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A continuing selection of classic and contemporary poems.

Death—Divination

Charles Wharton Stork

Death is like moonlight in a lofty wood,
 That pours pale magic through the shadowy leaves;
 ‘T is like the web that some old perfume weaves
In a dim, lonely room where memories brood;
Like snow-chilled wine it steals into the blood,
 Spurring the pulse its coolness half reprieves;
 Tenderly quickening impulses it gives,
As April winds unsheathe an opening bud.

Death is like all sweet, sense-enfolding things,
 That lift us in a dream-delicious trance
 Beyond the flickering good and ill of chance;
But most is Death like Music’s buoyant wings,
 That bear the soul, a willing Ganymede,
 Where joys on joys forevermore succeed.
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From The Second Book of Modern Verse | 1919
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