He resteth: weep not! The living sleep not With so much calm: He hears no chiding And no deriding, Hath joy for sorrow, For night hath morrow, For wounds hath balm, For life's strange riot Hath death and quiet. Who would recall him Of those that love him? No fears appal him, No ills befal him; There's nought above him Save turf and flowers And pleasant grass. Pass the swift hours, How swiftly pass! The hours of slumber He doth not number; Grey hours of morning Ere the day's dawning: Brightened by gleams Of the sun-beams, By the foreseeing Of Resurrection, Of glorious being, Of full perfection, Of sins forgiven Before the face Of men and spirits; Of God in Heaven, The Resting Place That he inherits. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A PRAYER by PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR SOMETHING BEYOND by MARY CLEMMER AMES HUDSON THOSE VARIOUS SCALPELS by MARIANNE MOORE THE RUBAIYAT, 1879 EDITION: 16 by OMAR KHAYYAM SONG, FR. ARTAXERXES (OPERA) by THOMAS AUGUSTINE ARNE |