To where he sleeps,not near the honored dead In the dim aisle of some cathedral grand, But in behind old London's noisy Strand, Where late or soon you hear a hurrying tread One spring-like day my tired feet were led By fond desire, his sacred shrine to view; Finding thereon a bunch of violets blue, I stood awhile with an uncovered head, And heard their-message sweet: "He was not laid Beside his brothers in poetic art; He sleeps alone in his loved Temple's shade, But is embalmed within the human heart" Happy all they who like asylum find Within the warm affections of mankind. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FRAGMENT 113 by HILDA DOOLITTLE THE USE OF FLOWERS by MARY HOWITT SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: SETH COMPTON by EDGAR LEE MASTERS SONG, WRITTEN AT SEA, IN THE FIRST DUTCH WAR, 1665 ... by CHARLES SACKVILLE (1637-1706) A SONG: REVENGE AGAINST CYNTHIA by PHILIP AYRES THE LAY OF THE LEVITE by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN |