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Find the perfect poem to honor the life of a special person
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Choosing a poem for funerals, memorials, or celebrations of life is a beautiful and touching way to honor a loved one who has passed. Unless your lost loved one had a favorite poem or selected one for their memorial, you may not know what poetry might be appropriate for the service. The good news is that there are many poems about grief and loss to help you express your emotions. This article presents over 70 poems that are suitable for honoring a beloved friend or family member who has passed away.

Section 1 of 11:

Popular Poems for Funerals

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  1. 1
    “Remember” – Christina Rossetti
    Remember me when I am gone away,
    Gone far away into the silent land;
    When you can no more hold me by the hand,
    Nor I half turn to go yet turning stay.
    Remember me when no more day by day
    You tell me of our future that you planned:
    Only remember me; you understand
    It will be late to counsel then or pray.
    Yet if you should forget me for a while
    And afterwards remember, do not grieve:
    For if the darkness and corruption leave
    A vestige of the thoughts that once I had,
    Better by far you should forget and smile
    Than that you should remember and be sad.
  2. 2
    “Holy Sonnets: Death, be not proud” – John Donne
    Death, be not proud, though some have called thee
    Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so;
    For those whom thou think'st thou dost overthrow
    Die not, poor Death, nor yet canst thou kill me.
    From rest and sleep, which but thy pictures be,
    Much pleasure; then from thee much more must flow,
    And soonest our best men with thee do go,
    Rest of their bones, and soul's delivery.
    Thou art slave to fate, chance, kings, and desperate men,
    And dost with poison, war, and sickness dwell,
    And poppy or charms can make us sleep as well
    And better than thy stroke; why swell'st thou then?
    One short sleep past, we wake eternally
    And death shall be no more; Death, thou shalt die.
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  3. 3
    “Requiem” – Robert Louis Stevenson
    Under the wide and starry sky
    Dig the grave and let me lie:
    Glad did I live and gladly die,
    And I laid me down with a will.

    This be the verse you 'grave for me:
    Here he lies where he long'd to be;
    Home is the sailor, home from the sea,
    And the hunter home from the hill.
  4. 4
    “Nothing Gold Can Stay” – Robert Frost
    Nature’s first green is gold,
    Her hardest hue to hold.
    Her early leaf’s a flower;
    But only so an hour.
    Then leaf subsides to leaf.
    So Eden sank to grief,
    So dawn goes down to day.
    Nothing gold can stay.
  5. 5
    “Warm Summer Sun” – Mark Twain
    Warm summer sun,
    Shine kindly here,
    Warm southern wind,
    Blow softly here.
    Green sod above,
    Lie light, lie light.
    Good night, dear heart,
    Good night, good night.
  6. 6
    “The Chariot” – Emily Dickinson
    Because I could not stop for Death,
    He kindly stopped for me;
    The carriage held but just ourselves
    And Immortality.

    We slowly drove, he knew no haste,
    And I had put away
    My labor, and my leisure too,
    For his civility.

    We passed the school where children played,
    Their lessons scarcely done;
    We passed the fields of gazing grain,
    We passed the setting sun.

    We paused before a house that seemed
    A swelling of the ground;
    The roof was scarcely visible,
    The cornice but a mound.

    Since then 't is centuries; but each
    Feels shorter than the day
    I first surmised the horses' heads
    Were toward eternity.
  7. 7
    “Poem” – Langston Hughes
    I loved my friend.
    He went away from me.
    There’s nothing more to say.
    The poem ends,
    Soft as it began,—
    I loved my friend.
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Section 2 of 11:

Funny Funeral Poems

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  1. 1
    “Condolence” – Dorothy Parker
    They hurried here, as soon as you had died,
    Their faces damp with haste and sympathy,
    And pressed my hand in theirs, and smoothed my knee,
    And clicked their tongues, and watched me, mournful-eyed.
    Gently they told me of that Other Side—
    How, even then, you waited there for me,
    And what ecstatic meeting ours would be.
    Moved by the lovely tale, they broke, and cried.

    And when I smiled, they told me I was brave,
    And they rejoiced that I was comforted,
    And left, to tell of all the help they gave.
    But I had smiled to think how you, the dead,
    So curiously preoccupied and grave,
    Would laugh, could you have heard the things they said.
  2. 2
    “Sport” – Langston Hughes
    Life
    For him
    Must be
    The shivering of
    A great drum
    Beaten with swift sticks
    Then at the closing hour
    The lights go out
    And there is no music at all
    And death becomes
    An empty cabaret
    And eternity an unblown saxophone
    And yesterday
    A glass of gin
    Drunk long
    Ago
  3. 3
    “The Dark Cavalier” – Margaret Widdemer
    I am the Dark Cavalier; I am the Last Lover:
    My arms shall welcome you when other arms are tired;
    I stand to wait for you, patient in the darkness,
    Offering forgetfulness of all that you desired.

    I ask no merriment, no pretense of gladness,
    I can love heavy lids and lips without their rose;
    Though you are sorrowful you will not weary me;
    I will not go from you when all the tired world goes.

    I am the Dark Cavalier; I am the Last Lover;
    I promise faithfulness no other lips may keep;
    Safe in my bridal place, comforted by darkness,
    You shall lie happily, smiling in your sleep.
  4. 4
    “Challenge” – Sterling A. Brown
    I said, in drunken pride of youth and you
    That mischief-making Time would never dare
    Play his ill-humored tricks upon us two,
    Strange and defiant lovers that we were.
    I said that even Death, Highwayman Death,
    Could never master lovers such as we,
    That even when his clutch had throttled breath,
    My hymns would float in praise, undauntedly.

