The Cambridge Churchyard
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- OUR ancient church! its lowly tower,
- Beneath the loftier spire,
- Is shadowed when the sunset hour
- Clothes the tall shaft in fire;
- It sinks beyond the distant eye
- Long ere the glittering vane,
- High wheeling in the western sky,
- Has faded o'er the plain.
- Like Sentinel and Nun, they keep
- Their vigil on the green;
- One seems to guard, and one to weep,
- The dead that lie between;
- And both roll out, so full and near,
- Their music's mingling waves,
- They shake the grass, whose pennoned spear
- Leans on the narrow graves.
- The stranger parts the flaunting weeds,
- Whose seeds the winds have strown
- So thick, beneath the line he reads,
- They shade the sculptured stone;
- The child unveils his clustered brow,
- And ponders for a while
- The graven willow's pendent bough,
- Or rudest cherub's smile.
- But what to them the dirge, the knell?
- These were the mourner's share,--
- The sullen clang, whose heavy swell
- Throbbed through the beating air;
- The rattling cord, the rolling stone,
- The shelving sand that slid,
- And, far beneath, with hollow tone
- Rung on the coffin's lid.
- The slumberer's mound grows fresh and green,
- Then slowly disappears;
- The mosses creep, the gray stones lean,
- Earth hides his date and years;
- But, long before the once-loved name
- Is sunk or worn away,
- No lip the silent dust may claim,
- That pressed the breathing clay.
- Go where the ancient pathway guides,
- See where our sires laid down
- Their smiling babes, their cherished brides,
- The patriarchs of the town;
- Hast thou a tear for buried love?
- A sigh for transient power?
- All that a century left above,
- Go, read it in an hour!
- The Indian's shaft, the Briton's ball,
- The sabre's thirsting edge,
- The hot shell, shattering in its fall,
- The bayonet's rending wedge,--
- Here scattered death; yet, seek the spot,
- No trace thine eye can see,
- No altar,--and they need it not
- Who leave their children free!
- Look where the turbid rain-drops stand
- In many a chiselled square;
- The knightly crest, the shield, the brand
- Of honored names were there;--
- Alas! for every tear is dried
- Those blazoned tablets knew,
- Save when the icy marble's side
- Drips with the evening dew.
- Or gaze upon yon pillared stone,
- The empty urn of pride;
- There stand the Goblet and the Sun,--
- What need of more beside?
- Where lives the memory of the dead,
- Who made their tomb a toy?
- Whose ashes press that nameless bed?
- Go, ask the village boy!
- Lean o'er the slender western wall,
- Ye ever-roaming girls;
- The breath that bids the blossom fall
- May lift your floating curls,
- To sweep the simple lines that tell
- An exile's date and doom;
- And sigh, for where his daughters dwell,
- They wreathe the stranger's tomb.
- And one amid these shades was born,
- Beneath this turf who lies,
- Once beaming as the summer's morn,
- That closed her gentle eyes;
- If sinless angels love as we,
- Who stood thy grave beside,
- Three seraph welcomes waited thee,
- The daughter, sister, bride.
- I wandered to thy buried mound
- When earth was hid below
- The level of the glaring ground,
- Choked to its gates with snow,
- And when with summer's flowery waves
- The lake of verdure rolled,
- As if a Sultan's white-robed slaves
- Had scattered pearls and gold.
- Nay, the soft pinions of the air,
- That lift this trembling tone,
- Its breath of love may almost bear
- To kiss thy funeral stone;
- And, now thy smiles have passed away,
- For all the joy they gave,
- May sweetest dews and warmest ray
- Lie on thine early grave!
- When damps beneath and storms above
- Have bowed these fragile towers,
- Still o'er the graves yon locust grove
- Shall swing its Orient flowers;
- And I would ask no mouldering bust,
- If e'er this humble line,
- Which breathed a sigh o'er other's dust,
- Might call a tear on mine.
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