My Life is Full of Weary Days

My Life is Full of Weary Days (1833)
by Alfred Tennyson
194081My Life is Full of Weary Days1833Alfred Tennyson

                           I
My life is full of weary days,
   But good things have not kept aloof,
Nor wander’d into other ways:
   I have not lack’d thy mild reproof,
Nor golden largess of thy praise.

And now shake hands across the brink
   Of that deep grave to which I go:
Shake hands once more: I cannot sink
   So far–far down, but I shall know
   Thy voice, and answer from below.
 
                           II
When in the darkness over me
   The four-handed mole shall scrape,
Plant thou no dusky cypress-tree,
   Nor wreathe thy cap with doleful crape,
   But pledge me in the flowing grape.

And when the sappy field and wood
   Grow green beneath the showery gray,
And rugged barks begin to bud,
   And thro’ damp holts new-flush’d with may,
   Ring sudden scritches of the jay,

Then let wise Nature work her will,
   And on my clay her darnel grow;
Come only, when the days are still,
   And at my headstone whisper low,
   And tell me if the woodbines blow.

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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