HONOUR the happy dead with sober praise, Who living would have scorned the fulsome phrase, Meet for the languorous Orient's jewelled ear; -- This was the @3English@1 King, that loved the English ways! A man not too remote, or too august, For other mortal children of the dust To know and to draw near. Born with a nature that demanded joy, He took full draughts of life, nor did the vintage cloy; But when she passed from vision, who so long Had sat aloft -- alone -- On the steep heights of an Imperial throne, Then rose he large and strong, Then spake his voice with new and grander tone, Then, called to rule the State Which he had only served, He saw clear Duty plain, nor from that highway swerved, And, unappalled by his majestic fate, Pretended not to greatness, yet was great. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...DRAW THE SWORD, O REPUBLIC by EDGAR LEE MASTERS THE HERETIC: 2. IRONY by LOUIS UNTERMEYER THE BEST [THING IN THE WORLD] by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING CHILD AND MOTHER by EUGENE FIELD THE HOUSE OF LIFE: 79. THE MONOCHORD by DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI AMORETTI: 19 by EDMUND SPENSER MY ONLY TITLE by WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT |