Page:The poetical works of Matthew Arnold, 1897.djvu/446

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
408
HAWORTH CHURCHYARD.

Breathings of song, with a pen
Tottering, a death-stricken hand.


Hope at that meeting smiled fair.
Years in number, it seemed,
Lay before both, and a fame
Heightened, and multiplied power.—
Behold! The elder, to-day,
Lies expecting from death,
In mortal weakness, a last
Summons! the younger is dead!


First to the living we pay
Mournful homage: the Muse
Gains not an earth-deafened ear.


Hail to the steadfast soul,
Which, unflinching and keen,
Wrought to erase from its depth
Mist and illusion and fear!
Hail to the spirit which dared
Trust its own thoughts, before yet
Echoed her back by the crowd!
Hail to the courage which gave
Voice to its creed, ere the creed
Won consecration from time!


Turn we next to the dead.—
How shall we honor the young.
The ardent, the gifted? how mourn?
Console we cannot, her ear
Is deaf. Far northward from here,
In a churchyard high 'mid the moors
Of Yorkshire, a little earth
Stops it forever to praise.