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But if our lives, though of transient duration, Are filled with some work in humanity's name, Some uplifting effort, or self-immolation, Our memories shall live in the temples of Fame. A Reverie. O, tomb of the past Where buried hopes lie, In my visions I see Thy phantoms pass by! A form, long departed, Before me appears; A sweet voice, long silent, Again greets my ears. Fond memory dwells On the things that have been; And my eyes calmly gaze On a long vanished scene; A scene such as memory Stores deep in the breast, Which only appears In a season of rest. Once more we wander, Her fair hand in mine; Once more her promise, "I'll ever be thine"; Once more the parting, The shroud, and the pall, The sods' hollow thump As they coffinward fall. The reverie ends-- All the fancies have flown; And my sad, lonely heart, Now seems doubly alone; As the Ivy, whose tendrils Reach longingly out, Yet finds not an oak To entwine them about. Love's Plea. I love thee, my darling, both now and forever, My heart feels the thralldom of love's mystic spell, 'Tis fettered with shackles which nothing can sever, To the heart which responds to its passionate swell. I love thee, my darling, with love that is stronger, Than all the fond ties which the heart holds enshrined; Adversity, sorrow or pain can no longer Detract from this heart, if with thine intertwined. I love thee, my darling, with sacred affection, Which death, nor the cycles of time shall efface; Nor from my heart's mirror, erase thy reflection, Nor tear thy fond heart from its fervent embrace. Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust. Is there a Death? The light of day At eventide shall fade away; From out the sod's eternal gloom The flowers, in their season, bloom; Bud, bloom and fade, and soon the spot Whereon they flourished knows them not; Blighted by chill, autumnal frost; "Ashes to ashes, dust to dust!" Is there a Death? Pale forms of men To formless clay resolve again; Sarcophagus of graven stone, Nor solitary grave, unknown, Mausoleum, or funeral urn, No answer to our cries return; Nor silent lips disclose their trust; "Ashes to ashes, dust to dust!" Is there a Death? All forms of clay Successively shall pass away; But, as the joyous days of spring Witness the glad awakening Of nature's forces, may not men, In some due season, rise again? Then why this calm,
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