SWEET names, the rosary of my evening prayer, Told on my lips like kisses of good-night To friends who go a little from my sight, And some through distant years shine clear and fair! -- So this dear burden that I daily bear Mighty God taketh, and doth loose me quite; And soft I sink in slumbers pure and light With thoughts of human love and heavenly care; But when I mark how into shadow slips My manhood's prime, and weep fast-passing friends, And heaven's riches making poor my lips, And think how in the dust love's labor ends, Then, where the cluster of my hearth-stone shone, "Bid me not live," I sigh, "till all be gone." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...HIRAM POWERS' GREEK SLAVE by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING CHRISTMAS by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR RED JACKET by FITZ-GREENE HALLECK ON THE DEATH OF SIR THOMAS WYATT by HENRY HOWARD MEETING AGAIN by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON LINES UNDER THE PICTURE OF MISS BURNS by ROBERT BURNS TOWARDS DEMOCRACY: PART 4. I HEAR THY CALL, MYSTERIOUS BEING by EDWARD CARPENTER |