Nothing
remains of unrecorded ages
That lie in the silent cemetery of
time;
Their wisdom may have shamed our wisest sages,
Their
glory may have been indeed sublime.
How weak do seem our strivings
after power,
How poor the grandest efforts of our brains,
If
out of all we are, in one short hour
Nothing remains.
Nothing
remains but the Eternal Spaces,
Time and decay uproot the forest
trees.
Even the mighty mountains leave their places,
And sink
their haughty heads beneath strange seas;
The great earth writhes
in some convulsive spasm
And turns the proudest cities into
plains.
The level sea becomes a yawning chasm –
Nothing
remains.
Nothing
remains but the Eternal Forces,
The sad seas cease complaining and
grow dry;
Rivers are drained and altered in their courses,
Great
stars pass out and vanish from the sky.
Ideas die and old
religions perish,
Our rarest pleasures and our keenest pains
Are
swept away with all we hate or cherish –
Nothing remains.
Nothing
remains but the Eternal Nameless
And all-creative spirit of the
Law,
Uncomprehended, comprehensive, blameless,
Invincible,
resistless, with no flaw;
So full of love it must create
forever,
Destroying that it may create again
Persistent and
perfecting in endeavor,
It yet must bring forth angels, after men
–
This, this remains.
A poem by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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