Quiet, quiet dead, 
Have ye aught to say 
From your hidden bed 
In the earthy clay? 
 
Fathers, children, mothers, 
Ye are very quiet; 
Can ye shout, my brothers? 
I would know you by it! 
 
Have ye any words 
That are like to ours? 
Have ye any birds? 
Have ye any flowers? 
 
Could ye rise a minute 
When the sun is warm? 
I would know you in it, 
I would take no harm. 
 
I am half afraid 
In the ghostly night; 
If ye all obeyed 
I should fear you quite. 
 
But when day is breaking 
In the purple east 
I would meet you waking- 
One of you at least- 
 
When the sun is tipping 
Every stony block, 
And the sun is slipping 
Down the weathercock. 
 
Quiet, quiet dead, 
I will not perplex you; 
What my tongue hath said 
Haply it may vex you! 
 
Yet I hear you speaking 
With a quiet speech, 
As if ye were seeking 
Better things to teach: 
 
'Wait a little longer, 
Suffer and endure 
Till your heart is stronger 
And your eyes are pure- 
 
A little longer, brother, 
With your fellow-men: 
We will meet each other 
Otherwhere again.'
George MacDonald
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/quiet-dead/