My Last Will


SUBMITTED BY: Guest

DATE: May 29, 2013, 1:45 p.m.

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  1. My Last Will
  2. When I am safely laid away,
  3. Out of work and out of play,
  4. Sheltered by the kindly ground
  5. From the world of sight and sound,
  6. One or two of those I leave
  7. Will remember me and grieve,
  8. Thinking how I made them gay
  9. By the things I used to say;
  10. -- But the crown of their distress
  11. Will be my untidiness.
  12. What a nuisance then will be
  13. All that shall remain of me!
  14. Shelves of books I never read,
  15. Piles of bills, undocketed,
  16. Shaving-brushes, razors, strops,
  17. Bottles that have lost their tops,
  18. Boxes full of odds and ends,
  19. Letters from departed friends,
  20. Faded ties and broken braces
  21. Tucked away in secret places,
  22. Baggy trousers, ragged coats,
  23. Stacks of ancient lecture-notes,
  24. And that ghostliest of shows,
  25. Boots and shoes in horrid rows.
  26. Though they are of cheerful mind,
  27. My lovers, whom I leave behind,
  28. When they find these in my stead,
  29. Will be sorry I am dead.
  30. They will grieve; but you, my dear,
  31. Who have never tasted fear,
  32. Brave companion of my youth,
  33. Free as air and true as truth,
  34. Do not let these weary things
  35. Rob you of your junketings.
  36. Burn the papers; sell the books;
  37. Clear out all the pestered nooks;
  38. Make a mighty funeral pyre
  39. For the corpse of old desire,
  40. Till there shall remain of it
  41. Naught but ashes in a pit:
  42. And when you have done away
  43. All that is of yesterday,
  44. If you feel a thrill of pain,
  45. Master it, and start again.
  46. This, at least, you have never done
  47. Since you first beheld the sun:
  48. If you came upon your own
  49. Blind to light and deaf to tone,
  50. Basking in the great release
  51. Of unconsciousness and peace,
  52. You would never, while you live,
  53. Shatter what you cannot give;
  54. -- Faithful to the watch you keep,
  55. You would never break their sleep.
  56. Clouds will sail and winds will blow
  57. As they did an age ago
  58. O'er us who lived in little towns
  59. Underneath the Berkshire downs.
  60. When at heart you shall be sad,
  61. Pondering the joys we had,
  62. Listen and keep very still.
  63. If the lowing from the hill
  64. Or the tolling of a bell
  65. Do not serve to break the spell,
  66. Listen; you may be allowed
  67. To hear my laughter from a cloud.
  68. Take the good that life can give
  69. For the time you have to live.
  70. Friends of yours and friends of mine
  71. Surely will not let you pine.
  72. Sons and daughters will not spare
  73. More than friendly love and care.
  74. If the Fates are kind to you,
  75. Some will stay to see you through;
  76. And the time will not be long
  77. Till the silence ends the song.
  78. Sleep is God's own gift; and man,
  79. Snatching all the joys he can,
  80. Would not dare to give his voice
  81. To reverse his Maker's choice.
  82. Brief delight, eternal quiet,
  83. How change these for endless riot
  84. Broken by a single rest?
  85. Well you know that sleep is best.
  86. We that have been heart to heart
  87. Fall asleep, and drift apart.
  88. Will that overwhelming tide
  89. Reunite us, or divide?
  90. Whence we come and whither go
  91. None can tell us, but I know
  92. Passion's self is often marred
  93. By a kind of self-regard,
  94. And the torture of the cry
  95. "You are you, and I am I."
  96. While we live, the waking sense
  97. Feeds upon our difference,
  98. In our passion and our pride
  99. Not united, but allied.
  100. We are severed by the sun,
  101. And by darkness are made one.
  102. Sir Walter Raleigh

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