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Poem by Albert Laighton The Necropolis Though the sexton, grim and old, Turns the mould. Damp and cold. In the churchyard, for the bed Of the still and holy dead; Though we see the green turf prest On each breast Full of rest. Full of quiet, sweet and deep, Yet not there our loved ones sleep. Oh, the graves where they are laid Sexton's spade Never made! Nor do sculptured tablets tell That within the heart they dwell; Where the winter winds, we know, Cannot blow, And the snow Never hides the flowers that grow, Fadeless, from the dust below. Albert Laighton Albert Laighton's other poems: 1588 Views |
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