Robert Herrick. 1591-1674
255. The Funeral Rites of the Rose
1 min to read
110 words

THE Rose was sick and smiling died; And, being to be sanctified, About the bed there sighing stood The sweet and flowery sisterhood: Some hung the head, while some did bring, To wash her, water from the spring; Some laid her forth, while others wept, But all a solemn fast there kept: The holy sisters, some among, The sacred dirge and trental sung. But ah! what sweet smelt everywhere, As Heaven had spent all perfumes there. At last, when prayers for the dead And rites were all accomplished, They, weeping, spread a lawny loom, And closed her up as in a tomb.

trental] services for the dead, of thirty masses.

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Robert Herrick. 1591-1674
256. Cherry-Ripe
1 min to read
47 words
Return to The Oxford Book of English Verse, 1250–1900






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