Saint, did I say? with your remembered faces, Dear men and women, whom I sought and slew! Ah when we mingle in the heavenly places How will I weep to Stephen and to you! Oh for the strain that rang to our reviling Still, when the bruised limbs sank upon the sod, Oh for the eyes that looked their last in smiling, Last on this world here, but their first on God! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...MATRES DOLOROSAE by ROBERT SEYMOUR BRIDGES NATIONALITY by THOMAS OSBORNE DAVIS PAST AND PRESENT by THOMAS HOOD SONNETS TO LAURA IN LIFE: 131 by PETRARCH MOLLY PITCHER [JUNE 28, 1778] by LAURA ELIZABETH HOWE RICHARDS THE FARMER'S WIFE by BERTON BRALEY THE APPEAL TO HAROLD by HENRY CUYLER BUNNER HARRY CAREY'S REPLY TO THE LIBELLING GENTRY, ANGRY AT HIS WELFARE by HENRY CAREY (1687-1743) TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 4. ONE AT A TIME by EDWARD CARPENTER |