A POEM ENTITLED “THE UNKNOWN GRAVE”

Below is a poem submitted by an anonymous reader of the Welshman newspaper published on August 27th 1858 page 8 entitled THE UNKNOWN GRAVE. With over 5,000 burials in this cemetery without any marker or headstone, it’s a poem with great relevance today as it was when it was first published 168 years ago. A poignant and moving epitaph..

 

THE UNKNOWN GRAVE

No name to let us know 

Who rests below 

No word of death or birth

Only the grasses wave

Over a mound of earth

Over a nameless grave.

 

Did this poor wandering heart 

In pain depart ? 

Longing, but all too late

For the calm home again

Where patient watchers wait

And still will wait in vain. 

 

Did mourners come in scorn

And thus forlorn

Leave him, with grief and shame

To silence and decay

And hide the tarnished name

Of the unconscious clay ?

 

It may be from his side 

His loved ones died

And last of some bright band 

(Together now once more) 

He sought his home, the land

Where they were gone before.

 

No matter, limes have made 

As cool a shade 

And lingering breezes pass

As tenderly and slow

As if beneath the grass 

A monarch slept below. 

 

No grief, though loud and deep

Could stir that sleep;

And earth and heaven tell 

Of rest that shall not cease 

Where the cold world’s farewell

Fades into endless peace. 

Translate »