Now By Abram Joseph Ryan

    Sometimes a single hour
     Rings thro’ a long life-time,
    As from a temple tower
     There often falls a chime
    From blessed bells, that seems
    To fold in Heaven’s dreams
     Our spirits round a shrine;
     Hath such an hour been thine?

    Sometimes — who knoweth why?
     One minute holds a power
     That shadows every hour,
    Dialed in life’s sky.
     A cloud that is a speck
    When seen from far away
     May be a storm, and wreck
    The joys of every day.

    Sometimes — it seems not much,
     ‘Tis scarcely felt at all —
    Grace gives a gentle touch
     To hearts for once and all,
    Which in the spirit’s strife
     May all unnoticed be.
    And yet it rules a life;
     Hath this e’er come to thee?

    Sometimes one little word,
     Whispered sweet and fleet,
    That scarcely can be heard,
     Our ears will sudden meet.
    And all life’s hours along
     That whisper may vibrate,
    And, like a wizard’s song,
     Decide our ev’ry fate.

    Sometimes a sudden look,
     That falleth from some face,
    Will steal into each nook
     Of life, and leave its trace;
    To haunt us to the last,
     And sway our ev’ry will
    Thro’ all the days to be,
     For goodness or for ill;
    Hath this e’er come to thee?

    Sometimes one minute folds
     The hearts of all the years,
    Just like the heart that holds
     The Infinite in tears;
    There be such thing as this —
     Who knoweth why, or how?
    A life of woe or bliss
     Hangs on some little Now.