GRIEF there will be, and may, When King Apollo's bay Is cut midwise; Grief that a song is stilled, Grief for the unfulfilled Singer that dies. Not so we mourn thee now, Not so we grieve that thou, MASTER, art passed, Since thou thy song didst raise, Through the full round of days, E'en to the last. Grief there may be, and will, When that the singer still Sinks in the song; When that the winged rhyme Fails of the promised prime, Ruined and wrong. Not thus we mourn thee -- we -- Not thus we grieve for thee, MASTER and Friend; Since, like a clearing flame, Clearer thy pure song came E'en to the end. Nay -- nor for thee we grieve E'en as for those that leave Life without name; Lost as the stars that set, Empty of men's regret, Empty of fame. Rather we count thee one Who, when his race is run, Layeth him down, Calm -- through all coming days, Filled with a nation's praise, Filled with renown. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WAR VERSE (1914) by EZRA POUND FROST AT MIDNIGHT by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE THE CHURCH FLOORE by GEORGE HERBERT TO MY GRANDMOTHER; SUGGESTED BY A PICTURE BY MR. ROMNEY by FREDERICK LOCKER-LAMPSON TO QUILCA; A COUNTRY HOUSE IN NO GOOD REPAIR by JONATHAN SWIFT CLIO, NINE ECLOGUES IN HONOUR OF NINE VIRTUES: 6. OF PATIENCE by WILLIAM BASSE |