To-Morrows By Abram Joseph Ryan

    God knows all things — but we
     In darkness walk our ways;
    We wonder what will be,
     We ask the nights and days.

    Their lips are sealed; at times
     The bards, like prophets, see,
    And rays rush o’er their rhymes
     From suns of “days to be”.

    They see To-morrow’s heart,
     They read To-morrow’s face,
    They grasp — is it by art —
     The far To-morrow’s trace?

    They see what is unseen,
     And hear what is unheard,
    And To-morrow’s shade or sheen
     Rests on the poet’s word.

    As seers see a star
     Beyond the brow of night,
    So poets scan the far
     Prophetic when they write.

    They read a human face,
     As readers read their page,
    The while their thought will trace
     A life from youth to age.

    They have a mournful gift,
     Their verses oft are tears;
    And sleepless eyes they lift
     To look adown the years.

    To-morrows are to-days!
     Is it not more than art?
    When all life’s winding ways
     Meet in the poet’s heart?

    The present meets the past,
     The future, too, is there;
    The first enclasps the last
     And never folds fore’er.

    It is not all a dream;
     A poet’s thought is truth;
    The things that are — and seem
     From age far back to youth —

    He holds the tangled threads,
     His hands unravel them;
    He knows the hearts and heads
     For thorns, or diadem.

    Ask him, and he will see
     What your To-morrows are;
    He’ll sing “What is to be”
     Beneath each sun and star.

    To-morrows! Dread unknown!
     What fates may they not bring?
    What is the chord? the tone?
     The key in which they sing?

    I see a thousand throngs,
     To-morrows for them wait;
    I hear a thousand songs
     Intoning each one’s fate.

    And yours? What will it be?
     Hush! song, and let me pray!
    God sees it all — I see
     A long, lone, winding way;

    And more! no matter what!
     Crosses and crowns you wear:
    My song may be forgot,
     But Thou shalt not, in prayer.