Share:
  Guess poet | Poets | Poets timeline | Isles | Contacts

Ernest Christopher Dowson - The Dead ChildErnest Christopher Dowson - The Dead Child
Work rating: Low


Sleep on, dear, now     The last sleep and the best,   And on thy brow,     And on thy quiet breast   Violets I throw.   Thy scanty years     Were mine a little while;   Life had no fears     To trouble thy brief smile   With toil or tears.   Lie still, and be     For evermore a child!   Not grudgingly,     Whom life has not defiled,   I render thee.   Slumber so deep,     No man would rashly wake;   I hardly weep,     Fain only, for thy sake.   To share thy sleep.   Yes, to be dead,     Dead, here with thee to-day,--   When all is said     `Twere good by thee to lay   My weary head.   The very best!     Ah, child so tired of play,   I stand confessed:     I want to come thy way,   And share thy rest.
Source

The script ran 0.001 seconds.