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Poem by Madison Julius Cawein


Finale


So let it be. Thou wilt not say 't was I!
Here in life's temple, where thy soul may see,
Look how the beauty of our love doth lie,
Shattered in shards, a dead divinity!
Approach: kneel down: yea, render up one sigh!
This is the end. What need to tell it thee!
So let it be.

So let it be. Care, who hath stood with him,
And sorrow, who sat by him deified,
For whom his face made comfort, lo! how dim
They heap his altar which they can not hide,
While memory's lamp swings o'er it, burning slim.
This is the end. What shall be said beside?
So let it be.

So let it be. Did we not drain the wine,
Red, of love's sacramental chalice, when
He laid sweet sanction on thy lips and mine?
Dash it aside! Lo, who will fill again
Now it is empty of the god divine!
This is the end. Yea, let us say Amen.
So let it be.



Madison Julius Cawein


Madison Julius Cawein's other poems:
  1. The Iron Cross
  2. In the Mountains
  3. The Battle
  4. Night and Rain
  5. Above the Vales


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Henry Longfellow Finale ("These are the tales those merry guests")

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