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MISCELLANEOUS
POEMS
By
Charles Sangster
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HENRY’S
GRAVE.
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Standing beside the consecrated mound,
That marked the narrow
grave wherein he lay,
I thought upon the Trumpet’s welcome sound,
That would arouse him
in the latter day.
I thought
of the young spirit, that had fled |
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Beyond the keenest search of human eye—
Beyond the limits of a world of dread—
Beyond the reach of man’s
philosophy.
And
as I strove to lift the distant veil—
To track the spirit in
its upward flight— |
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My
mind was awed—my vision seemed to fail,
And all became confused
as blackest night!
I was
an atom of mere mortal mould,
Too weak to pierce the
depths that soul had trod;
Backward to earth my wandering senses rolled, |
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And my eye rested on the crumbling sod—
Part
of myself—poor perishable clay!
The child whose corse
beneath my feet did lie,
Was, like myself, but mortal, yesterday,
And now, a dweller with
the blest on high! |
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Oh! Mystery of Mysteries! Oh, Death!
I sit and muse in deep
solemnity,
And wonder how the dust that perisheth
Must pass to life eternal
but through thee! [Page 115]
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