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1837–1909

III

Algernon Charles Swinburne

Nor less of grief than ours The gods wrought long ago To bruise men one by one; But with the incessant hours

Fresh grief and greener woe Spring, as the sudden sun Year after year makes flowers; And these die down and grow,

And the next year lacks none. As these men sleep, have slept The old heroes in time fled, No dream-divided sleep;

And holier eyes have wept Than ours, when on her dead Gods have seen Thetis weep, With heavenly hair far-swept

Back, heavenly hands outspread Round what she could not keep, Could not one day withhold, One night; and like as these

White ashes of no weight, Held not his urn the cold Ashes of Heracles? For all things born one gate

Opens, no gate of gold; Opens; and no man sees Beyond the gods and fate.

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III · Algernon Charles Swinburne · Poetry Cove