Public Domain Poetry And Stories - On the Death of Mrs. Lynn Linton by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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On the Death of Mrs. Lynn Linton

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    Kind, wise, and true as truth's own heart,
    A soul that here
    Chose and held fast the better part
    And cast out fear,
    Has left us ere we dreamed of death
    For life so strong,
    Clear as the sundawn's light and breath,
    And sweet as song.
    We see no more what here awhile
    Shed light on men:
    Has Landor seen that brave bright smile
    Alive again?
    If death and life and love be one
    And hope no lie
    And night no stronger than the sun,
    These cannot die.
    The father-spirit whence her soul
    Took strength, and gave
    Back love, is perfect yet and whole,
    As hope might crave.
    His word is living light and fire:
    And hers shall live
    By grace of all good gifts the sire
    Gave power to give.
    The sire and daughter, twain and one
    In quest and goal,
    Stand face to face beyond the sun,
    And soul to soul.
    Not we, who loved them well, may dream
    What joy sublime
    Is theirs, if dawn through darkness gleam,
    And life through time.
    Time seems but here the mask of death,
    That falls and shows
    A void where hope may draw not breath:
    Night only knows.
    Love knows not: all that love may keep
    Glad memory gives:
    The spirit of the days that sleep
    Still wakes and lives.
    But not the spirit's self, though song
    Would lend it speech,
    May touch the goal that hope might long
    In vain to reach.
    How dear that high true heart, how sweet
    Those keen kind eyes,
    Love knows, who knows how fiery fleet
    Is life that flies.
    If life there be that flies not, fair
    The life must be
    That thrills her sovereign spirit there
    And sets it free.



Extra Info:
From "A Channel Passage and Other Poems"


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