Not in the marble tomb— Lay me not there to rest, With the dim charnel gloom Damply around my breast: Bind me not there to lie, Cold, mouldering lone, Unmoved by the rain, as it falleth nigh, Or the winds of varied tone: No!—lay me under the sod— 'Neath the green turf, lay me low, Where the sweet spring flowers may nod, In dews which wet my brow. Ay! then I'll mount the flowers, And be worn on fairest breast, And go up in vines which deck the bowers, Where beauty loves to rest: I shall rise, perchance, in the laurel leaf, And be worn in the conqueror's hall; In the grape, I'll be the foe of grief, And the joy of the festival; This is the way which I would rest— Not in the charnel gloom: Then lay me under the earth's green vest, And I'll seek me out my tomb. G. P. T. |