Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Sirius by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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Sirius

    By Ella Wheeler Wilcox



    'Since Sinus crossed the Milky Way, sixty thousand years have gone.' - GARRETT P. SERVISS.

    Since Sirius crossed the Milky Way
        Full sixty thousand years have gone,
    Yet hour by hour, and day by day,
        This tireless star speeds on and on.

    Methinks he must be moved to mirth
        By that droll tale of Genesis,
    Which says creation had its birth
        For such a puny world as this.

    To hear how One who fashioned all
        Those Solar Systems, tier on tiers,
    Expressed in little Adam's fall
        The purpose of a million spheres.

    And, witness of the endless plan,
        To splendid wrath he must be wrought
    By pigmy creeds presumptuous man
        Sends forth as God's primeval thought.

    Perchance from half a hundred stars
        He hears as many curious things;
    From Venus, Jupiter and Mars,
        And Saturn with the beauteous rings,

    There may be students of the Cause
        Who send their revelations out,
    And formulate their codes of laws,
        With heavens for faith and hells for doubt.

    On planets old ere form or place
        Was lent to earth, may dwell - who knows -
    A God-like and perfected race
        That hails great Sirius as he goes.

    In zones that circle moon and sun,
        'Twixt world and world, he may see souls
    Whose span of earthly life is done,
        Still journeying up to higher goals.

    And on dead planets grey and cold
        Grim spectral souls, that harboured hate
    Life after life, he may behold
        Descending to a darker fate.

    And on his grand majestic course
        He may have caught one glorious sight
    Of that vast shining central Source
        From which proceeds all Life, all Light.

    Since Sirius crossed the Milky Way
        Full sixty thousand years have gone,
    No mortal man may bid him stay,
        No mortal man may speed him on.

    No mortal mind may comprehend
        What is beyond, what was before;
    To God be glory without end,
        Let man be humble and adore.



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