By man forgotten, Nature remembers, with her fitful tears. The wooden slabs lose name and date with years, And crumble, rotten. The Padre there, One Saint's day, from an evening rite returning, Set for each unknown soul a candle burning, With muttered prayer. Glow-worms, they shone Strange, spectral-gleaming through the lonely dark. Whose nameless dust did each faint glimmer mark Skull, crumbling bone? Ah, the Dead knew! The grateful Dead, far-called from voids of space, Each by the tiny spark that gave him grace, Watched, the night through. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...BLOOD IS THICKER THAN WATER by WALLACE RICE SONNET: 73 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE PEG OF LIMAVADDY by WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY ANOTHER REAPER by WILLIAM H. ARMSTRONG III FIRST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS by JOANNA BAILLIE |