O DEATH! O grave! O endless world beyond! And Thou, the Holy One, that shuttest up What no man openeth, -- that openeth That which nor man --nor death-- nor the filled grave Can ever shut? To Thee, how reverend, How humble, and how pure should be our prayer. Forgive us, for what are we! What but worms That crawl, and bask, and shine -- then writhe and die But there is hope in Heaven. I hear a voice That says the dead are blessed, if they die In Him who died for them. That whoso lives Believing, shall not die eternally. -- So may we live, and so apply our hearts To God's true wisdom in our numbered days, That though we be cut down even as the flowers, And though we flee like passing shadows by, Hereafter we may bloom again, -- and stand Where all that blooms shall bloom eternally, And shadows, like the bitter thoughts of life, Can never flit across the holy path, Nor darken one forgiving smile of Heaven. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE SICKNESS by CHARLES BUKOWSKI TO THE IMMORTAL MEMORY OF THE HALIBUT ON WHICH I DINED by WILLIAM COWPER ALICE IN WONDERLAND: THE WALRUS AND THE CARPENTER by CHARLES LUTWIDGE DODGSON SEAWEED by HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW I SHALL NOT CARE by SARA TEASDALE MEMORY by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS OF SIR PHILIP SIDNEY by JOHN BEAUMONT |