Now along the solemn heights  
Fade the Autumn's altar-lights;  
   Down the great earth's glimmering chancel  
Glide the days and nights.  
 
Little kindred of the grass,  
Like a shadow in a glass  
   Falls the dark and falls the stillness;  
We must rise and pass.  
 
We must rise and follow, wending  
Where the nights and days have ending, --  
   Pass in order pale and slow  
Unto sleep extending.  
 
Little brothers of the clod,  
Soul of fire and seed of sod,  
   We must fare into the silence  
At the knees of God.  
 
Little comrades of the sky,  
Wing to wing we wander by,  
   Going, going, going, going,  
Softly as a sigh.  
 
Hark, the moving shapes confer,  
Globe of dew and gossamer,  
   Fading and ephemeral spirits  
In the dusk astir.  
 
Moth and blossom, blade and bee,  
Worlds must go as well as we,  
   In the long procession joining  
Mount and star and sea.  
 
Toward the shadowy brink we climb  
Where the round year rolls sublime,  
   Rolls, and drops, and falls forever  
In the vast of time.  
 
Like a plummet plunging deep  
Past the utmost reach of sleep,  
   Till remembrance has no longer  
Care to laugh or weep.
Sir Charles George Douglas Roberts
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-recessional/