The stars, the fields, will know him never-
more;
his friends, his trees, the restless swerving sea.
Three days to live, they said the kind gave four.
They glide about his bed silently.
Twas not the lead of battle nor the shell
the spitting of Maxims basiliskine breath
Twas through the falseness of the winds he fell;
the snows mock-warmth a chill. His humble
death
will neer be sung in elegy and rhyme,
his passage bloodless was, unstained and still.
It brought no stir; and smiling all the time
He waved his last farewell behind the Hill.
I saw him die with my half-closed eyes,
And closing them I thought of Paradise.
The Consumptive
written byLeon Gellert
© Leon Gellert