A CHURCH-YARDaye, but Spring had shaken down Her roses like a shower of sweet snow; There was a bird where'er a bird could sing, There was a rose where'er a rose could grow, And all the long, pale grass smelt sweet of Spring. The trees had leaves half shut, like dreams half dreamed, And here a bird and there a bud was set; A linnet sang so sweetly overhead, So glad and sweet, 'twas easy to forget That underneath the roses lay the dead. Two maidens stood there in the radiant noon: One plucked the roses, fair as they were frail, And mingled with the birds her happy breath; The other pondered, thoughtful-browed and pale, Upon that mystery which men call Death. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MANOKWARI, IRIAN JAYA; IN MEMORIAM, ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE by KAREN SWENSON THE MENTAL TRAVELLER by WILLIAM BLAKE HE HAD HIS DREAM by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR CHRIST IN FLANDERS by LUCY WHITMELL SONG OF SEID NIMETOLLAH OF KUHISTAN by AMIR NURU'D-DIN NI'MATU'LLAH SONG by FRANCOIS JOACHIM DE PIERRE DE BERNIS THE IDLE SINGER: REACTION by QUINTIN BONE |