SINCE we can die but once, what matters it If rope or garter, poison, pistol, sword, Slow-wasting sickness, or the sudden burst Of valve arterial in the noble parts, Curtail the miseries of human life? Though varied is the cause, the effect's the same: All to one common dissolution tends. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EPISTLE IN FORM OF A BALLAD TO HIS FRIENDS by FRANCOIS VILLON LWONESOMENESS by WILLIAM BARNES SONGS FOR THE PEOPLE by FRANCES ELLEN WATKINS HARPER THE WILLOWS by FRANCIS BRET HARTE SONNET: 9. TO THE RIVER LODON by THOMAS WARTON THE YOUNGER WASHINGTON'S MONUMENT, FEBRUARY, 1885 by WALT WHITMAN SEVEN SAD SONNETS: 2. THE OTHER ONE COMES TO HER by MARY REYNOLDS ALDIS |