    I did not think such words were bravado.
    Oh, I think honestly we knew no fear,
    We loved each other so.
    And thus, with you believing me, I made
    My prophecies, rebellious, unafraid . . . .
    And that was foolish, wasn’t it, my dear?
  5. 5
    “Cavalier” – Bruce Nugent
    Slay fowl and beast; pluck clean the vine,
    Prepare the feast and pearl the wine.
    Bring on the best! Bring on the bard,
    Bring on the rest. Let nought retard
    Nor yet distress with putrid breath,
    My new mistress, My Lady Death.
  6. 6
    “Testament” – Dorothy Parker
    Oh, let it be a night of lyric rain
    And singing breezes, when my bell is tolled.
    I have so loved the rain that I would hold
    Last in my ears its friendly, dim refrain.
    I shall lie cool and quiet, who have lain
    Fevered, and watched the book of day unfold.
    Death will not see my flinch; the heart is bold
    That pain has made incapable of pain.

    Kinder the busy worms than ever love;
    It will be peace to lie there, empty-eyed,
    My bed made secret by the leveling showers,
    My breast replenishing the weeds above.
    And you will say of me, “Then has she died?
    Perhaps I should have sent a spray of flowers.”
  7. 7
    “All the Dead” – Countee Cullen
    Priest and layman, virgin, strumpet,
    Good and ill commingled sleep,
    Waiting till the dreadful trumpet
    Separates the wolves and sheep.
  8. 8
    “Humdrum” – Carl Sandburg
    If I had a million lives to live
    and a million deaths to die
    in a million humdrum worlds,

    I’d like to change my name
    and have a new house number to go by
    each and every time I died
    and started life all over again.

    I wouldn’t want the same name every time
    and the same old house number always,
    dying a million deaths,
    dying one by one a million times:
    —would you?
    or you?
    or you?
  9. 9
    “I Shall Come Back” – Dorothy Parker
    I shall come back without fanfaronade
    Of wailing wind and graveyard panoply;
    But, trembling, slip from cool Eternity—
    A mild and most bewildered little shade.
    I shall not make sepulchral midnight raid,
    But softly come where I had longed to be
    In April twilight’s unsung melody,
    And I, not you, shall be the one afraid.

    Strange, that from lovely dreamings of the dead
    I shall come back to you, who hurt me most.
    You may not feel my hand upon your head,
    I’ll be so new and inexpert a ghost.
    Perhaps you will not know that I am near,—
    And that will break my ghostly heart, my dear.
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Section 3 of 11:

Short Memorial Poems

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  1. 1
    “Requiem” – John F. Matheus
    She wears, my beloved, a rose upon her head.
    Walk softly angels, lest your gentle tread
    Awake her to the turmoil and the strife,
    The dissonance and hates called life.

    She sleeps, my beloved, a rose upon her head.
    Who says she will not hear, that she is dead?
    The rose will fade and lose its lovely hue,
    But not, my beloved, will fading wither you.
  2. 2
    “A Triviality” – Waring Cuney
    Not to dance with her
    Was such a trivial thing

    There were girls more fair than she,––

    To-day
    Ten girls dressed in white.
    Each had a white rose wreath.

    They made a dead man’s arch
    And ten strong men
    Carried a body through.

    Not to dance with her
    Was a trivial thing.
  3. 3
    “Rose Song” – Anne Reeve Aldrich
    Plant, above my lifeless heart
    Crimson roses, red as blood.
    As if the love, pent there so long
    Were pouring forth its flood.

    Then, through them, my heart may tell,
    Its Past of Love and Grief,
    And I shall feel them grow from it,
    And know a vague relief.

    Through rotting shroud shall feel their roots,
    And unto them myself shall grow,
    And when I blossom at her feet,
    She, on that day, shall know!
  4. 4
    “Fantasy in Purple” – Langston Hughes
    Beat the drums of tragedy for me.
    Beat the drums of tragedy and death.
    And let the choir sing a stormy song
    To drown the rattle of my dying breath.

    Beat the drums of tragedy for me,
    And let the white violins whir thin and slow,
    But blow one blaring trumpet note of sun
    To go with me
    to the darkness
    where I go.
  5. 5
    “Music when Soft Voices Die (To–)” – Percy Bysshe Shelley
    Music, when soft voices die,
    Vibrates in the memory—
    Odours, when sweet violets sicken,
    Live within the sense they quicken.

    Rose leaves, when the rose is dead,
    Are heaped for the belovèd's bed;
    And so thy thoughts, when thou art gone,
    Love itself shall slumber on.
  6. 6
    “When At Your Heart Should Be Sad” – Sir Walter Raleigh
    When at heart you should be sad,
    Pondering the joys we had,
    Listen and keep very still.
    If the lowing from the hill
    Or the toiling of a bell
    Do not serve to break the spell,
    Listen: you may be allowed
    To hear my laughter from a cloud.
  7. 7
    “Intimations of Immortality” – William Wordsworth
    What though the radiance which was once so bright
    Be now forever taken from my sight,
    Though nothing can bring back the hour
    Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower;
    We will grieve not, rather find
    Strength in what remains behind.
  8. 8
    “Invocation” – Helene Johnson
    Let me be buried in the rain
    In a deep, dripping wood,
    Under the warm wet breast of Earth
    Where once a gnarled tree stood.
    And paint a picture on my tomb
    With dirt and a piece of bough
    Of a girl and a boy beneath a round, ripe moon
    Eating of love with an eager spoon
    And vowing an eager vow.
    And do not keep my plot mowed smooth
    And clean as a spinster’s bed,
    But let the weed, the flower, the tree,
    Riotous, rampant, wild and free,
    Grow high above my head.
  9. 9
    “For Myself” – Countee Cullen
    What’s in this grave is worth your tear;
    There's more than the eye can see;
    Folly and Pride and Love lie here
    Buried alive with me.
  10. 10
    “Coda” – Ezra Pound
    O my songs,
    Why do you look so eagerly and so curiously into people's faces,
    Will you find your lost dead among them?
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Section 4 of 11:

Non-Religious Poems for Funerals

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  1. 1
    “Loss” – Winifred M. Letts
    In losing you I lost my sun and moon
    And all the stars that blessed my lonely night.
    I lost the hope of Spring, the joy of June,
    The Autumn’s peace, the Winter’s firelight.
    I lost the zest of living, the sweet sense
    Expectant of your step, your smile, your kiss;
    I lost all hope and fear and keen suspense
    For this cold calm, sans agony, sans bliss.
    I lost the rainbow’s gold, the silver key
    That gave me freedom of my town of dreams;
    I lost the path that leads to Faërie
    By beechen glades and heron-haunted streams.
    I lost the master word, dear love, the clue
    That threads the maze of life when I lost you.
  2. 2
    “The Shadow on the Stone” – Thomas Hardy
    I went by the Druid stone
    That stands in the garden white and lone,
    And I stopped and looked at the shifting shadows
    That at some moments there are thrown
    From the tree hard by with a rhythmic swing,
    And they shaped in my imagining
    To the shade that a well-known head and shoulders
    Threw there when she was gardening.

