Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Processional by Madison Julius Cawein
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Processional

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    Universes are the pages
    Of that book whose words are ages;
    Of that book which destiny
    Opens in eternity.

    There each syllable expresses
    Silence; there each thought a guess is;
    In whose rhetoric's cosmic runes
    Roll the worlds and swarming moons.

    There the systems, we call solar,
    Equatorial and polar,
    Write their lines of rushing light
    On the awful leaves of night.

    There the comets, vast and streaming,
    Punctuate the heavens' gleaming
    Scroll; and suns, gigantic, shine,
    Periods to each starry line.

    There, initials huge, the Lion
    Looms and measureless Orion;
    And, as 'neath a chapter done,
    Burns the Great-Bear's colophon.

    Constellated, hieroglyphic,
    Numbering each page terrific,
    Fiery on the nebular black,
    Flames the hurling zodiac.

    In that book, o'er which Chaldean
    Wisdom pored and many an eon
    Of philosophy long dead,
    This is all that man has read:--

    He has read how good and evil,--
    In creation's wild upheaval,--
    Warred; while God wrought terrible
    At foundations red of Hell.

    He has read of man and woman;
    Laws and gods, both beast and human;
    Thrones of hate and creeds of lust,
    Vanished now and turned to dust.

    Arts and manners that have crumbled;
    Cities buried; empires tumbled:
    Time but breathed on them its breath;
    Earth is builded of their death.

    These but lived their little hour,
    Filled with pride and pomp and power;
    What availed them all at last?
    We shall pass as they have past.

    Still the human heart will dream on
    Love, part angel and part demon;
    Yet, I question, what secures
    Our belief that aught endures?

    In that book, o'er which Chaldean
    Wisdom pored and many an eon
    Of philosophy long dead,
    This is all that man has read.



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