Page:Fugitive Poetry 1600-1878.djvu/563

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My Grave.
545


As we gazed, we forgot our present pain;
And followed our brother's spirit,
Unto that fair heaven we hoped to gain,
Which the good after death inherit.

And we left the dust of our brother to lie
In its noisome habitation;
With the trust that his spirit had. flown on high,
To its heavenly destination.

My Grave.

Shall they bury me in the deep,
Where wind-forgetting waters sleep?
Shall they dig a grave for me
Under the greenwood tree?
Or on the wild heath,
Where the wilder breath
Of the storm, doth blow?
Oh, no! oh, no!

Shall they bury me in the Palace Tombs,
Or under the shade of cathedral domes?
Sweet 'twere to lie on Italy's shore;
Yet not there, nor in Greece, though I love it more.
In the wolf or the vulture my grave shall I find?
Shall my ashes career on the world-seeing wind?
Shall they fling my corpse in the battle mound,
Where coffinless thousands lie under the ground?
Just as they fall they are buried so—
Oh, no! oh, no!

No! on an Irish green hillside,
On an opening lawn—but not too wide;
For I love the drip of the wetted trees—
On me blow no gales, but a gentle breeze,
To freshen the turf: put no tombstone there,
But green sods decked with daisies fair.
Nor sods too deep; but so that the dew,
The matted grass-roots may trickle through—
Be my epitaph writ on my country's mind,
"He served his country, and loved his kind."
Oh! 'twere merry under the grave to go,
If one were sure to be buried so.

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