The couch whereon he lies reclined.

91

A sound that through the senses steals,
And partly breaks their quiet deep,
Till a half consciousness reveals
The very blessedness of sleep.
And nature, more than kind to me,
Has calmed her voice to my desire;
She gently sighs through herb and tree,
And sinks the pitch-note of her choir.
And I, myself, who, in the hush
Of serious evening, grieve and moan
Beside his grave, without a blush,
Have felt my manhood drop its tone.
All things assuage my troubles sore,
And strive to make my sorrow light;—
Only these fierce hyenas roar
Above him in the coward night.