[BNP/E3, 78A – 45]
Documents of Mental Decadence.
Agony
To my Dearest Friend
When I am dead you'll write — I know you will —
A thoughtful sonnet on my early death,
In which, stating that life but wearieth,
You'll notice how I lie pale, cold, and still.
This in the quatrains, which likewise you'll fill
With some reflections on how soon goes breath
And how the cold and heavy earth beneath
There is an end to living, good or ill.
After this, in the tercets, you will say
That death's a mystery, that nought doth stay,
Perhaps that immortality is true.
Then you will sign and put your name[1] to it.
And, having read again the sonnet, you
Will be content, seeing it is well writ.
Alexander Search.
Febraury 25th 1909.
[1] name /the date\