Poems of Felicia Hemans in Friendship's Offering, 1827/Last Rites

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From Poems of Felicia Hemans, 1872, page 372


LAST RITES.


By the mighty minster's bell,
Tolling with a sudden swell;
By the colours half-mast high,
O'er the sea hung mournfully;
        Know, a prince hath died!

By the drum's dull muffled sound,
By the arms that sweep the ground,
By the volleying muskets' tone,
Speak ye of a soldier gone
        In his manhood's pride.

By the chanted psalm that fills
Reverently the ancient hills,1[1]

Learn, that from his harvests done,
Peasants bear a brother on
        To his last repose.

By the pall of snowy white
Through the yew-trees gleaming bright;
By the garland on the bier,
Weep! a maiden claims thy tear—
        Broken is the rose!

Which is the tenderest rite of all?—
Buried virgin's coronal,
Requiem o'er the monarch's head,
Farewell gun for warrior dead,
        Herdsman's funeral hymn?

Tells not each of human woe?
Each of hope and strength brought low?
Number each with holy things,
If one chastening thought it brings
        Ere life's day grow dim!

  1. 1 A custom still retained at rural funerals in some parts of England and Wales.