Calverly's
We
go no more to Calverly's,
For
there the lights are few and low;
And
who are there to see by them,
Or
what they see, we do not know.
Poor
strangers of another tongue
May
now creep in from anywhere,
And
we, forgotten, be no more
Than
twilight on a ruin there.
We
two, the remnant. All the rest
Are
cold and quiet. You nor I,
Nor
fiddle now, nor flagon-lid,
May
ring them back from where they lie.
No
fame delays oblivion
For
them, but something yet survives:
A
record written fair, could we
But
read the book of scattered lives.
There'll
be a page for Leffingwell,
And
one for Lingard, the Moon-calf;
And
who knows what for Clavering,
Who
died because he couldn't laugh?
Who
knows or cares? No sign is here,
No
face, no voice, no memory;
No
Lingard with his eerie joy,
No
Clavering, no Calverly.
We
cannot have them here with us
To
say where their light lives are gone,
Or
if they be of other stuff
Than
are the moons of Ilion.
So,
be their place of one estate
With
ashes, echoes, and old wars,—
Or
ever we be of the night,
Or
we be lost among the stars.
E.A.
Robinson
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