Page:The Unconquered Air, Coates, 1912.djvu/32

 16 Darkness the shadow of the day,

And sleep the door to waking!

And shall we still with tears

Pay tribute sad to one whose soul endears

Even the dark, dark river it hath crossed?

Shall we in grief forget

The sweetness and the glory of our debt,

And that no good, once given, can be lost?

Distant thy dwelling seems,

Poet and patriot!—but, ah, thy dreams

Are living as the flame of sacrifice!

Therefore love's roses now

We lay amidst the laurel for thy brow,

Grateful that souls like thine our earth emparadise.