    I thought her behind my back,
    Yea, her I long had learned to lack,
    And I said: “I am sure you are standing behind me,
    Though how do you get into this old track?”
    And there was no sound but the fall of a leaf
    As a sad response; and to keep down grief
    I would not turn my head to discover
    That there was nothing in my belief.

    Yet I wanted to look and see
    That nobody stood at the back of me;
    But I thought once more: “Nay, I’ll not unvision
    A shape which, somehow, there may be.”
    So I went on softly from the glade,
    And left her behind me throwing her shade,
    As she were indeed an apparition—
    My head unturned lest my dream should fade.
  3. 3
    “To Jake” – Eunice Tietjens
    You are turned wraith. Your supple, flitting hands,
    As formless as the night wind’s moan,
    Beckon across the years, and your heart’s pain
    Fades surely as a stainèd stone.

    And yet you will not let me rest, crying
    And calling down the night to me
    A thing that when your body moved and glowed,
    Living, you could not make me see.

    Lean down your homely, mist-encircled head
    Close, close above my human ear,
    And tell me what of pain among the dead—
    Tell me, and I will try to hear.
  4. 4
    “After” – Leonora Speyer
    I will not walk in the wood to-night,
    I will not stand by the water’s edge
    And see day lie on the dusk’s bright ledge
    Until it turn, a star at its breast,
    To rest.

    I will not see the wide-flung hills
    Closing darkly about my grief,
    I wore a crown of their lightest leaf,
    But now they press like a cold, blue ring,
    Imprisoning.

    I dare not meet that caroling blade,
    Jauntily drawn in the sunset pine,
    Stabbing me with its thrust divine,
    Knowing my naked, aching need,
    Till I bleed.

    Sheathe your song, invincible bird,
    Strike not at me with that flashing note,
    Have pity, have pity, persistent throat,
    Deliver me not to your dread delight
    To-night!

    I am afraid of the creeping wood,
    I am afraid of the furtive trees,
    Hiding behind them, memories,
    Ready to spring, to clutch, to tear,
    Wait for me there.
  5. 5
    “Out of the Rolling Ocean the Crowd” – Walt Whitman
    Out of the rolling ocean, the crowd, came a drop gently to me,
    Whispering I love you, before long I die,
    I have travel'd a long way, merely to look on you to touch you,
    For I could not die till I once look'd on you,
    For I fear'd I might afterward lose you.

    Now we have met, we have look'd, we are safe,
    Return in peace to the ocean my love,
    I too am part of that ocean, my love, we are not so much separated,
    Behold the great rondure, the cohesion of all, how perfect!
    But as for me, for you, the irresistible sea is to separate us,
    As for an hour carrying us diverse, yet cannot carry us diverse forever;
    Be not impatient—a little space—know you I salute the air, the ocean and the land,
    Every day at sundown for your dear sake my love.
  6. 6
    “After great pain a formal feeling comes — (175)” – Emily Dickinson
    After great pain a formal feeling comes —
    The nerves sit ceremonious like tombs;
    The stiff Heart questions — was it He that bore?
    And yesterday — or centuries before?

    The feet mechanical go round
    A wooden way
    Of ground or air or Ought,
    Regardless grown,
    A quartz contentment like a stone.

    This is the hour of lead
    Remembered if outlived
    As freezing persons recollect
    The snow —
    First chill, then stupor, then
    The letting go.
  7. 7
    “From ‘Spanish Folk Songs’” – Salvador de Madariaga
    II
    Of the dust of the earth
    Can I make songs.
    One is scarcely over,
    A new one comes.

    Del polvo de la tierra
    Saco yo coplas.
    No bien se acaba una
    Ya tengo otra.

    LV
    Like two trees we are
    By fate separated.
    The road is between
    But the boughs are mated.

    Como dos árboles somos
    Que la suerte nos separa,
    Con un camino por medio,
    Pero se juntan las ramas.

    CII
    I see myself as a crow.
    All are wearing clothes of gladness,
    Clothed in black mourning I go.

    Me comparo con el cuervo.
    Todos visten de alegría,
    Yo visto de luto negro.
  8. 8
    “The Heart Recalcitrant” – Leonora Speyer
    Does the heart grieve on,
    After its grief is gone
    Like a slow ship moving
    Across its own oblivion?

    Heart! Heart! Do you not know
    That I have conquered pain,
    Have parted from my woe?
    That my proud feet have found their path again,
    After the pathless heights-long after-
    And that my hands have learned to bless
    Their overflowing emptiness,
    My lips grown reconciled to laughter?

    O laggard of dead roads,
    O heart that will not heal nor break
    Nor yet forget!
    Tell me, whose tears are these
    That greet me as I wake?
    Why is my pillow wet?

    Red rebel, is it you
    That lifted this wild dew
    Like banners from my arid dreams,
    That roused this ember
    From exiled ashes,
    Calling me to remember?

    Speak, is it you that wept
    Upon my pillow while I slept?

