Andrew Lang

The Passing of Œdipous

(Œd. Col., 1655–1666.)

How Œdipous departed, who may tell
  Save Theseus only? for there neither came
  The burning bolt of thunder, and the flame
To blast him into nothing, nor the swell
Of sea-tide spurred by tempest on him fell.
  But some diviner herald none may name
  Called him, or inmost Earth’s abyss became
The painless place where such a soul might dwell.
 
Howe’er it chanced, untouched of malady,
  Unharmed by fear, unfollowed by lament,
With comfort on the twilight way he went,
  Passing, if ever man did, wondrously;
From this world’s death to life divinely rent,
  Unschooled in Time’s last lesson, how we die.
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