So many a dream and hope that went and came, So many and sweet, that love thought like to be, Of hours as bright and soft as those for me That made our hearts for song's sweet love the same, Lie now struck dead, that hope seems one with shame. O Death, thy name is Love: we know it, and see The witness: yet for very love's sake we Can hardly bear to mix with thine his name. Philip, how hard it is to bid thee part Thou knowest, if aught thou knowest where now thou art Of us that loved and love thee. None may tell What none but knows -- how hard it is to say The word that seals up sorrow, darkens day, And bids fare forth the soul it bids fare well. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW; IN MEMORIAM by HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON SPRING SONG by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR A SHROPSHIRE LAD: 8 by ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN THE KISS by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR A HOUSE by JOHN COLLINGS SQUIRE AUNTIE'S SKIRTS by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON |