THEY will not be so long from dawn to dark, The few, -- the golden-few days that remain! They will not see the red rose laugh again, And in their morning skies will be no lark. Hope will not run, a wild-fire, from the spark The fervid Hours may scatter in their train. They will not be so rich in joy or pain; But no despair of theirs shall loom so stark! The few, the priceless-few days that remain, Ere I upon the unknown Deep embark, I bend to them, and to their speech I hark -- The wild bright days that were they can explain! Yet there be those who pity when they mark How I do prize the few days that remain! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...GO DOWN DEATH; A FUNERAL SERMON by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON EPITAPH ON ELIZABETH, L.H. by BEN JONSON HYMN TO CONTENT by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD SONNET TO A FRIEND by BERNARD BARTON THE FUNERAL OF ANTONIO GIANNO by STIRLING BOWEN TO CAROLINE (4) by GEORGE GORDON BYRON EPITAPH ON TOMBSTONE ERECTED OVER MARQUIS OF ANGLESEA'S LEG by GEORGE CANNING CRUCIFIXUS PRO NOBIS: 2. CHRIST IN THE GARDEN by PATRICK CAREY |