Toggle Dropdown Serif Sans-serif Monospaced Dyslexic Bold Italic Font size: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Mark as read [object Object] Only page of title 142 7 Moderate Welladay! Here I lay You at rest -- all worn away, O my pencil, to the tip Of our old companionship! Memory Sighs to see What you are, and used to be, Looking backward to the time When you wrote your earliest rhyme! -- When I sat Filing at Your first point, and dreaming that Your initial song should be Worthy of posterity. With regret I forget If the song be living yet, Yet remember, vaguely now, It was honest, anyhow. You have brought Me a thought -- Truer yet was never taught, -- That the silent song is best, And the unsung worthiest. So if I, When I die, May as uncomplainingly Drop aside as now you do, Write of me, as I of you: -- Here lies one Who begun Life a-singing, heard of none; And he died, satisfied, With his dead songs by his side. End of title Sign in to unlock this title Sign in to continue reading, it's free! As an unregistered user you can only read a little bit. Links External resources bookshop Wikipedia Project Gutenberg Goodreads Google Books
Memory Sighs to see What you are, and used to be, Looking backward to the time When you wrote your earliest rhyme! --
When I sat Filing at Your first point, and dreaming that Your initial song should be Worthy of posterity.
You have brought Me a thought -- Truer yet was never taught, -- That the silent song is best, And the unsung worthiest.
Here lies one Who begun Life a-singing, heard of none; And he died, satisfied, With his dead songs by his side.