Page:Landon in Literary Gazette 1829.pdf/25

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Literary Gazette, 29th August, 1829, Page 571



The place is purified with hope,
    The hope that is of prayer;
And human love, and heavenward thought,
    And pious faith, are there.

The wild flowers spring amid the grass;
    And many a stone appears,
Carved by affection's memory,
    Wet with affection's tears.

The golden chord which binds us all
    Is loosed, not rent in twain;
And love, and hope, and fear unite
    To bring the past again.

But this grave is so desolate,
    With no remembering stone,
No fellow-graves for sympathy—
    ’Tis utterly alone.

I do not know who sleeps beneath,
    His history or name—
Whether if, lonely in his life,
    He is in death the same:

Whether he died unloved, unmourned,
    The last leaf on the bough;
Or if some desolated hearth
    Is weeping for him now.