| J. C. Squire, ed. A Book of Womens Verse. 1921. | | | | To Death | | By Caroline Southey (17861854) |
| | | COME not in terrors clad, to claim | |
| An unresisting prey: | |
| Come like an evening shadow, Death! | |
| So stealthily, so silently! | |
| And shut mine eyes, and steal my breath; | 5 |
| Then willingly, O willingly, | |
| With thee Ill go away. | |
| |
| What need to clutch with iron grasp | |
| What gentlest touch may take? | |
| What need with aspect dark to scare, | 10 |
| So awfully, so terribly, | |
| The weary soul would hardly care, | |
| Calld quietly, calld tenderly, | |
| From thy dread power to break? | |
| |
| Tis not as when thou markest out | 15 |
| The young, the blest, the gay, | |
| The loved, the lovingthey who dream | |
| So happily, so hopefully; | |
| Then harsh thy kindest call may seem, | |
| And shrinkingly, reluctantly, | 20 |
| The summond may obey. | |
| |
| But I have drunk enough of life | |
| The cup assignd to me | |
| Dashd with a little sweet at best, | |
| So scantily, so scantily | 25 |
| To know full well that all the rest | |
| More bitterly, more bitterly, | |
| Druggd to the last will be. | |
| |
| And I may live to pain some heart | |
| That kindly cares for me: | 30 |
| To pain, but not to bless, O Death! | |
| Come quietlycome lovingly | |
| And shut mine eyes and steal my breath; | |
| Then willingly, O willingly, | |
| Ill go away with thee. | 35 | | | |
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