Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THOMAS, by EBENEZER ELLIOTT Poet's Biography First Line: Thou art not dead, my son! My son! Last Line: "the tears of parting blind me!" Alternate Author Name(s): Corn-law Rhymer; Elliot, Ebenezer Subject(s): Death - Children; Death - Babies | ||||||||
THOU art not dead, my son! my son! But God hath hence removed thee: Thou canst not die, my buried boy, While lives the sire who loved thee. How canst thou die, while weeps for thee The broken heart that bore thee; And e'en the thought that thou art not Can to her soul restore thee? Will grief forget thy willingness To run before thy duty? The love of all the good and true, That fill'd thine eyes with beauty? Thy pitying grace, thy dear request, When others had offended, That made thee look as angels look, When great good deeds are ended? The strength with which thy soul sustain'd Thy woes and daily wasting? Thy prayer, to stay with us, when sure That thou from us wast hasting? And that last smile, which seem'd to say -- "Why cannot ye restore me?" Thy look'd farewell is in my heart, And brings thee still before me. What though the change, the fearful change, From thought, which left thee never, To unremembering ice and clay, Proclaim thee gone for ever? Thy half-closed lids, thy upturn'd eyes, Thy still and lifeless tresses; Thy marble lip, which moves no more, Yet more than grief expresses; The silence of thy coffin'd snow, By awed remembrance cherish'd; These dwell with me, like gather'd flowers, That in their April perish'd. Thou art not gone, thou canst not go, My bud, my blasted blossom! The pale rose of thy faded face Still withers in my bosom. O Mystery of Mysteries, That took'st my poor boy from me! What art thou, Death? all-dreaded Death! If weakness can o'ercome thee? We hear thee not! we see thee not, E'en when thy arrows wound us; But, viewless, printless, echoless, Thy steps are ever round us. Though more than life a mystery Art thou, the undeceiver, Amid thy trembling worshippers Thou seest no true believer. No! -- but for life, and more than life, No fearful search could find thee: Tremendous shadow! who is He That ever stands behind thee? The Power who bids the worm deny The beam that o'er her blazes, And veils from us the holier light On which the seraph gazes, Where burns the throne of Him, whose name The sunbeams here write faintly; And where my child a stranger stands Amid the blest and saintly, And sobs aloud -- while in his eyes The tears, o'erflowing, gather -- "They come not yet! -- until they come, Heaven is not Heaven, my father! Why come they not? why comes not she From whom thy will removes me? Oh, does she love me -- love me still? I know my mother loves me! Then send her soon! and with her send The brethren of my bosom! My sisters too! Lord, let them all Bloom round the parted blossom! The only pang I could not bear Was leaving them behind me: I cannot bear it. Even in heaven The tears of parting blind me!" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LOST CHILDREN by RANDALL JARRELL THE MOURNER by LOUISE MOREY BOWMAN MELANCHOLY; AN ODE by WILLIAM BROOME SISTERS IN ARMS by AUDRE LORDE A BOTANICAL TROPE by WILLIAM MEREDITH FOR MOHAMMED ZEID OF GAZA, AGE 15 by NAOMI SHIHAB NYE A POET'S EPITAPH by EBENEZER ELLIOTT |
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