HIS verse was carved in ivory forms, undying As those that deck the marble Phidian frieze. Over his plaintive hearse to-night is flying A phantom genius from the Cyclades. It hovers till our idle rites be over; And then will bear him in its arms away To islands cinctured by the sun, their lover, And spicy woodlands thrilled with fiery day. There his dark hours of toil shall drop, forgotten; There all he loved, simple and calm and grand -- All the white creatures by his Muse begotten -- Shall cluster round him in a stately band. Then shall he smile, appeased by sovereign beauty, Contented that he strove and waited long, Since in those worlds where loveliness is duty His bronze and marble leap to life and song. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TWO OF A TRADE by SAMUEL WILLOUGHBY DUFFIELD LINES TO MR. WYNCH ON HIS FORTH-FIFTH BIRTHDAY by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD IN THE STILLNESS O' THE NIGHT by WILLIAM BARNES POSTHUMOUS REMORSE by CHARLES BAUDELAIRE THE RANGE OF BEAUTY by HARRY RANDOLPH BLYTHE TO E. M. O. by THOMAS EDWARD BROWN SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGUESE: 42 by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING |