Skip to content
1826–1907

A DIRGE.

Walter Richard Cassels

Winds are sighing round the drooping eaves; Sadly float the midnight hours away; Dun and grey athwart the ivy-leaves, Fall the first pale chilly tints of day,

Ah me! the weary, weary tints of day. Soon the darkness will be past and gone; Soon the silence spread its noiseless wing; Sleep will strike its tent and hurry on;

Life commence its weary wandering, Ah me! its weary, weary wandering. Not the sighing of my lonely heart, Not the heavy grief-clouds hanging o'er,

Not its silence can with night depart: Gloom hangs o'er it ever, evermore, Ah me! darkness ever, evermore.

Cookies on Poetry Cove

We use cookies to remember your language preference and — only with your consent — to learn how Poetry Cove is used. You can change your mind any time.
A DIRGE. · Walter Richard Cassels · Poetry Cove