Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Memorial Verses on the Death of William Bell Scott by Algernon Charles Swinburne
Public domain poetry and public domain stories from the literary greats of yesteryear.
Custom Search
Main Menu

Home

Latest Poetry

Latest Authors

Authors Surname

Authors First Name

Poetry Title

Poetry First Lines

Latest Stories

Stories Title

Top Authors

Top Poetry


Top Stories Etc.

Search

Contact Us

Useless Information!!

Store



Top Sites, Click here to vote for our site

Sponsored Links

Read, Rate, Comment on or Submit your poetry

Memorial Verses on the Death of William Bell Scott

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    A life more bright than the sun's face, bowed
    Through stress of season and coil of cloud,
    Sets: and the sorrow that casts out fear
    Scarce deems him dead in his chill still shroud,
    Dead on the breast of the dying year,
    Poet and painter and friend, thrice dear
    For love of the suns long set, for love
    Of song that sets not with sunset here,
    For love of the fervent heart, above
    Their sense who saw not the swift light move
    That filled with sense of the loud sun's lyre
    The thoughts that passion was fain to prove
    In fervent labour of high desire
    And faith that leapt from its own quenched pyre
    Alive and strong as the sun, and caught
    From darkness light, and from twilight fire.
    Passion, deep as the depths unsought
    Whence faith's own hope may redeem us nought,
    Filled full with ardour of pain sublime
    His mourning song and his mounting thought.
    Elate with sense of a sterner time,
    His hand's flight clomb as a bird's might climb
    Calvary: dark in the darkling air
    That shrank for fear of the crowning crime,
    Three crosses rose on the hillside bare,
    Shown scarce by grace of the lightning's glare
    That clove the veil of the temple through
    And smote the priests on the threshold there.
    The soul that saw it, the hand that drew,
    Whence light as thought's or as faith's glance flew,
    And stung to life the sepulchral past,
    And bade the stars of it burn anew,
    Held no less than the dead world fast
    The light live shadows about them cast,
    The likeness living of dawn and night,
    The days that pass and the dreams that last.
    Thought, clothed round with sorrow as light,
    Dark as a cloud that the moon turns bright,
    Moved, as a wind on the striving sea,
    That yearns and quickens and flags in flight,
    Through forms of colour and song that he
    Who fain would have set its wide wings free
    Cast round it, clothing or chaining hope
    With lights that last not and shades that flee.
    Scarce in song could his soul find scope,
    Scarce the strength of his hand might ope
    Art's inmost gate of her sovereign shrine,
    To cope with heaven as a man may cope.
    But high as the hope of a man may shine
    The faith, the fervour, the life divine
    That thrills our life and transfigures, rose
    And shone resurgent, a sunbright sign,
    Through shapes whereunder the strong soul glows
    And fills them full as a sunlit rose
    With sense and fervour of life, whose light
    The fool's eye knows not, the man's eye knows.
    None that can read or divine aright
    The scriptures writ of the soul may slight
    The strife of a strenuous soul to show
    More than the craft of the hand may write.
    None may slight it, and none may know
    How high the flames that aspire and glow
    From heart and spirit and soul may climb
    And triumph; higher than the souls lie low
    Whose hearing hears not the livelong rhyme,
    Whose eyesight sees not the light sublime,
    That shines, that sounds, that ascends and lives
    Unquenched of change, unobscured of time.
    A long life's length, as a man's life gives
    Space for the spirit that soars and strives
    To strive and soar, has the soul shone through
    That heeds not whither the world's wind drives
    Now that the days and the ways it knew
    Are strange, are dead as the dawn's grey dew
    At high midnoon of the mounting day
    That mocks the might of the dawn it slew.
    Yet haply may not, and haply may,
    No sense abide of the dead sun's ray
    Wherein the soul that outsoars us now
    Rejoiced with ours in its radiant sway.
    Hope may hover, and doubt may bow,
    Dreaming. Haply, they dream not how,
    Not life but death may indeed be dead
    When silence darkens the dead man's brow.
    Hope, whose name is remembrance, fed
    With love that lightens from seasons fled,
    Dreams, and craves not indeed to know,
    That death and life are as souls that wed.
    But change that falls on the heart like snow
    Can chill not memory nor hope, that show
    The soul, the spirit, the heart and head,
    Alive above us who strive below.



Extra Info:
From "Astrophel and Other Poems" - 1904


Printable Page

Add Your Thoughts on this poem.



This page viewed 832 times.
Sponsored Links


Your Shops - Affordable Ecommerce stores and cheaper goods for customers - No listing fees!



Our Sites