Poems of Felicia Hemans in The Literary Souvenir, 1828/The Memory of the Dead

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
For other versions of this work, see The Memory of the Dead (Felicia Hemans).


THE MEMORY OF THE DEAD.


BY MRS. HEMANS.


Forget them not!—tho' now their name
    Be but a mournful sound,
Tho' by the hearth its utterance claim
    A stillness round.

Tho' for their sakes this earth no more
    As it hath been may be,
And shadows, never marked before,
    Brood o'er each tree;

And tho' their image dim the sky,
    Yet, yet forget them not!
Nor, where their love and life went by,
    Forsake the spot!

They have a breathing influence there,
    A charm, not elsewhere found;
Sad—yet it sanctifies the air,
    The stream—the ground.


Then, tho' the wind an altered tone
    Through the young foliage bear,
Tho' every flower, of something gone,
    A tinge may wear;

Oh! fly it not!—no fruitless grief
    Thus in their presence felt,
A record links to every leaf
    There, where they dwelt.

Still trace the path which knew their tread,
    Still tend their garden-bower,
And call them back, the holy Dead,
    To each lone hour!

The holy Dead!—oh! blest we are,
    That we may name them so,
And to their spirits look afar,
    Through all our woe!

Blest, that the things they loved on earth,
    As relics we may hold,
Which wake sweet thoughts of parted worth,
By springs untold!

Blest, that a deep and chastening power
    Thus o'er our souls is given,
If but to bird, or song, or flower,
    Yet all for Heaven!