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Three Dead Friends.

By James Whitcomb Riley

Topics: classic

Always suddenly they are gone -         The friends we trusted and held secure -      Suddenly we are gazing on,         Not a smiling face, but the marble-pure      Dead mask of a face that nevermore         To a smile of ours will make reply -          The lips close-locked as the eyelids are -      Gone - swift as the flash of the molten ore         A meteor pours through a midnight sky,          Leaving it blind of a single star.      Tell us, O Death, Remorseless Might!         What is this old, unescapable ire      You wreak on us? - from the birth of light         Till the world be charred to a core of fire!      We do no evil thing to you -         We seek to evade you - that is all -          That is your will - you will not be known      Of men. What, then, would you have us do? -         Cringe, and wait till your vengeance fall,          And your graves be fed, and the trumpet blown?      You desire no friends; but we - O we         Need them so, as we falter here,      Fumbling through each new vacancy,         As each is stricken that we hold dear.      One you struck but a year ago;         And one not a month ago; and one -          (God's vast pity!) - and one lies now      Where the widow wails, in her nameless woe,         And the soldiers pace, with the sword and gun,          Where the comrade sleeps, with the laureled brow.      And what did the first? - that wayward soul,         Clothed of sorrow, yet nude of sin,      And with all hearts bowed in the strange control         Of the heavenly voice of his violin.      Why, it was music the way he stood,         So grand was the poise of the head and so          Full was the figure of majesty! -      One heard with the eyes, as a deaf man would,         And with all sense brimmed to the overflow          With tears of anguish and ecstasy.      And what did the girl, with the great warm light         Of genius sunning her eyes of blue,      With her heart so pure, and her soul so white -         What, O Death, did she do to you?      Through field and wood as a child she strayed,         As Nature, the dear sweet mother led;          While from her canvas, mirrored back,      Glimmered the stream through the everglade         Where the grapevine trailed from the trees to wed          Its likeness of emerald, blue and black.      And what did he, who, the last of these,         Faced you, with never a fear, O Death?      Did you hate him that he loved the breeze,         And the morning dews, and the rose's breath?      Did you hate him that he answered not         Your hate again - but turned, instead,          His only hate on his country's wrongs?      Well - you possess him, dead! - but what         Of the good he wrought? With laureled head          He bides with us in his deeds and songs.      Laureled, first, that he bravely fought,         And forged a way to our flag's release;      Laureled, next - for the harp he taught         To wake glad songs in the days of peace -      Songs of the woodland haunts he held         As close in his love as they held their bloom          In their inmost bosoms of leaf and vine -      Songs that echoed, and pulsed and welled         Through the town's pent streets, and the sick child's room,          Pure as a shower in soft sunshine.      Claim them, Death; yet their fame endures,         What friend next will you rend from us      In that cold, pitiless way of yours,         And leave us a grief more dolorous?      Speak to us! - tell us, O Dreadful Power! -         Are we to have not a lone friend left? -          Since, frozen, sodden, or green the sod, -      In every second of every hour,         Some one, Death, you have left thus bereft,          Half inaudibly shrieks to God.

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"Always suddenly they are gone -..."

"Three Dead Friends." is a quintessential example of James Whitcomb Riley's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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Author:James Whitcomb Riley

"Always suddenly they are gone -..." by James Whitcomb Riley

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James Whitcomb Riley

About James Whitcomb Riley

James Whitcomb Riley (1849–1916) was an American poet known as the "Hoosier Poet." His dialect poems—including "Little Orphant Annie" and "When the Frost Is on the Punkin"—celebrate rural Indiana life and childhood nostalgia.

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