Page:Poems (1853).djvu/164

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142
ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND.

ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND.


There was no bell to peal thy funeral dirge,
No nodding plumes to wave above thy bier,
No shroud to wrap thee but the foaming surge,
No kindly voices thy dark way to cheer,
No eye to give the tribute of a tear.
Alone, “unknell’d, uncoffin’d,” thou hast died,
Without one gentle mourner lingering near;
Down the deep waters thou unseen didst glide,
With Ocean’s countless dead to slumber side by side.

Thou sleep’st not with thy fathers. O’er thy bed,
The flowers that deck their tombs may never wave;
To plead remembrance for thee, o’er thy head
No sculptur’d marble shall arise. Thy grave
Is the dark boundless deep, whose waters lave
The shores of empires. When thou sought’st thy rest
Within their silent depths, they only gave
A circling ripple, then with foaming crest
The booming waves roll’d o’er their unconscious guest.