LONG, long ago, in the sweet Roman spring Through the bright morning air we slowly strolled, And in the blue heaven heard the skylarks sing Above the ruins old -- Beyond the Forum's crumbling grass-grown piles, Through high-walled lanes o'erhung with blossoms white That opened on the far Campagna's miles Of verdure and of light; Till by the grave of Keats we stood, and found A rose some loyal hand had planted there. Making more sacred still that hallowed ground, And that enchanted air. A single rose, whose fading petals drooped, And seemed to wait for us to gather them. So, kneeling on the humble mound, we stooped And plucked it from its stem. One rose, and nothing more. We shared its leaves Between us, as we shared the thoughts of one Called from the fields before his unripe sheaves Could feel the harvest sun. That rose's fragrance is forever fled For us, dear friend -- but not the poet's lay. He is the rose -- deathless among the dead -- Whose perfume lives to-day. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HOME-THOUGHTS, FROM THE SEA by ROBERT BROWNING PALINODE; AUTUMN by JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL THE PHILOSOPHER by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY SONNET: 73 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE MERLIN AND THE GLEAM by ALFRED TENNYSON |