Dear comrade, whose
unhappy fate we mourn,
So soon from thy
domestic circle torn;
By cruel death’s
cold, grim, relentless hand,
To prove the secrets
of the spirit land.
Thy form now lies
unconsciously at rest,
Which dear, loved,
little prattlers once caress’d;
Thy smile no more
thy presence will illume,
Thy voice is hushed
forever in the tomb.
Sleep! dear one,
sleep! no more the ills of life,
Nor vain commotion
– offspring of mad strife,
Nor racking pain
– inflammatory throes,
Disturb thy rest,
or break thy calm repose.
Insatiate monster!
Mortal’s direst foe,
Whose callous nature
smiles at human woe;
Why blast the instrument
which succour gained,
And leave the tender
offspring unsustained?
Thy life’s short
dream is now forever o’er,
Round yon void hearth
thy voice will sound no more;
In vain the tears
– the bitter tears may fall,
They cannot thy
long cherish’d form recall.
The hopes once centred
in thy chequered life,
Which charmed thy
children, and which cheered thy wife;
Are all destroyed
by death’s destructive blast,
And grace the pages
of the dreamy past.
Though now departed,
yet, methinks I hear
Thy well-known voice
th’ immortal Blair revere;
The “grave”,
which oft thy feelings overawed,
Is now thy cold,
long, lifeless abode.
No more we meet on
life’s frail stormy strand,
Yet in the portals
of the deathless spirit land,
In bonds of love
united we may be,
Through endless
ages of eternity.
Thomas Blackah
March 15th 1872
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