    Does the heart then grieve on,
    After its grief is gone,
    A treasure ship that journeys
    Across its own oblivion?
  9. 9
    “Earth’s Night” – Max Eastman
    Sombre,
    Sombre is the night, the stars’ light is dimmed
    With smoky exhalations of the earth,
    Whose ancient voice is lifted on the wind
    In ceaseless elegies and songs of tears.
    O earth, I hear thee mourning for thy dead!
    Thou art waving the long grass over thy graves;
    Murmuring over all thy resting children,
    That have run and wandered and gone down
    Upon thy bosom. Thou wilt mourn for him
    Who looketh now a moment on these stars,
    And in the moving boughs of this dark night
    Heareth the murmurous sorrow of thy heart.
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Section 5 of 11:

Spiritual Poems for Funerals

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  1. 1
    “Another Leaf Has Fallen” – Unknown
    Another leaf has fallen,
    another soul has gone.
    But still we have God’s promises,
    in every robin’s song.

    For he is in His heaven,
    and though He takes away,
    He always leaves to mortals,
    the bright sun’s kindly ray.

    He leaves the fragrant blossoms,
    and lovely forest, green.
    And gives us new found comfort,
    when we on Him will lean.
  2. 2
    “Saying Goodbye” – Grace Noll Crowell
    As this day of sorrow comes,
    tears in our eyes, loneliness in our hearts,
    we say goodbye.
    Thank You for sharing your life with us,
    without you, we will not know
    the love of God for us.
    For you are a blessing in our eyes.
    We thank the Lord for sharing you with us.
    He has given us a great gift that we will never forget.
    Even as the sun sets and the rain falls down.
    God is indeed amazing, for knowing who we need.
  3. 3
    “Prayer of Saint Francis” – Unknown
    The Lord bless you
    and keep you.
    May He show His face
    to you and have mercy.
    May He turn His countenance
    to you and give you peace.
    The Lord bless you!
  4. 4
    “How Did They Live?” – Unknown
    Not, how did they die, but how did they live?
    Not, what did they gain, but what did they give?
    These are the units to measure the worth
    Of a person as a person, regardless of birth.

    Not, what was their church, nor what was their creed?
    But had they befriended those really in need?
    Were they ever ready, with a word of good cheer,
    To bring back a smile, to banish a tear?

    Not, what did the sketch in the newspaper say,
    But how many were sorry when they passed away?
  5. 5
    “Not Dead, but Sleeping” – Clara Ann Thompson
    We say he is dead; ah, the word is too somber;
    ’Tis the touch of God, on the weary eyes,
    That has caused them to close, in peaceful slumber,
    To open with joy, in the upper skies.

    We say he is gone; we have lost him forever;
    His face and his form we will cherish no more;
    While happy and safe, just over the river,
    He is waiting for us, where partings are o’er.

    Ah, sad are our hearts, as we gaze on him sleeping,
    And bitter and sad are the tears gushing down;
    And yet,— but we cannot see, for the weeping,—
    He has only exchanged the cross, for the crown.

    And though the dark mists of grief may surround us,
    Obscuring the face of the Father above,
    And blindly we grope, still His arms are around us,
    To guide and sustain with His pitying love.

    And he whom we love, is safe in His keeping,
    Yes, safe and secure, whatever may come;
    But ne’er will we know how sweetly he’s sleeping.
    Till God, in His mercy, shall gather us home.
  6. 6
    “Epitaph on my own Friend” – Robert Burns
    An honest man here lies at rest,
    As e’er God with His image blest:
    The friend of man, the friend of truth;
    The friend of age, and guide of youth:
    Few hearts like his, with virtue warm’d,
    Few heads with knowledge so inform’d:
    If there’s another world, he lives in bliss;
    If there is none, he made the best of this.
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Section 6 of 11:

Uplifting Poems for Funerals

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  1. 1
    “Crossing the Bar” – Alfred, Lord Tennyson
    Sunset and evening star,
    And one clear call for me!
    And may there be no moaning of the bar,
    When I put out to sea,

    But such a tide as moving seems asleep,
    Too full for sound and foam,
    When that which drew from out the boundless deep
    Turns again home.

    Twilight and evening bell,
    And after that the dark!
    And may there be no sadness of farewell,
    When I embark;

    For tho’ from out our bourne of Time and Place
    The flood may bear me far,
    I hope to see my Pilot face to face
    When I have cross’d the bar.
  2. 2
    “Away” – James Whitcomb Riley
    I cannot say, and I will not say
    That he is dead. He is just away!

    With a cheery smile, and a wave of the hand
    He has wandered into an unknown land,

    And left us dreaming how very fair
    It needs must be, since he lingers there.

    And you - O you, who the wildest yearn
    For the old-time step and the glad return,

    Think of him faring on, as dear
    In the love of There as the love of Here;

    And loyal still, as he gave the blows
    Of his warrior-strength to his country's foes.

    Mild and gentle, as he was brave,
    When the sweetest love of his life he gave

    To simple things: Where the violets grew
    Blue as the eyes they were likened to,

    The touches of his hands have strayed
    As reverently as his lips have prayed:

    When the little brown thrush that harshly chirred
    Was dear to him as the mocking-bird;

    And he pitied as much as a man in pain
    A writhing honey-bee wet with rain.

    Think of him still as the same, I say:
    He is not dead - he is just away!
  3. 3
    “When I Die” – Fenton Johnson
    When I die my song shall be
    Crooning of the summer breeze;
    When I die my shroud shall be
    Leaves plucked from the maple trees;
    On a couch as green as moss
    And a bed as soft as down
    I shall sleep and dream my dream
    Of a poet’s laurel crown.

    When I die my star shall drop
    Singing like a nightingale;
    When I die my soul shall rise
    Where the lyre-strings never fail;
    In the rose my blood shall lie,
    In the violet the smile,
    And the moonbeams thousand strong
    Past my grave each night shall file.
  4. 4
    “Death Is Nothing at All” – Henry Scott-Holland
    Death is nothing at all.
    It does not count.
    I have only slipped away into the next room.
    Nothing has happened.

