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Poems of Power

Chapter 6: GRIEF
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About This Book

A sequence of lyric poems and brief meditations that foreground the idea of an inner divine power as the source of success and happiness, exploring faith, hope, grief, love, and the moral life. The pieces move between intimate prayers and domestic scenes, public elegies and civic reflections, and philosophical dialogues about change and progress. Recurring motifs include the efficacy of thought, self-reliance, compassion, and the tension between experience and youthful expectation. Tone shifts from comforting consolation to sober realism, combining exhortation and consolation while urging courage, ethical living, and trust in the human spirit amid personal and social trials.

GRIEF

As the funeral train with its honoured dead
   On its mournful way went sweeping,
While a sorrowful nation bowed its head
   And the whole world joined in weeping,
I thought, as I looked on the solemn sight,
   Of the one fond heart despairing,
And I said to myself, as in truth I might,
   “How sad must be this sharing.”

To share the living with even Fame,
   For a heart that is only human,
Is hard, when Glory asserts her claim
   Like a bold, insistent woman;
Yet a great, grand passion can put aside
   Or stay each selfish emotion,
And watch, with a pleasure that springs from pride,
   Its rival—the world’s devotion.

But Death should render to love its own,
   And my heart bowed down and sorrowed
For the stricken woman who wept alone
   While even her dead was borrowed;
Borrowed from her, the bride—the wife—
   For the world’s last martial honour,
As she sat in the gloom of her darkened life,
   With her widow’s grief fresh upon her.

He had shed the glory of Love and Fame
   In a golden halo about her;
She had shared his triumphs and worn his name:
   But, alas! he had died without her.
He had wandered in many a distant realm,
   And never had left her behind him,
But now, with a spectral shape at the helm,
   He had sailed where she could not find him.

It was only a thought, that came that day
   In the midst of the muffled drumming
And funeral music and sad display,
   That I knew was right and becoming
Only a thought as the mourning train
   Moved, column after column,
Bearing the dead to the burial plain
   With a reverence grand as solemn.