Poems (Eckley)/The Living Dead

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4606745Poems — The Living DeadSophia May Eckley
THE LIVING DEAD.
HERE all around me are the mouldering dead—
The dead of ancient Rome; for evermore
They sleep beneath the grass, where violets shed
Their dewy scented kisses at the door
Of every grave fast locked by buds of spring,
Whose petals softly fold, as angel's wing.

Where'er I go, still walk I o'er the dead—
Forgotten dead; but are they only so,
Who 'neath the cooling grass through which I tread,
Have broken bond with life, and falling low,
Are hidden from our sight, down buried deep,
Where neither sun may warm, nor showers weep?

Alas! the angel guardian of our life
Bids us look round, and count the living dead,
Ah, better far to break our bond with life,
And with the unseen secret worm to wed,
Than walk in grave-shroud, bound by iron chain,
Whose links are welded to the links of pain.