For Beatrice a red rose, and a white For thee,and for my wife a violet fair. Let petals of such flowers caress the air Above my grave, when summer suns shine bright. Red for the day,the snowy for the night, The purple for the eve or early morn: By tender hands let such three plants be borne Towards the green hillock where in still delight The poet sleeps, life's mantle off him torn, Waiting the resurrection and its might. Earth had for him not much besides its scorn: Love found his soul, then left that soul forlorn: But death hath rapture! Where in grievous plight He sowed, behold the interminable corn! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WAR VERSE (1914) by EZRA POUND LETTERS TO DEAD IMAGISTS by CARL SANDBURG NO PLATONIQUE LOVE by WILLIAM CARTWRIGHT MARSYAS by CHARLES GEORGE DOUGLAS ROBERTS THE PLEASURES OF IMAGINATION; A POEM. ENLARGED VERSION: BOOK 3 by MARK AKENSIDE THE LAY OF ST. CUTHBERT; OR THE DEVIL'S DINNER-PARTY by RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM IN MEMORIAM, A.H. by MAURICE BARING |