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1874–1907

L'envoi

John Charles McNeill

God willed, who never needed speech, “Let all things be:” And, lo, the starry firmament And land and sea

And his first thought of life that lives In you and me. His circle of eternity We see in part;

Our spirits are his breath, our hearts Beat from his heart; Hence we have played as little gods And called it art.

Lacking his power, we shared his dream Of perfect things; Between the tents of hope and sweet Rememberings

Have sat in ashes, but our souls Went forth on wings. Where life fell short of some desire In you and me,

Feeling for beauty which our eyes Could never see, Behold, from out the void we willed That it should be,

And sometimes dreamed our lisping songs Of humanhood Might voice his silent harmony Of waste and wood,

And he, beholding his and ours, Might find it good.

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L'envoi · John Charles McNeill · Poetry Cove