ALTER EGO WHERE is the boyish Poet Who used with you to write? Alas! his songs are ended: I dug his grave last night. Beneath a flowering myrtle, His face against the East, I buried him at midnight; Without a book or priest. He had grown older, graver,— He had grown graver, sadder, What should he do but dwindle, His lyre was carved for pleasure, His lot was cast in pain; So, 'neath a flowering myrtle 1923 [1888. FOR A CLOSING PAGE "Never a palinode !”—“ Q.” LIFE, like a page unpenned, Spreads out its whiteness; Nothing, from end to end, Marring its brightness. Surely a field to claim Steadfast endeavour ? Where one might win a name Sounding for ever? Now-to review it all- Plans that ne'er found a base; Doubt never set at rest, Stifle or falter it; Good that was not the best ... Yet-would you alter it? IN AFTER DAYS Ν IN after days when grasses high O'er-top the stone where I shall lie, Though ill or well the world adjust My slender claim to honoured dust, I shall not question or reply. I shall not see the morning sky; But yet, now living, fain were 1 Saying " He held his pen in trust To Art, not serving shame or lust." Will none?—Then let my memory die In after days! |