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    On That Day

    by D.H. Lawrence
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    Page 1 of 1
    From New Poems (1916).

    On that day
    I shall put roses on roses, and cover your grave
    With multitude of white roses: and since you were brave
    One bright red ray.

    So people, passing under
    The ash-trees of the valley-road, will raise
    Their eyes and look at the grave on the hill, in wonder,
    Wondering mount, and put the flowers asunder

    To see whose praise
    Is blazoned here so white and so bloodily red.
    Then they will say: "'Tis long since she is dead,
    Who has remembered her after many days?"

    And standing there
    They will consider how you went your ways
    Unnoticed among them, a still queen lost in the maze
    Of this earthly affair.

    A queen, they'll say,
    Has slept unnoticed on a forgotten hill.
    Sleeps on unknown, unnoticed there, until
    Dawns my insurgent day.

    Page 1 of 1
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