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Lines Inscribed Upon a Cup Formed from a Skull

Poetry

And Thou Art Dead, As Young and Fair

By the Rivers of Babylon We Sat Down and Wept

Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto the Fourth

Darkness

Epistle to Augusta

Farewell! If Ever Fondest Prayer

I Would I Were a Careless Child

Lines Inscribed Upon a Cup Formed from a Skull

My Soul is Dark

Oh! Snatched Away in Beauty's Bloom

On Chillon

On This Day I Complete My Thirty-Sixth Year

Prometheus

She Walks in Beauty

Stanzas To Augusta

The Destruction of Sennacherib

When We Two Parted







Start not - nor deem my spirit fled;
In me behold the only skull
From which, unlike a living head,
Whatever flows is never dull.

I lived, I loved, I quaffed, like thee:
I died: let earth my bones resign;
Fill up - thou canst not injure me;
The worm hath fouler lips than thine.

Better to hold the sparkling grape,
Than nurse the earth-worm's slimy
brood;
And circle in the goblet's shape
The drink of gods, than reptile's food.

Where once my wit, perchance, hath shone,
In aid of others' let me shine;
And when, alas! our brains are gone,
What nobler substitute than wine?

Quaff while thou canst: another race,
When thou and thine, like me, are sped,
May rescue thee from earth's embrace,
And rhyme and revel with the dead.

Why not? since through life's little day
Our heads such sad effects produce;
Redeemed from worms and wasting clay,
This chance is theirs, to be of use.





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