SILENTLY, slowly falls the snow from an ashen sky, Cries, and sounds of life from the city rise no more, No more the hawker's shout and the sound of running wheels, No more the joyous song of love and youth arise. Raucously from the somber spire through the leaden air The hours moan, like sighs of a world removed from time. Wandering birds insistent knock on the glowing panes. My ghostly friends return, and gaze, and call to me. Soon, my dear ones, soonbe still, O dauntless heart Down to the silence I come, in the shadow I will rest. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THISTLE by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS VANQUISHED; ON THE DEATH OF GENERAL GRANT by FRANCIS FISHER BROWNE THE BOOK OF MARTYRS by EMILY DICKINSON STANZAS ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND by REGINALD HEBER ASTROPHEL AND STELLA: 83 by PHILIP SIDNEY PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 43. ALLAH-AL-KARIM by EDWIN ARNOLD SONNET: 8 by RICHARD BARNFIELD |