Page:Landon in Literary Gazette 1829.pdf/5



I cannot muse beside that mound— I cannot dream beneath that shade— Too solemn is the haunted ground Where Death his resting-place has made.

I feel my heart beat but to think Each pulse is bearing life away; I cannot rest upon the grave, And not feel kindred to its clay. There is a name upon the stone— Alas! and can it be the same— The young, the lovely, and the loved?— It is too soon to bear thy name.

Too soon!—oh no, 'tis best to die Ere all of life save breath is fled: Why live when feelings, friends, and hopes, Have long been numbered with the dead?

But thou, thy heart and cheek were bright— No check, no soil had either known; The angel natures of yon sky Will only be to thee thine own.

Thou knew'st no rainbow-hopes that weep Themselves away to deeper shade; Nor Love, whose very happiness Should make the wakening heart afraid.

The green leaves e'en in spring they fall, The tears the stars at midnight weep, The dewy wild-flowers—such as these Are fitting mourners o'er thy sleep.

For human tears are lava-drops, That scorch and wither as they flow; Then let them flow for those who live, And not for those who sleep below.

Oh weep for those whose silver chain Has long been loosed, and yet live on— The doomed to drink of life's dark wave, Whose golden bowl has long been gone!

Ay, weep for those, the wearied, worn, Dragged downward by some earthly tie, By some vain hope, some earthly love, Who loathe to live, yet fear to die. L. E. L.