    Everything remains exactly as it was.
    I am I, and you are you,
    and the old life that we lived so fondly together is untouched, unchanged.
    Whatever we were to each other, that we are still.

    Call me by the old familiar name.
    Speak of me in the easy way which you always used.
    Put no difference into your tone.
    Wear no forced air of solemnity or sorrow.

    Laugh as we always laughed at the little jokes that we enjoyed together.
    Play, smile, think of me, pray for me.
    Let my name be ever the household word that it always was.
    Let it be spoken without an effort, without the ghost of a shadow upon it.

    Life means all that it ever meant.
    It is the same as it ever was.
    There is absolute and unbroken continuity.
    What is this death but a negligible accident?

    Why should I be out of mind because I am out of sight?
    I am but waiting for you, for an interval,
    somewhere very near,
    just round the corner.

    All is well.
    Nothing is hurt; nothing is lost.
    One brief moment and all will be as it was before.
    How we shall laugh at the trouble of parting when we meet again!
  5. 5
    “Under the Harvest Moon” – Carl Sandburg
    Under the harvest moon,
    When the soft silver
    Drips shimmering
    Over the garden nights,
    Death, the gray mocker,
    Comes and whispers to you
    As a beautiful friend
    Who remembers.

    Under the summer roses
    When the flagrant crimson
    Lurks in the dusk
    Of the wild red leaves,
    Love, with little hands,
    Comes and touches you
    With a thousand memories,
    And asks you
    Beautiful, unanswerable questions.
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Section 7 of 11:

Celebration of Life Poems

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  1. 1
    “Let Me Go” – Christina Rossetti
    When I come to the end of the road
    And the sun has set for me
    I want no rites in a gloom filled room
    Why cry for a soul set free?

    Miss me a little, but not for long
    And not with your head bowed low
    Remember the love that once we shared
    Miss me, but let me go.

    For this is a journey we all must take
    And each must go alone.
    It's all part of the master plan
    A step on the road to home.

    When you are lonely and sick at heart
    Go to the friends we know.
    Laugh at all the things we used to do
    Miss me, but let me go.
  2. 2
    “In Memoriam” – William Morecomb
    For a second you were flying
    Like you always wanted to
    Now you’ll fly forever
    In skies of azure blue
    We’ll see your smile in every ray
    Of sunshine after rain
    And hear the echo of your laughter
    Over all the pain
    The world’s a little quieter now
    The colours have lost their hue
    The birds are singing softly
    And our hearts are missing you
    Each time we see a little cloud
    Or a rainbow soaring high
    We’ll think of you and gently
    Wipe a tear from our eye.
  3. 3
    “Philosophy” – Elsa Gidlow
    Since we must soon be fed
    As honey and new bread
    To every-hungry Death:
    O, love me very sweet
    And kiss me very long
    And let us use our breath
    For song.
    Nothing else endures
    Overlong.
  4. 4
    “Consolation” – Robert Louis Stevenson
    Though he, that ever kind and true,
    Kept stoutly step by step with you,
    Your whole long, gusty lifetime through,
    Be gone a while before,
    Be now a moment gone before,
    Yet, doubt not, soon the seasons shall restore
    Your friend to you.

    He has but turned the corner — still
    He pushes on with right good will,
    Through mire and marsh, by heugh and hill,
    That self-same arduous way —
    That self-same upland, hopeful way,
    That you and he through many a doubtful day
    Attempted still.

    He is not dead, this friend — not dead,
    But in the path we mortals tread
    Got some few, trifling steps ahead
    And nearer to the end;
    So that you too, once past the bend,
    Shall meet again, as face to face, this friend
    You fancy dead.

    Push gaily on, strong heart! The while
    You travel forward mile by mile,
    He loiters with a backward smile
    Till you can overtake,
    And strains his eyes to search his wake,
    Or whistling, as he sees you through the brake,
    Waits on a stile.
  5. 5
    “Winter Sleep” – Edith Matilda Thomas
    I know it must be winter (though I sleep)—
    I know it must be winter, for I dream
    I dip my bare feet in the running stream,
    And flowers are many, and the grass grows deep.
  6. 6
    I know I must be old (how age deceives! )
    I know I must be old, for, all unseen,
    My heart grows young, as autumn fields grow green
    When late rains patter on the falling sheaves.
    I know I must be tired (and tired souls err)—
    I know I must be tired, for all my soul
    To deeds of daring beats a glad, faint roll,
    As storms the riven pine to music stir.
    I know I must be dying (Death draws near)—
    I know I must be dying, for I crave
    Life—life, strong life, and think not of the grave,
    And turf-bound silence, in the frosty year.
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Section 8 of 11:

Moving Poems about Death

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  1. 1
    “Prisms” – Laura Riding Jackson
    What is beheld through glass seems glass.

    The quality of what I am
    Encases what I am not,
    Smooths the strange world.
    I perceive it slowly
    In my time,
    In my material,
    As my pride,
    As my possession:
    The vision is love.

    When life crashes like a cracked pane,
    Still shall I love
    Even the slight grass and the patient dust.
    Death also sees, though darkly,
    And I must trust then as now
    Only another kind of prism
    Through which I may not put my hands to touch.
  2. 2
    “The Past” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
    The debt is paid,
    The verdict said,
    The Furies laid,
    The plague is stayed.
    All fortunes made;
    Turn the key and bolt the door,
    Sweet is death forevermore.
    Nor haughty hope, nor swart chagrin,
    Nor murdering hate, can enter in.
    All is now secure and fast;
    Not the gods can shake the Past;
    Flies-to the adamantine door
    Bolted down forevermore.
    None can re-enter there,—
    No thief so politic,
    No Satan with a royal trick
    Steal in by window, chink, or hole,
    To bind or unbind, add what lacked,
    Insert a leaf, or forge a name,
    New-face or finish what is packed,
    Alter or mend eternal Fact.
  3. 3
    “In Flanders Fields” – John McCrae
    In Flanders fields the poppies blow
    Between the crosses, row on row,
    That mark our place; and in the sky
    The larks, still bravely singing, fly
    Scarce heard amid the guns below.
    We are the Dead. Short days ago
    We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
    Loved and were loved, and now we lie
    In Flanders fields.
    Take up our quarrel with the foe:
    To you from failing hands we throw
    The torch; be yours to hold it high.
    If ye break faith with us who die
    We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
    In Flanders fields.
  4. 4
    “Requiescat in Pace” – Libbie C. Baer
    Cover with flowers the wound of the dart,
    Fill it with flowers, the void in the heart;
    Tenderest thoughts are unfolding to-day,
    Sweet as the blossoms a-bloom in the May.

