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THE BURIAL OF SOPHOCLES

The First Verses

Gather great store of roses, crimson-red
From ancient gardens under summer skies:
New opened buds, and some that soon must shed
Their leaves to earth, that all expectant lies;
Some from the paths of poets' wandering,
Some from the places where young lovers meet,
Some from the seats of dreamers pondering,
And all most richly red, and honey-sweet.

For in the splendour of the afternoon,
When sunshine lingers on the glittering town
And glorifies the temples wondrous-hewn
All set about it like a deathless crown,
We will go mingle with the solemn throng,
With neither eyes that weep, nor hearts that bleed,
That to his grave with slow, majestic song
Bears down the latest of the godlike seed.

Many a singer lies on distant isle
Beneath the canopy of changing sky:
Around them waves innumerable smile,
And o'er their head the restless seabirds cry:
But we will lay him far from sound of seas,
Far from the jutting crags' unhopeful gloom,
Where there blows never wind save summer breeze,
And where the growing rose may clasp his tomb.

And thither in the splendid nights of spring,
When stars in legions over heaven are flung,
Shall come the ancient gods, all wondering
Why he sings not that had so richly sung:

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