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				Title:     New Year's Day 
			    
Author: Ella Wheeler Wilcox [
More Titles by Wilcox]		                
			    
When with clanging and with ringing
   Comes the year's initial day,
I can feel the rhythmic swinging
   Of the world upon its way;
And though Right still wears a fetter,
   And though Justice still is blind,
Time's beyond is always better
   Than the paths he leaves behind.
In our eons of existence,
   As we circle through the night,
We annihilate the distance
   'Twixt the darkness and the light.
From beginnings crude and lowly,
   Round and round our souls have trod
Through the circles, winding slowly
   Up to knowledge and to God.
With each century departed
   Some old evil found a tomb,
Some old truth was newly started
   In propitious soil to bloom.
With each epoch some condition
   That has handicapped the race
(Worn-out creed or superstition)
   Unto knowledge yields its place.
Though in folly and in blindness
   And in sorrow still we grope,
Yet in man's increasing kindness
   Lies the world's stupendous hope;
For our darkest hour of errors
   Is as radiant as the dawn,
Set beside the awful terrors
   Of the ages that have gone.
And above the sad world's sobbing,
   And the strife of clan with clan,
I can hear the mighty throbbing
   Of the heart of God in man;
And a voice chants through the chiming
   Of the bells, and seems to say,
We are climbing, we are climbing,
   As we circle on our way.
[The end]
Ella Wheeler Wilcox's poem: New Year's Day
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