    Think not of suffering, bloodshed and strife,
    Think not of loss that hath come to thy life,
    Think of the peace with suffering done,
    Think of the glories their sacrifice won.
  5. 5
    “A Mother to the War-Makers” – Margaret Widdemer
    This is my son that you have taken,
    Guard lest your gold-vault walls be shaken,
    Never again to speak or waken.
    This, that I gave my life to make,
    This you have bidden the vultures break—
    Dead for your selfish quarrel’s sake!
    This that I built all of my years,
    Made with my strength and love and tears,
    Dead for pride of your shining spears!
    Just for your playthings bought and sold
    You have crushed to a heap of mold
    Youth and life worth a whole world’s gold—
    This was my son, that you have taken,
    Guard lest your gold-vault walls be shaken—
    This—that shall never speak or waken!
  6. 6
    “On the Death of Emily Jane Brontë” – Charlotte Brontë
    My darling thou wilt never know
    The grinding agony of woe
    That we have bourne for thee,
    Thus may we consolation tear
    E'en from the depth of our despair
    And wasting misery.

    The nightly anguish thou art spared
    When all the crushing truth is bared
    To the awakening mind,
    When the galled heart is pierced with grief,
    Till wildly it implores relief,
    But small relief can find.

    Nor know'st thou what it is to lie
    Looking forth with streaming eye
    On life's lone wilderness.
    "Weary, weary, dark and drear,
    How shall I the journey bear,
    The burden and distress?"

    Then since thou art spared such pain
    We will not wish thee here again;
    He that lives must mourn.
    God help us through our misery
    And give us rest and joy with thee
    When we reach our bourne!
  7. 7
    “Rhythms (Section I)” – Charles Reznikoff
    The stars are hidden,
    the lights are out;
    the tall black houses
    are ranked about.

    I beat my fists
    on the stout doors,
    no answering steps
    come down the floors.

    I have walked until
    I am faint and numb;
    from one dark street
    to another I come.

    The comforting
    winds are still.

    This is a chaos
    through which I stumble,
    till I reach the void
    and down I tumble.

    The stars will then
    be out forever;
    the fists unclenched,
    the feet walk never,

    and all I say
    blown by the wind
    away.
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Section 9 of 11:

Poems about Grief

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  1. 1
    “Inarticulate Grief” – Richard Aldington
    Let the sea beat its thin torn hands
    In anguish against the shore,
    Let it moan
    Between headland and cliff;
    Let the sea shriek out its agony
    Across waste sands and marshes,
    And clutch great ships,
    Tearing them plate from steel plate
    In reckless anger;
    Let it break the white bulwarks
    Of harbour and city;
    Let it sob and scream and laugh
    In a sharp fury,
    With white salt tears
    Wet on its writhen face;
    Ah! let the sea still be mad
    And crash in madness among the shaking rocks—
    For the sea is the cry of our sorrow.
  2. 2
    “Forever” – Paul Laurence Dunbar
    I had not known before
    Forever was so long a word.
    The slow stroke of the clock of time
    I had not heard.

    ‘Tis hard to learn so late;
    It seems no sad heart really learns,
    But hopes and trusts and doubts and fears,
    And bleeds and burns.

    The night is not all dark,
    Nor is the day all it seems,
    But each may bring me this relief—
    My dreams and dreams.

    I had not known before
    That Never was so sad a word,
    So wrap me in forgetfulness—
    I have not heard.
  3. 3
    “Requiescat” – Oscar Wilde
    Tread lightly, she is near
    Under the snow,
    Speak gently, she can hear
    The daisies grow.

    All her bright golden hair
    Tarnished with rust,
    She that was young and fair
    Fallen to dust.

    Lily-like, white as snow,
    She hardly knew
    She was a woman, so
    Sweetly she grew.

    Coffin-board, heavy stone,
    Lie on her breast,
    I vex my heart alone
    She is at rest.

    Peace, Peace, she cannot hear
    Lyre or sonnet,
    All my life’s buried here,
    Heap earth upon it.
  4. 4
    “Friends” – Leonora Speyer
    Grief shall not be my friend! She shall not be
    Companion of my table, path or bed,
    She shall not share my salt nor break my bread,
    Nor walk nor weep nor dream nor wake with me:
    I will not trust her mournful company,
    Nor listen to her whisperings of the dead,
    Why should I heed her somber eyelid’s red?
    Tears are but chains and I, I would be free!

    For grief would make a laggard of my will,
    And me, a puny thing of anguished need,
    A memory! And I would die at length,
    Close to the thought of you—and loving still:
    So will I choose a friend of stouter creed,
    The wingless, tearless thing the heart calls strength.
  5. 5
    “[Like a white stone]” – Anna Akhmatova
    Like a white stone deep in a draw-well lying,
    As hard and clear, a memory lies in me.
    I cannot strive nor have I heart for striving:
    It is such pain and yet such ecstasy.

    It seems to me that someone looking closely
    Into my eyes would see it, patent, pale.
    And, seeing, would grow sadder and more thoughtful
    Than one who listens to a bitter tale.

