WHO would remember me were I to die, Remember with a pang and yet no pain; Remember as a friend, and feel good-bye Said at each memory as it wakes again? I would not that a single heart should ache That some dear heart will ache is my one grief. Friends, if I have them, I would fondly take With me that best of gifts, a friend's belief. I have believed, and for my faith reaped tares; Believed again, and, losing, was content; A heart perchance touched blindly, unawares, Rewards with friendship faith thus freely spent. Bury the bodyit has served its ends; Mark not the spot, but "On Gallipoli," Let it be said, "he died." Oh, Hearts of Friends, If I am worth it, keep my memory. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...CONTRA MORTEM: THE LEAVES by HAYDEN CARRUTH THE BIRDS OF VIETNAM by HAYDEN CARRUTH WHEN THE SPEED COMES by ROBERT FROST DOWN BY THE CARIB SEA: 1. SUNRISE IN THE TROPICS by JAMES WELDON JOHNSON DOMESDAY BOOK: ALMA BELL TO THE CORONER by EDGAR LEE MASTERS |