Humanist Readings for Funerals

If you’ve found this page in a time of grief, please accept my sincere condolences.

Below is a list of secular funeral readings. If you search for Humanist or Secular Funeral Readings you will find more.

You can read more about a Humanist Celebrant’s role and many services to support grieving families here:

SELECTED HUMANIST FUNERAL READINGS

One at Rest by Anonymous

Think of me as one at rest,

for me you should not weep

I have no pain no troubled thoughts

for I am just asleep

The living thinking me that was,

is now forever still

And life goes on without me now,

as time forever will.

If your heart is heavy now

because I’ve gone away

Dwell not long upon it friend

For none of us can stay

Those of you who liked me,

I sincerely thank you all

And those of you who loved me,

I thank you most of all.

And in my fleeting lifespan,

as time went rushing by

I found some time to hesitate,

to laugh, to love, to cry

Matters it now if time began

If time will ever cease?

I was here, I used it all,

and now I am at peace.

The Dash by Linda Ellis

I read of a man who stood to speak at the funeral of a friend.

He referred to the dates on the tombstone from the beginning to the end.

He noted first came the date of the birth and spoke the following date with tears.

But he said what mattered most of all was the dash between the years.

For that dash represents all the time that they spent life on Earth.

And now only those who loved them know what that little line is worth.

For it matters not how much we own, the cars, the house, the cash.

What matters is how we live and love, and how we spend our dash.

So, think about this long and hard. Are there things you’d like to change?

For you never know how much time is left that can still be rearranged.

If we could just slow down enough to consider what’s true and real,

and always try to understand the way other people feel.

Be less quick to anger and show appreciation more,

and love the people in our lives like we’ve never loved before.

If we treat each other with respect and more often wear a smile,

remembering that this special dash might only last a little while.

So, when your eulogy is being read with your life’s actions to rehash,

would you be proud of the things they say about how you spent your dash?

Roads Go Ever On by J.R.R. Tolkien

Roads go ever ever on,

Over rock and under tree,

By caves where never sun has shone,

By streams that never find the sea;

Over snow by winter sown,

And through the merry flowers of June,

Over grass and over stone,

And under mountains in the moon.

Roads go ever ever on

Under cloud and under star,

Yet feet that wandering have gone

Turn at last to home afar.

Eyes that fire and sword have seen

And horror in the halls of stone

Look at last on meadows green

And trees and hills they long have known.

Roads go ever on and on

Out from the door where it began.

Now far ahead the Road has gone,

Let others follow it who can!

Let them a journey new begin,

But I at last with weary feet

Will turn towards the lighted inn,

My evening-rest and sleep to meet.

Do Not Stand at My Grave and Weep by Elizabeth Frye

Do not stand at my grave and weep

I am not there. I do not sleep.

I am a thousand winds that blow.

I am the diamond glints on snow.

I am the sunlight on ripened grain.

I am the gentle autumn’s rain.

When you awaken in the morning’s hush,

I am the swift uplifting rush

Of quiet birds in circled flight.

I am the soft stars that shine at night.

Do not stand at my grave and cry;

I am not there. I did not die.

Intimations of Immortality by William Wordsworth

What though the radiance which was once so bright~
Be now forever taken from my sight,


Though nothing can bring back the hour
Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower;


We will grieve not, rather find
Strength in what remains behind.

She is Gone by David Harkins

You can shed tears that she is gone

Or you can smile because she has lived

You can close your eyes and pray that she will come back

Or you can open your eyes and see all that she has left

Your heart can be empty because you can’t see her

Or you can be full of the love that you shared

You can turn your back on tomorrow and live yesterday

Or you can be happy for tomorrow because of yesterday

You can remember her and only that she is gone

Or you can cherish her memory and let it live on

You can cry and close your mind, be empty and turn your back

Or you can do what she would want: smile, open your eyes, love and go on.