    The ancient gods changed men to things, but left them
    A consciousness that smoldered endlessly,
    That splendid sorrows might endure forever.
    And you are changed into a memory.
  6. 6
    “When the Green Lies over the Earth” – Angelina Weld Grimké
    When the green lies over the earth, my dear,
    A mantle of witching grace,
    When the smile and the tear of the young child year
    Dimple across its face,
    And then flee, when the wind all day is sweet
    With the breath of growing things,
    When the wooing bird lights on restless feet
    And chirrups and trills and sings
    To his lady-love
    In the green above,
    Then oh! my dear, when the youth’s in the year,
    Yours is the face that I long to have near,
    Yours is the face, my dear.

    But the green is hiding your curls, my dear,
    Your curls so shining and sweet;
    And the gold-hearted daisies this many a year
    Have bloomed and bloomed at your feet,
    And the little birds just above your head
    With their voices hushed, my dear,
    For you have sung and have prayed and have pled
    This many, many a year.

    And the blossoms fall,
    On the garden wall,
    And drift like snow on the green below.
    But the sharp thorn grows
    On the budding rose,
    And my heart no more leaps at the sunset glow.
    For oh! my dear, when the youth’s in the year,
    Yours is the face that I long to have near,
    Yours is the face, my dear.
  7. 7
    “Lines Written at the Grave of Alexander Dumas” – Gwendolyn Bennett
    Cemeteries are places for departed souls
    And bones interred,
    Or hearts with shattered loves.
    A woman with lips made warm for laughter
    Would find grey stones and roving spirits
    Too chill for living, moving pulses . . .
    And thou, great spirit, wouldst shiver in thy granite shroud
    Should idle mirth or empty talk
    Disturb thy tranquil sleeping.

    A cemetery is a place for shattered loves
    And broken hearts . . . .
    Bowed before the crystal chalice of thy soul,
    I find the multi-colored fragrances of thy mind
    Has lost itself in Death’s transparency.

    Oh, stir the lucid waters of thy sleep
    And coin for me a tale
    Of happy loves and gems and joyous limbs
    And hearts where love is sweet!

    A cemetery is a place for broken hearts
    And silent thought . . .
    And silence never moves,
    Nor speaks nor sings.
  8. 8
    “She Went Out Singing” – Ameen Rihani
    She went out singing, and the poppies still
    Crowd round her door awaiting her return;
    She went out dancing, and the doleful rill
    Lingers beneath her walls her news to learn.

    Their love is but a seed of what she has sown;
    Their grief is but a shadow of my own.

    O Tomb, O Tomb! did Zahra’s beauty fade,
    Or dost thou still preserve it in thy gloom?
    O, Tomb, thou art nor firmament nor glade,
    Yet in thee shines the moon and lilies bloom.
  9. 9
    “To a Dead Friend” – Langston Hughes
    The moon still sends its mellow light
    Through the purple blackness of the night;
    The morning star is palely bright
    Before the dawn.

    The sun still shines just as before;
    The rose still grows beside my door,
    But you have gone.

    The sky is blue and the robin sings;
    The butterflies dance on rainbow wings
    Though I am sad.

    In all the earth no joy can be;
    Happiness comes no more to me,
    For you are dead.
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Section 10 of 11:

Poems for a Parent’s Funeral

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  1. 1
    “O Captain! My Captain!” – Walt Whitman
    O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done,
    The ship has weather’d every rack, the prize we sought is won,
    The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
    While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring;
    But O heart! heart! heart!
    O the bleeding drops of red,
    Where on the deck my Captain lies,
    Fallen cold and dead.

    O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells;
    Rise up- for you the flag is flung- for you the bugle trills,
    For you bouquets and ribbon’d wreaths- for you the shores a-crowding,
    For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;
    Here Captain! dear father!
    This arm beneath your head!
    It is some dream that on the deck
    ,You’ve fallen cold and dead.

    My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still,
    My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will,
    The ship is anchor’d safe and sound, its voyage closed and done,
    From fearful trip the victor ship comes in with object won;
    Exult O shores, and ring O bells!
    But I with mournful tread,
    Walk the deck my Captain lies,
    Fallen cold and dead.
  2. 2
    “Mother Dear” – Claude McKay
    “Husban’, I am goin’—
    Though de brooklet is a-flowin’,
    An’ de coolin’ breeze is blowin’
    Softly by;
    Hark, how strange de cow is mooin’,
    An’ our Jennie’s pigeons cooin’,
    While I feel de water growin’,
    Climbing high.

    “Akee trees are laden,
    But de yellow leaves are fadin’
    Like a young an’ bloomin’ maiden
    Fallen low;
    In de pond de ducks are wadin’
    While my body longs for Eden,
    An’ my weary breat’ is gledin
    ’Way from you.

    “See dem John-crows flyin’!
    ’Tis a sign dat I am dyin’;
    Oh, I’m wishful to be lyin’
    All alone:
    fait’ful husban’, don’t go cryin’,
    Life is one long self-denyin’
    All-surrenderin’ an’ sighin’
    Livin’ moan.”

    “Wife, de parson’s prayin’,
    Won’t you listen what he’s sayin’,
    Spend de endin’ of your day in
    Christ our Lord?"
    But de sound of horses neighin’,
    Baain’ goats an’ donkeys brayin’,
    Twitt’rin’ birds an’ children playin’
    Was all she heard.

    Things she had been rearin’,
    Only those could claim her hearin,
    When de end we had been fearin’
    Now had come:
    Now her last pain she is bearin’,
    Now de final scene is nearin’,
    An’ her vacant eyes are starin’
    On her hom.

    Oh! it was heart-rendin’
    As we watched de loved life endin’,
    Dat sweet sainted spirit bendin’
    To de death:
    Gone all further hope of mendin’,
    With de angel Death attendin’,
    An’ his slayin’ spirit blendin’
    With her breath.’
  3. 3
    “Maumee Ruth” – Sterling A. Brown
    Might as well bury her
    And bury her deep,
    Might as well put her
    Where she can sleep.

