Two Thoughts of Death

1.
Her heart that loved me once is rottenness
Now and corruption; and her life is dead
That was to have been one with mine she said.
The earth must lie with such a cruel stress
On her eyes where the white lids used to press;
Foul worms fill up her mouth so sweet and red;
Foul worms are underneath her graceful head.
Yet these, being born of her from nothingness
These worms are certainly flesh of her flesh. —
How is it that the grass is rank and green,
And the dew dropping rose is brave and fresh
Above what was so sweeter far than they?
Even as her beauty hath passed quite away
Their's too shall be as tho' it had not been.
2.

So I said underneath the dusky trees:
But because I still loved her memory
I stooped to pluck a pale anemone
And lo! my hand lighted upon heartsease
Not fully blown: while with new life from these
Fluttered a starry moth that rapidly
Rose toward the sun: sunlighted flashed on me
Its wings that seemed to throb like heart pulses.
Far far away it flew far out of sight,
From earth and flowers of earth it passed away
As tho' it flew straight up into the light.
Then my heart answered me: Thou fool to say
That she is dead whose night is turned to day,
And whose day shall no more turn back to night.
Translation: 
Language: 
Rate this poem: 

Reviews

No reviews yet.