Public Domain Poetry And Stories - St. Francis Of Borgia By The Coffin Of Queen Isabel. by Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
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St. Francis Of Borgia By The Coffin Of Queen Isabel.

    By Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon



    "Open the coffin and shroud until
        I look on the dead again
    Ere we place her in Grenada's vaults,
        Where sleep the Monarchs of Spain;
    For unto King Charles must I swear
        That I myself have seen
    The regal brow of the royal corpse,
        Our loved, lamented Queen."

    The speaker was Borgia, Gaudia's Duke,
        A noble and gallant knight,
    Whose step was welcome in courtly halls,
        As his sword was keen in fight.
    To him had his Monarch given the task
        Of conveying to the tomb.
    The Princess ravished from his arms
        In the pride of youthful bloom.

    While they slowly raised the coffin lid,
        Borgia stood silent by,
    Recalling the beauty of the dead
        With low, half-uttered sigh -
    Longing to look on that statue fair
        That wanted but life's warm breath,
    That matchless form which he hoped to find
        Beautiful e'en in death.

    'Tis done, and with silent, rev'rent step
        To the coffin draws he near,
    And sadly looks in its depths, where lies
        Spain's Queen, his sovereign dear.
    But what does he see? What horrors drear
        Are those that meet his eye,
    For he springs aside and shades his brow
        With a sharp, though stifled, cry?

    Ah' youth and beauty, in spirit gaze
        On what that coffin holds -
    On the fearful object that now lies
        In the shroud's white ample folds:
    Nay, turn not away with loathing look,
        Lest that hideous sight you see,
    In a few short years from now, alas!
        It is what we all shall be.

    Let us learn as Francis Borgia learned,
        By that lifeless form of clay,
    To despise the changing things of earth,
        All doomed to swift decay -
    Deep into his heart the lesson sank,
        Effacing earthly taint,
    And Spain's Court lost a gallant knight,
        While the Church gained a Saint!



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