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Poem by Dorothy Parker


Epitaph


The first time I died, I walked my ways;
I followed the file of limping days.

I held me tall, with my head flung up,
But I dared not look on the new moon's cup.

I dared not look on the sweet young rain,
And between my ribs was a gleaming pain.

The next time I died, they laid me deep.
They spoke worn words to hallow my sleep.

They tossed me petals, they wreathed me fern,
They weighted me down with a marble urn.

And I lie here warm, and I lie here dry,
And watch the worms slip by, slip by.



Dorothy Parker


Dorothy Parker's other poems:
  1. Portrait of the Artist
  2. Chant for Dark Hours
  3. Inventory
  4. They Part
  5. The Immortals


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Samuel Coleridge Epitaph ("Stop, Christian passer-by : Stop, child of God")
  • Percy Shelley Epitaph ("These are two friends whose lives were undivided") 1822
  • Abraham Cowley Epitaph ("Underneath this marble stone")
  • Katherine Philips Epitaph ("What on Earth deserves our trust?")
  • Thomas Hardy Epitaph ("I never cared for Life: Life cared for me")
  • Edna Millay Epitaph ("Heap not on this mound")
  • Elinor Wylie Epitaph ("For this she starred her eyes with salt")
  • Walter Scott Epitaph ("AMID these aisles, where once his precepts showed")
  • Robert Southey Epitaph ("HERE, in the fruitful vales of Somerset")
  • George Byron Epitaph ("Posterity will ne’er survey") January 2, 1820
  • Emily Dickinson Epitaph ("Step lightly on this narrow spot!")

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