Funerals

I have collected a selection of poems and readings you may like to use during a ceremony, I hope you will find something suitable. I intend to add more regularly.

Sea fever

I must down to the seas again,

to the lonely sea and the sky,

And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer

her by,

And the wheel’s kick and the wind’s song

and the white sail’s shaking,

And a grey mist on the sea’s face,

and a grey dawn breaking.

 

I must down to the seas again,

For the call of the running tide

Is a wild call and a clear call

That may not be denied;

And all I ask is a windy day with the white

clouds flying,

And the flung spray and the blown spume,

And the sea-gulls crying.

 

I must down to the seas again,

to the vagrant gypsy life,

To the gull’s way and the whale’s way

where the wind’s like a whetted knife;

And all I ask is a merry yarn from a

laughing fellow-rover

And quiet sleep and a sweet dream

When the long trick’s over.

 

John Masefield (1878 – 1967)

Warm Summer sun

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.

 

Mark Twain (1835 – 1910)

Farewell

Farewell dear friends

I loved you so much

But now I must leave you

And spread over me the dust.

 

Fair life fare well

Fare never ill

Far I go now

And Say, Farewell.

 

Farewell dear world

With the waters around you curled

And the grass on your breast

I loved you best.

 

Farewell fish and insect

Bird, animal, swift mover

Grim reptile as well

I was your approver.

 

Wide sky, farewell,

Sun, moon, stars in places

Farewell all fair universes

In far places

 

Stevie Smith (1902 – 1971)

Farewell, sweet dust

Now I have lost you, I must scatter

All of you on the air henceforth;

Not that to me it can ever matter

Buy it’s only fair to the rest of the earth.

 

Now especially, when it is winter

And the sun’s not half so bright as she was,

Who wouldn’t be glad to find a splinter

That once was you in the frozen grass?

 

Snowflakes, too, will be softer feathered,

Clouds, perhaps, will be whiter plumed;

Rain, whose brilliance you caught and gathered,

Purer silver have reassumed.

 

Farewell, sweet dust; I never was a miser:

Once, for a minute, I made you mine:

Now you are gone, I am none the wiser

But the leaves of the willow are as bright as wine.

 

Elinor Wyle (1885 – 1928)

Scatter my ashes to the wind

Scatter my ashes to the wind

To help the flowers grow.

 

If you must bury something,

Let it be my faults, my weaknesses

And all prejudices against my fellow men.

 

If you wish to remember me,

Do it with a kind word or deed

To someone who needs you,

 

Then I will live forever.

 

Anon

Andrea Jackson The Holistic Celebrant

Contact me by phone or email

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