Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Euthanatos by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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Euthanatos

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    In Memory of Mrs. Thellusson.


    Forth of our ways and woes,
    Forth of the winds and snows,
    A white soul soaring goes,
    Winged like a dove:
    So sweet, so pure, so clear,
    So heavenly tempered here,
    Love need not hope or fear her changed above:

    Ere dawned her day to die,
    So heavenly, that on high
    Change could not glorify
    Nor death refine her:
    Pure gold of perfect love,
    On earth like heaven’s own dove,
    She cannot wear, above, a smile diviner.

    Her voice in heaven’s own quire
    Can sound no heavenlier lyre
    Than here no purer fire
    Her soul can soar:
    No sweeter stars her eyes
    In unimagined skies
    Beyond our sight can rise than here before,

    Hardly long years had shed
    Their shadows on her head:
    Hardly we think her dead,
    Who hardly thought her
    Old: hardly can believe
    The grief our hearts receive
    And wonder while they grieve, as wrong were wrought her.

    But though strong grief be strong
    No word or thought of wrong
    May stain the trembling song,
    Wring the bruised heart,
    That sounds or sighs its faint
    Low note of love, nor taint
    Grief for so sweet a saint, when such depart.

    A saint whose perfect soul,
    With perfect love for goal,
    Faith hardly might control,
    Creeds might not harden:
    A flower more splendid far
    Than the most radiant star
    Seen here of all that are in God’s own garden.

    Surely the stars we see
    Rise and relapse as we,
    And change and set, may be
    But shadows too:
    But spirits that man’s lot
    Could neither mar nor spot
    Like these false lights are not, being heavenly true.

    Not like these dying lights
    Of worlds whose glory smites
    The passage of the nights
    Through heaven’s blind prison:
    Not like their souls who see,
    If thought fly far and free,
    No heavenlier heaven to be for souls rerisen.

    A soul wherein love shone
    Even like the sun, alone,
    With fervour of its own
    And splendour fed,
    Made by no creeds less kind
    Toward souls by none confined,
    Could Death’s self quench or blind, Love’s self were dead.



Extra Info:
February 4, 1881.


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