Sonnet 60: Like as the waves make towards the pebbl’d shore By William Shakespeare

Like as the waves make towards the pebbl’d shore,

So do our minutes hasten to their end;

Each changing place with that which goes before,

In sequent toil all forwards do contend.

Nativity, once in the main of light,

Crawls to maturity, wherewith being crown’d,

Crooked eclipses ‘gainst his glory fight,

And Time that gave doth now his gift confound.

Time doth transfix the flourish set on youth

And delves the parallels in beauty’s brow,

Feeds on the rarities of nature’s truth,

And nothing stands but for his scythe to mow:

And yet to times in hope my verse shall stand,

Praising thy worth, despite his cruel hand.

Nothing Gold can Stay by Robert Frost

Nature’s first green is gold,

Her hardest hue to hold.

Her early leaf’s a flower;

But only so an hour.

Then leaf subsides to leaf.

So Eden sank to grief,

So dawn goes down to day.

Nothing gold can stay.

Death Sets a Thing Significant By Emily Dickinson

Death sets a thing significant

The eye had hurried by,

Except a perished creature

Entreat us tenderly

To ponder little workmanships

In crayon or in wool,

With “This was last her fingers did,”

Industrious until

The thimble weighed too heavy,

The stitches stopped themselves,

And then ‘t was put among the dust

Upon the closet shelves.

A book I have, a friend gave,

Whose pencil, here and there,

Had notched the place that pleased him,—

At rest his fingers are.

Now, when I read, I read not,

For interrupting tears

Obliterate the etchings

Too costly for repairs.

Death By Epicurus

Become accustomed to the belief that death is

nothing to us.

For all good and evil consist in sensation,

but death is deprivation of sensation.

And therefore a right understanding

that death is nothing to us

makes the mortality of life enjoyable,

not because it adds to it an infinite span of time,

but because it takes away the craving for immortality.

For there is nothing terrible in life for the man

who has truly comprehended

that there is nothing terrible

in not living.

No Single Thing Abides By Lucretius

No single thing abides; but all things flow.

Fragment to fragment clings—the things thus grow

Until we know and name them. By degrees

They melt, and are no more the things we know.

Globed from the atoms falling slow or swift

I see the suns, I see the systems lift

Their forms; and even the systems and the suns

Shall go back slowly to the eternal drift.

You too, oh earth—your empires, lands, and seas—

Least with your stars, of all the galaxies,

Globed from the drift like these, like these you too

Shalt go. You are going, hour by hour, like these.

Nothing abides. The seas in delicate haze

Go off; those mooned sands forsake their place;

And where they are, shall other seas in turn

Mow with their scythes of whiteness other bays.

The seeds that once were we take flight and fly,

Winnowed to earth, or whirled along the sky,

Not lost but disunited. Life lives on.

It is the lives, the lives, the lives, that die.

Heritage By Theodore Spencer

What fills the heart of a man

Is not that his life must fade,

But that out of his dark there can

A light like a rose be made,

That seeing a snow-flake fall

His heart is lifted up,

That hearing a meadow-lark call

For a moment he will stop

To rejoice in the musical air

To delight in the fertile earth

And the flourishing everywhere

Of spring and spring’s rebirth.

And never a woman or man

Walked through their quickening hours

But found for some brief span

An intervale of flowers,

Where love for a man or woman

So captured the heart’s beat

That they and all things human

Danced on rapturous feet.

And though, for man, love dies,

And the rose has flowered in vain,

The rose to his children’s eyes

Will flower again, again,

Will flower again out of shadow

To make the brief heart sing,

And the meadowlark from the meadow

Will call again in spring.

When Great Trees Fall  by Maya Angelou (excerpt)

Great souls die and

our reality, bound to

them, takes leave of us.

Our souls,

dependent upon their

nurture,

now shrink, wizened.

Our minds, formed

and informed by their

radiance,

fall away.

We are not so much maddened

as reduced to the unutterable ignorance

of dark, cold

caves.

And when great souls die,

after a period peace blooms,

slowly and always

irregularly. Spaces fill

with a kind of

soothing electric vibration.

