Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Anima Anceps by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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Anima Anceps

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    Till death have broken
    Sweet life’s love-token,
    Till all be spoken
    That shall be said,
    What dost thou praying,
    O soul, and playing
    With song and saying,
    Things flown and fled?
    For this we know not
    That fresh springs flow not
    And fresh griefs grow not
    When men are dead;
    When strange years cover
    Lover and lover,
    And joys are over
    And tears are shed.

    If one day’s sorrow
    Mar the day’s morrow
    If man’s life borrow
    And man’s death pay
    If souls once taken,
    If lives once shaken,
    Arise, awaken,
    By night, by day
    Why with strong crying
    And years of sighing,
    Living and dying,
    Fast ye and pray?
    For all your weeping,
    Waking and sleeping,
    Death comes to reaping
    And takes away.

    Though time rend after
    Roof-tree from rafter,
    A little laughter
    Is much more worth
    Than thus to measure
    The hour, the treasure,
    The pain, the pleasure,
    The death, the birth;
    Grief, when days alter,
    Like joy shall falter;
    Song-book and psalter,
    Mourning and mirth.
    Live like the swallow;
    Seek not to follow
    Where earth is hollow
    Under the earth.



Extra Info:
From "Poems and Ballads" - 1866


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