Reverie [“We laugh when our souls are the saddest,”] By Abram Joseph Ryan

   We laugh when our souls are the saddest,
     We shroud all our griefs in a smile;
    Our voices may warble their gladdest,
     And our souls mourn in anguish the while.

    And our eyes wear a summer’s bright glory,
     When winter is wailing beneath;
    And we tell not the world the sad story
     Of the thorn hidden back of the wreath.

    Ah! fast flow the moments of laughter,
     And bright as the brook to the sea
    But ah! the dark hours that come after
     Of moaning for you and for me.

    Yea, swift as the sunshine, and fleeting
     As birds, fly the moments of glee!
    And we smile, and mayhap grief is sleeting
     Its ice upon you and on me.

    And the clouds of the tempest are shifting
     O’er the heart, tho’ the face may be bright;
    And the snows of woe’s winter are drifting
     Our souls; and each day hides a night.

    For ah! when our souls are enjoying
     The mirth which our faces reveal,
    There is something — a something — alloying
     The sweetness of joy that we feel.

    Life’s loveliest sky hides the thunder
     Whose bolt in a moment may fall;
    And our path may be flowery, but under
     The flowers there are thorns for us all.

    Ah! ’tis hard when our beautiful dreamings
     That flash down the valley of night,
    Wave their wing when the gloom hides their gleaming,
     And leave us, like eagles in flight;

    And fly far away unreturning,
     And leave us in terror and tears,
    While vain is the spirit’s wild yearning
     That they may come back in the years.

    Come back! did I say it? but never
     Do eagles come back to the cage:
    They have gone — they have gone — and forever —
     Does youth come back ever to age?

    No! a joy that has left us in sorrow
     Smiles never again on our way,
    But we meet in the farthest to-morrow
     The face of the grief of to-day.

    The brightness whose tremulous glimmer
     Has faded we cannot recall;
    And the light that grows dimmer and dimmer —
     When gone — ’tis forever and all.

    Not a ray of it anywhere lingers,
     Not a gleam of it gilds the vast gloom;
    Youth’s roses perfume not the fingers
     Of age groping nigh to the tomb.

    For “the memory of joy is a sadness” —
     The dim twilight after the day;
    And the grave where we bury a gladness
     Sends a grief like a ghost, on our way.

    No day shall return that has faded,
     The dead come not back from the tomb;
    The vale of each life must be shaded,
     That we may see best from the gloom.

    The height of the homes of our glory,
     All radiant with splendors of light;
    That we may read clearly life’s story —
     “The dark is the dawn of the bright.”