There was a day when death to me meant tears, And tearful takings-leave that had to be, And awed embarkings on an unshored sea, And sudden disarrangement of the years. But now I know that nothing interferes With the fixed forces when a tired man dies; That death is only answerings and replies, The chiming of a bell which no one hears, The casual slanting of a half-spent sun, The soft recessional of noise and coil, The coveted something time nor age can spoil; I know it is a fabric finely spun Between the stars and dark; to seize and keep, Such glad romances as we read in sleep. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FABLES: 1ST SER. 5. THE WILD BOAR AND THE RAM by JOHN GAY CATAWBA WINE by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW SANDALPHON by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW TO JOHN KEATS; SONNET by AMY LOWELL ON CHLORIS WALKING IN THE SNOW by WILLIAM STRODE PSALM 121 by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE SONG, FR. A VISION OF GIORGIONE: GEMMA'S SONG ON THE WAY by GORDON BOTTOMLEY |