If I should die, how kind you all would grow! In that strange hour I would not have one foe. There are no words too beautiful to say Of one who goes forevermore away Across that ebbing tide which has no flow. With what new lustre my good deeds would glow! If faults were mine, no one would call them so, Or speak of me in aught but praise that day, If I should die. Ah, friends! before my listening ear lies low, While I can hear and understand, bestow That gentle treatment and fond love, I pray, The lustre of whose late though radiant way Would gild my grave with mocking light, I know, If I should die | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE CANONIZATION by JOHN DONNE THREE GRAINS OF CORN; THE IRISH FAMINE by AMELIA BLANDFORD EDWARDS THE OLD CHURCHYARD OF BONCHURCH by PHILIP BOURKE MARSTON SONNET: 21. TO CYRIACK SKINNER by JOHN MILTON THE RUBAIYAT, 1879 EDITION: 71 by OMAR KHAYYAM ON HIS RETURN FROM SPAIN by THOMAS WYATT MOUNTAIN STORM by FRANCES DAVIS ADAMS |