    Might as well lay her
    Out in her shiny black;
    And for the love of God
    Not wish her back.

    Maum Sal may miss her
    Maum Sal, she only
    With no one now to scoff
    Sal may be lonely . . . .

    Nobody else there is
    Who will be caring
    How rocky was the road
    For her wayfaring;

    Nobody be heeding in
    Cabin, or town
    That she is lying here
    In her best gown.

    Boy that she suckled
    How should he know
    Hiding in city holes
    Sniffling the ‘snow’?

    And how should the news
    Pierce Harlem’s din
    To reach her baby gal,
    Sodden with gin?

    To cut her withered heart
    They cannot come again,
    Preach her the lies about
    Jordan and then

    Might as well drop her
    Deep in the ground
    Might as well pray for her
    That she sleep sound. . . . .
  4. 4
    “I Think I See Him There” – Waring Cuney
    I think I see Him there
    With a stern dream on his face

    I see Him there—

    Wishing they would hurry
    The last nail in place.

    And I wonder, had I been there,
    Would I have doubted too

    Or would the dream have told me,
    What this man speaks is true.
  5. 5
    “My Mother” – Claude McKay
    I
    Reg wished me to go with him to the field,
    I paused because I did not want to go;
    But in her quiet way she made me yield
    Reluctantly, for she was breathing low.
    Her hand she slowly lifted from her lap
    And, smiling sadly in the old sweet way,
    She pointed to the nail where hung my cap.
    Her eyes said: I shall last another day.
    But scarcely had we reached the distant place,
    When o'er the hills we heard a faint bell ringing;
    A boy came running up with frightened face;
    We knew the fatal news that he was bringing.
    I heard him listlessly, without a moan,
    Although the only one I loved was gone.

    II
    The dawn departs, the morning is begun,
    The trades come whispering from off the seas,
    The fields of corn are golden in the sun,
    The dark-brown tassels fluttering in the breeze;
    The bell is sounding and the children pass,
    Frog-leaping, skipping, shouting, laughing shrill,
    Down the red road, over the pasture-grass,
    Up to the school-house crumbling on the hill.
    The older folk are at their peaceful toil,
    Some pulling up the weeds, some plucking corn,
    And others breaking up the sun-baked soil.
    Float, faintly-scented breeze, at early morn
    Over the earth where mortals sow and reap—
    Beneath its breast my mother lies asleep.
  6. 6
    “Lament” – Edna St. Vincent Millay
    Listen, children:
    Your father is dead.
    From his old coats
    I'll make you little jackets;
    I'll make you little trousers
    From his old pants.
    There'll be in his pockets
    Things he used to put there,
    Keys and pennies
    Covered with tobacco;
    Dan shall have the pennies
    To save in his bank;
    Anne shall have the keys
    To make a pretty noise with.
    Life must go on,
    And the dead be forgotten;
    Life must go on,
    Though good men die;
    Anne, eat your breakfast;
    Dan, take your medicine;
    Life must go on;
    I forget just why.
  7. 7
    “Telling the Bees” – Lizette Woodworth Reese
    A Colonial Custom

    Bathsheba came out to the sun,
    Out to our wallèd cherry-trees;
    The tears adown her cheek did run,
    Bathsheba standing in the sun,
    Telling the bees.

    My mother had that moment died;
    Unknowing, sped I to the trees,
    And plucked Bathsheba’s hand aside;
    Then caught the name that there she cried
    Telling the bees.

    Her look I never can forget,
    I that held sobbing to her knees;
    The cherry-boughs above us met;
    I think I see Bathsheba yet
    Telling the bees.
  8. 8
    “Mother” – Luis Dato
    When evenings cast pale shadows on the earth,
    And silence, like a vast mysterious ghost,
    Stifles the land and sea from hill to coast,
    And buries all that tropic suns gave birth,
    When by myself I pace the darkened shore,
    And think of this unhappy lot of mine,
    The pain and grief the fates to me assign,
    I sigh for you, O mother I adore!
    That I could seek your bosom as of old,
    And, nestling there, bare secrets that oppress,
    Accuse these that my love would dispossess,
    Whose hearts to cold desires and base are sold!
    O mother dear! When death relieves our sighs,
    Shall we in heaven, meet, in Paradise?
  9. 9
    “December, 1919” – Claude McKay
    Last night I heard your voice, mother,
    The words you sang to me
    When I, a little barefoot boy,
    Knelt down against your knee.
    And tears gushed from my heart, mother,
    And passed beyond its wall,
    But though the fountain reached my throat
    The drops refused to fall.
    'Tis ten years since you died, mother,
    Just ten dark years of pain,
    And oh, I only wish that I
    Could weep just once again.
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Section 11 of 11:

Reading a Poem at a Funeral

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  1. 1
    Practice reading the poem until you know it well. You don’t have to memorize the poem, but it helps to read it until you feel familiar with it. First, read it silently and think about the rhythm and order of the words. Next, find a quiet place to read it out loud at least 15 times. [1]
    • It’s not necessary to read it out loud in front of anyone, but it may help to have a trusted friend watch and offer feedback to help you polish your reading.
    • Read the poem in front of a mirror if you don’t have anyone to listen and offer comments.
  2. 2
    Follow the natural phrases and not the line breaks. While poems are often arranged with specific line breaks, you don’t have to pause at the end of a line. Instead of following the line breaks, pause when you see punctuation like a comma, semicolon, or period. [2]
    • Pausing at the end of line breaks can make the poem sound choppy when you read it out loud.
    • Remember to breathe naturally as you read. Use the pause for punctuation to take a quick breath before moving on.
  3. 3
    Slow down and vary the pitch and tone of your voice. Many people talk more rapidly when they’re nervous. Take a deep breath before you start reading and think about slowing down. Give yourself enough time to pronounce each word carefully so the audience understands what you say. [3]
    • Try to read in a relaxed tone of voice that rises and falls naturally. Don’t worry about giving a dramatic reading. Let the poem speak for itself.
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