INTO the caverns of the sea Shall all at last descend, Who now press forward gallantly Unrecking of the end. And no man knoweth what is there, Nor when his time shall come To yield his soul and take his share With all those gone and dumb. It may be we shall find our kin Waiting to grasp our hands, And lead us glorified within, Over the shining sands; It may be we with them shall lie, While heaven and earth abide, Swaying silent with sightless eye There in the sluggish tide. It matters nothing if to-day, Beneath the splendid sun, We hold to the appointed way, Doing what must be done. Reward? What would you? Have not we The waves beneath us bent? The winds about us blowing free? Above -- the firmament? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ODE TO EVENING by WILLIAM COLLINS (1721-1759) INSCRIPTION FOR AN ICE-HOUSE by ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD VERSES, SUGGESTED BY THE FUNERAL OF AN EPITAPH IN BURY CHURCH-YARD by BERNARD BARTON ON HIS HEAD WERE MANY CROWNS by MATTHEW BRIDGES HINTS FROM HORACE by GEORGE GORDON BYRON |