I SAW him last on this terrace proud, | |
| Walking in health and gladness, | |
| Begirt with his court; and in all the crowd | |
| Not a single look of sadness. | |
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| Bright was the sun, the leaves were green | 5 |
| Blithely the birds were singing; | |
| The cymbals replied to the tambourine, | |
| And the bells were merrily ringing. | |
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| I have stood with the crowd beside his bier, | |
| When not a word was spoken | 10 |
| When every eye was dim with a tear, | |
| And the silence by sobs was broken. | |
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| I have heard the earth on his coffin pour | |
| To the muffled drums, deep rolling, | |
| While the minute-gun, with its solemn roar, | 15 |
| Drowned the death-bells tolling. | |
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| The timesince he walked in his glory thus, | |
| To the grave till I saw him carried | |
| Was an age of the mightiest change to us, | |
| But to him a night unvaried. | 20 |
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| A daughter beloved, a queen, a son, | |
| And a sons sole child, have perished; | |
| And sad was each heart, save only the one | |
| By which they were fondest cherished; | |
| For his eyes were sealed and his mind was dark, | 25 |
| And he sat in his ages lateness | |
| Like a vision throned, as a solemn mark | |
| Of the frailty of human greatness; | |
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| His silver beard, oer a bosom spread | |
| Unvexed by lifes commotion, | 30 |
| Like a yearly lengthening snow-drift shed | |
| On the calm of a frozen ocean. | |
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| Still oer him Oblivions waters lay, | |
| Though the stream of life kept flowing; | |
| When they spoke of our king, twas but to say | 35 |
| The old mans strength was going. | |
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| At intervals thus the waves disgorge, | |
| By weakness rent asunder, | |
| A piece of the wreck of the Royal George, | |
| To the peoples pity and wonder. | 40 |
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| He is gone at lengthhe is laid in the dust, | |
| Deaths hand his slumbers breaking; | |
| For the coffined sleep of the good and just | |
| Is a sure and blissful waking. | |
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| His peoples heart is his funeral urn; | 45 |
| And should sculptured stone be denied him, | |
| There will his name be found, when in turn | |
| We lay our heads beside him. | |
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