Poems (Trask)/The Death-Bed

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
4478924Poems — The Death-BedClara Augusta Jones Trask

THE DEATH-BED.
Faintly came her breathing
From her troubled breast;
Feebly on the pillows
Sank her head to rest.
Calmly closed her eyelids,
Passed her smile away,
As the morning vapors
Flee the light of day.

Paler grew her forehead
With each panting breath,
Ghastly o'er her features
Lay the seal of death.
Clasped her slender fingers
On her bosom meek;
Fell the golden tresses
O'er her pallid cheek.

Passed her breath so calmly
That we never knew
When she walked in shadow
Death's dark valley through;
Never knew the moment
When she paused to rest,
At the gate which foldeth
Ever in the Blest.

Passed she like the fragrance
Of some fading flower,
Or like summer sunbeams
When the tempests lower;
Left us but her memory,
Sweet for evermore,—
Earth has lost her for us,
Heaven will restore.