[BNP/E3, 77 – 56]
On Death
When I consider how each day's career
Doth with its footstep swift yet heavy tread
Approach my soul to those great regions dread
And bring my youth to timeless death more near,
Though strange and sad to one it doth appear
That I (who now am life) must soon be dead
Some vague, uncertain sorrow weighs my head
And whelms my coward mind with lengthless fear.
Nevertheless through sorrow, rage and tear,
My heart, yet each moment's boon shall seize.
And shape rude laughter from each heart-felt moan:
Not without hope is most extreme despair,
I know not death and think it no release -
The bad indeed is better than the unknown.
Alexander Search.
May, 1904