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Second April
Memorial to D. C.
Edna St.Vincent Millay
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       [VASSAR COLLEGE, 1918]
       Oh, loveliest throat of all sweet throats,
           Where now no more the music is,
       With hands that wrote you little notes
           I write you little elegies!
        
       EPITAPH
       Heap not on this mound
           Roses that she loved so well;
       Why bewilder her with roses,
           That she cannot see or smell?
       She is happy where she lies
           With the dust upon her eyes.
        
       PRAYER TO PERSEPHONE
       Be to her, Persephone,
       All the things I might not be;
       Take her head upon your knee.
       She that was so proud and wild,
       Flippant, arrogant and free,
       She that had no need of me,
       Is a little lonely child
       Lost in Hell,--Persephone,
       Take her head upon your knee;
       Say to her, "My dear, my dear,
       It is not so dreadful here."
        
       CHORUS
       Give away her gowns,
       Give away her shoes;
       She has no more use
       For her fragrant gowns;
       Take them all down,
       Blue, green, blue,
       Lilac, pink, blue,
       From their padded hangers;
       She will dance no more
       In her narrow shoes;
       Sweep her narrow shoes
       From the closet floor.
        
       ELEGY
       Let them bury your big eyes
       In the secret earth securely,
       Your thin fingers, and your fair,
       Soft, indefinite-colored hair,--
       All of these in some way, surely,
       From the secret earth shall rise;
       Not for these I sit and stare,
       Broken and bereft completely;
       Your young flesh that sat so neatly
       On your little bones will sweetly
       Blossom in the air.
       But your voice,--never the rushing
       Of a river underground,
       Not the rising of the wind
       In the trees before the rain,
       Not the woodcock's watery call,
       Not the note the white-throat utters,
       Not the feet of children pushing
       Yellow leaves along the gutters
       In the blue and bitter fall,
       Shall content my musing mind
       For the beauty of that sound
       That in no new way at all
       Ever will be heard again.
       Sweetly through the sappy stalk
       Of the vigorous weed,
       Holding all it held before,
       Cherished by the faithful sun,
       On and on eternally
       Shall your altered fluid run,
       Bud and bloom and go to seed;
       But your singing days are done;
       But the music of your talk
       Never shall the chemistry
       Of the secret earth restore.
       All your lovely words are spoken.
       Once the ivory box is broken,
       Beats the golden bird no more.
        
       DIRGE
       Boys and girls that held her dear,
           Do your weeping now;
       All you loved of her lies here.
       Brought to earth the arrogant brow,
           And the withering tongue
       Chastened; do your weeping now.
       Sing whatever songs are sung,
           Wind whatever wreath,
       For a playmate perished young,
       For a spirit spent in death.
       Boys and girls that held her dear,
       All you loved of her lies here.