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Home  »  A Library of American Literature  »  When the Grass shall Cover Me

Stedman and Hutchinson, comps. A Library of American Literature:
An Anthology in Eleven Volumes. 1891.
Vols. IX–XI: Literature of the Republic, Part IV., 1861–1889

When the Grass shall Cover Me

By Ina Donna Coolbrith (1841–1928)

[Born near Springfield, Ill., 1841. Died in Berkeley, Cal., 1928. From A Perfect Day, and Other Poems. 1881.]

WHEN the grass shall cover me,

Head to foot where I am lying;

When not any wind that blows,

Summer blooms nor winter snows,

Shall awake me to your sighing:

Close above me as you pass,

You will say, “How kind she was,”

You will say, “How true she was,”

When the grass grows over me.

When the grass shall cover me,

Holden close to earth’s warm bosom;

While I laugh, or weep, or sing

Nevermore, for anything,

You will find in blade and blossom,

Sweet small voices, odorous,

Tender pleaders in my cause,

That shall speak me as I was—

When the grass grows over me.

When the grass shall cover me!

Ah, belovèd, in my sorrow

Very patient, I can wait,

Knowing that, or soon or late,

There will dawn a clearer morrow:

When your heart will moan: “Alas!

Now I know how true she was;

Now I know how dear she was”—

When the grass grows over me!