Читать книгу The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 55, May, 1862 - Various - Страница 3

MY GARDEN
LYRICS OF THE STREET

Оглавление

I. THE TELEGRAMS

  Bring the hearse to the station,

    When one shall demand it, late;

  For that dark consummation

    The traveller must not wait.

  Men say not by what connivance

    He slid from his weight of woe,

  Whether sickness or weak contrivance,

    But we know him glad to go.

            On, and on, and ever on!

                     What next?


  Nor let the priest be wanting

    With his hollow eyes of prayer,

  While the sexton wrenches, panting,

    The stone from the dismal stair.

  But call not the friends who left him,

    When Fortune and Pleasure fled;

  Mortality hath not bereft him,

    That they should confront him, dead.

            On, and on, and ever on!

                     What next?


  Bid my mother be ready:

    We are coming home to-night:

  Let my chamber be still and shady,

    With the softened nuptial light.

  We have travelled so gayly, madly,

    No shadow hath crossed our way;

  Yet we come back like children, gladly,

    Joy-spent with our holiday.

             On, and on, and ever on!

                      What next?


  Stop the train at the landing,

    And search every carriage through;

  Let no one escape your handing,

    None shiver or shrink from view.

  Three blood-stained guests expect him,

    Three murders oppress his soul;

  Be strained every nerve to detect him

    Who feasted, and killed, and stole.

              On, and on, and ever on!

                       What next?


  Be rid of the notes they scattered;

    The great house is down at last;

  The image of gold is shattered,

    And never can be recast.

  The bankrupts show leaden features,

    And weary, distracted looks,

  While harpy-eyed, wolf-souled creatures

    Pry through their dishonored books.

              On, and on, and ever on!

                       What next?


  Let him hasten, lest worse befall him,

    To look on me, ere I die:

  I will whisper one curse to appall him,

    Ere the black flood carry me by.

  His bridal? the friends forbid it;

    I have shown them his proofs of guilt:

  Let him hear, with my laugh, who did it;

    Then hurry, Death, as thou wilt!

              On, and on, and ever on!

                       What next?


  Thus the living and dying daily

    Flash forward their wants and words,

  While still on Thought's slender railway

    Sit scathless the little birds:

  They heed not the sentence dire

    By magical hands exprest,

  And only the sun's warm fire

    Stirs softly their happy breast.

              On, and on, and ever on!

                       God next!


The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 09, No. 55, May, 1862

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