[To a young English lady in the Hospital of the Wounded at Carlsruhe, Sept. 1870.] What does the dim gaze of the dying find To waken dream or memory, seeing you? In your sweet eyes what other eyes are blue, And in your hair what gold hair on the wind Floats of the days gone almost out of mind? In deep green valleys of the Fatherland He may remember girls with locks like thine- May dream how, where the waiting angels stand, Some lost love's eyes are dim before they shine With welcome:-so past homes, or homes to be, He sees a moment, ere, a moment blind, He crosses death's inhospitable sea, And with brief passage of those barren lands Comes to the home that is not made with hands. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE OLD VICARAGE, GRANTCHESTER by RUPERT BROOKE SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGUESE: 13 by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING UNDER HOUSE ARREST IN WINDSOR by HENRY HOWARD DEATH STANDS ABOVE ME by WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR PRAYER OF COLUMBUS by WALT WHITMAN TO A FRIEND by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD |