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The King Is Dead

By Paul Laurence Dunbar

Topics: classic

Aye, lay him in his grave, the old dead year!     His life is lived--fulfilled his destiny.     Have you for him no sad, regretful tear     To drop beside the cold, unfollowed bier?     Can you not pay the tribute of a sigh?     Was he not kind to you, this dead old year?     Did he not give enough of earthly store?     Enough of love, and laughter, and good cheer?     Have not the skies you scanned sometimes been clear?     How, then, of him who dies, could you ask more?     It is not well to hate him for the pain     He brought you, and the sorrows manifold.     To pardon him these hurts still I am fain;     For in the panting period of his reign,     He brought me new wounds, but he healed the old.     One little sigh for thee, my poor, dead friend--     One little sigh while my companions sing.     Thou art so soon forgotten in the end;     We cry e'en as thy footsteps downward tend:     "The king is dead! long live the king!"

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"Aye, lay him in his grave, the old dead year!..."

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Author:Paul Laurence Dunbar

"Aye, lay him in his grave, the old dead year!..." by Paul Laurence Dunbar

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Paul Laurence Dunbar

About Paul Laurence Dunbar

Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872–1906) was an American poet and novelist who was one of the first African-American writers to gain national prominence. His poems in dialect—including "When Malindy Sings"—and standard English explore Black life with humor, pathos, and dignity.

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