What is Death?, by William B. Tappan

What is Death?

I ask'd the laughing bright-haired boy,
As he bounded on his innocent joy; --
His eye with accustomed lustre shone,
To him it was a word unknown.   I asked the fair as she flew along
The mazy dance, to the sound of song;
She paused not on her giddy way,
She answered not, but turned away.   I asked the man of silvery hairs,
As he tottered on with years and cares;
He shook his head and was eager yet
To bear that load and Death forget.   The toiling fool, as he passed by
With hurried step and anxious eye,
I asked next, and heard a groan
From his hoarded heaps, but of answer, none.   I bent me o'er the bed of death,
And asked as I watched the passing breath; --
But by the foe that heart was crushed,
The voice of reply was forever hushed.   I searched amid the place of tombs,
And fearfully asked of its silent glooms:
Surely, surely, ye can tell,
None are so drear, none know so well.   O, tell me sepulchres! I said,
And Echo answered from the dead;
I only heard among the trees
By the hollow graves, the moaning breeze.   In tears I sought the Bible then,
And saw, writ by Jehovah's pen;
To the wicked 'tis undying pain,
To the righteous, 'tis eternal gain.

poems.one - William B. Tappan

William B. Tappan