Again, my soul, sustain the mournful page! Is there no difference? none of place? of age? How the words tremble, how the lines unite! What dim confusion floats before my sight! Thrice happy strangers, to whose roving eyes Unwet with tears these public columns rise! Whate'er the changeful world contains of new, These are events the least observed by you. O Lambe, my early guide, my guardian friend, Must thus our pleasures, thus our prospects end! When the fond mother claspt her fever'd child, Death hail'd the omen, waved his dart, and smiled, Nor unobserv'd his lengthen'd wings o'erspread With deeper darkness each devoted head. She knows his silent footsteps; they have past Two other babes; two more have breath'd their last. What now avails thee, what avail'd thee then, To shine in science o'er the sons of men! Each varying plant, each tortuous root, to know, How latent pests from lucid waters flow, All the deep bosom of the air contains, Fire's parent strength and earth's prolific veins. The last and hardest lesson teaches this, Frail is our knowledge, frailer is our bliss. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...IN ANSWER TO MR. POPE by ANNE FINCH THE PHANTOM SHIP by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW THE LAIRD O' COCKPEN by CAROLINA OLIPHANT NAIRNE THERMOPYLAE by SIMONIDES OF CEOS THE DEUK'S DANG O'ER MY DADDIE by ROBERT BURNS THE SALLE MONTESQUIEU; A PARISIAN REMINISCENCE by WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 4. THE WANDERING PSYCHE by EDWARD CARPENTER |