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Inevitable

Topics: classic

What has been will be,      'Tis the under law of life;     'Tis the song of sky and sea,      To the key of calm and strife.     For guard we as we may,      What is to be will be,     The dark must fold each day --      The shore must gird each sea.     All things are ruled by law;      'Tis only in man's will     You meet a feeble flaw;      But fate is weaving still     The web and woof of life,      With hands that have no hearts,     Thro' calmness and thro' strife,      Despite all human arts.     For fate is master here,      He laughs at human wiles;     He sceptres every tear,      And fetters any smiles.     What is to be will be,      We cannot help ourselves;     The waves ask not the sea      Where lies the shore that shelves.     The law is coldest steel,      We live beneath its sway,     It cares not what we feel,      And so pass night and day.     And sometimes we may think      This cannot -- will not -- be:     Some waves must rise -- some sink,      Out on the midnight sea.     And we are weak as waves      That sink upon the shore;     We go down into graves --      Fate chants the nevermore;     Cometh a voice! Kneel down!      'Tis God's -- there is no fate --     He giveth the Cross and Crown,      He opens the jeweled gate.     He watcheth with such eyes      As only mothers own --     "Sweet Father in the skies!      Ye call us to a throne."     There is no fate -- God's love      Is law beneath each law,     And law all laws above      Fore'er, without a flaw.

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"What has been will be,..."

"Inevitable" is a quintessential example of Abram Joseph Ryan's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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