Our senses, restored, never

to be the same, whisper to us.

They existed. They existed.

We can be. Be and be

better. For they existed.

i carry your heart with me (i carry it in

my heart)  by E.E.cummings

i carry your heart with me (i carry it in

my heart) i am never without it (anywhere

i go you go, my dear; and whatever is done

by only me is your doing, my darling)

i fear

no fate (for you are my fate, my sweet) i want

no world (for beautiful you are my world, my true)

and it’s you are whatever a moon has always meant

and whatever a sun will always sing is you

here is the deepest secret nobody knows

(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud

and the sky of a tree called life; which grows

higher than soul can hope or mind can hide)

and this is the wonder that’s keeping the stars apart

i carry your heart (i carry it in my heart)

“So many different lengths of time” by Brian Patten.

How long does a man live after all?

A thousand days or only one?

One week or a few centuries?

How long does a man spend living or dying

and what do we mean when we say gone forever?

How long does a man live after all?

And how much does he live while he lives?

We fret and ask so many questions –

then when it comes to us

the answer is so simple after all.

A man lives for as long as we carry him inside us,

for as long as we carry the harvest of his dreams,

for as long as we ourselves live,

holding memories in common, a man lives.

His lover will carry his man’s scent, his touch:

his children will carry the weight of his love.

One friend will carry his arguments,

another will hum his favourite tunes,

another will still share his terrors.

And the days will pass with baffled faces,

then the weeks, then the months,

then there will be a day when no question is asked,

and the knots of grief will loosen in the stomach

and the puffed faces will calm.

And on that day he will not have ceased

but will have ceased to be separated by death.

How long does a man live after all?

A man lives so may different lengths of time

What is Success? By Ralph Waldo Emerson

To laugh often and love much, to win the respect of intelligent persons and the affections of children;

to earn the approbation of honest critics and to endure the betrayal of false friends;

to appreciate the beauty;

to find the best in others;

to give one’s self;

to leave the world a bit better, whether by healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition;

to have played and laughed with enthusiasm and sung with exultation;

to know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived,

this is to have succeeded.

Let There Be Light By Philip Appleman

Is it

crossing over Jordan

to a city of light, archangels

ceaselessly trumpeting over

the heavenly choirs: perpetual Vivaldi,

jasper and endless topaz and amethyst,

the Sistine ceiling seven days a week,

the everlasting smirk

of perfection?

Is it

the river Styx,

darkness made visible, fire

that never stops: endless murder

too merciless to kill,

massacres on an endless loop,

the same old victims always

coming back for more?

Or is it the silky muck

of Wabash and Maumee, the skirr

and skim of blackbirds,

fields of Queen Anne’s lace

and bumblebees? Well,

go out once more, and feel

the crumble of dry loam,

fingers and soil slowly becoming

the same truth: there in the hand

is our kinship with oak, our bloodline

to cattle. Imagine,

not eons of boredom or pain,

but honest earth-to-earth;

and when our bodies rise again,

they will be wildflowers, then rabbits,

then wolves, singing a perfect love

to the beautiful, meaningless moon.

Mystery of Life By Robert G. Ingersoll

Before the sublime mystery of life and spirit,

the mystery of infinite space

and endless time, we stand in reverent awe . . .

This much we know:

we are at least one phase of the immortality of life.

The mighty stream of life flows on, and, in this mighty stream,

we too flow on . . .

not lost . . . but each eternally significant.

For this I feel: The spirit never betrays the person

who trusts it.

Physical life may be defeated but life goes on;

character survives,

goodness lives and love is immortal.

Our Lives Matter By M. Maureen Killoran

We come together from the diversity of our grieving,

to gather in the warmth of this community

giving stubborn witness to our belief that

in times of sadness, there is room for laughter.

In times of darkness, there always will be light.

May we hold fast to the conviction

that what we do with our lives matters and that a caring world is possible after