One Day Solitary.[1151]I am all right! Good-bye,[1152]old chap!Twenty-four hours, that won’t be long;Nothing to do but take a nap,And—say![1153]can a fellow sing a song?Will the light fantastic be in order—A pigeon-wing[1154]on your pantry floor?What are the rules for a regular boarder?Be quiet? All right![1155]Cling-clang goes the door.Clang-clinkthe bolts, and I am locked in;Some pious reflection and repentanceCome next, I suppose, for I just beginTo perceive the sting[1156]in the tail of my sentence—“One day whereof shall be solitary.”Here I am at the end of my journey,And[1157]—well, it ain’t jolly, not so very—I’d like to throttle[1158]that sharp attorney.He took my money, the very last dollar,[1159]Didn’t leave me so much as a dime,Not enough to buy me a paper collarTo wear at my trial; he knew all the time[1160]’Twas some that I got for the stolen silver.Why hasn’t he been indicted, too?If he doesn’t exactly rob and pilfer,He lives by the plunder[1161]of them that do.Then didn’t it put me into a fury,To see him step up,[1162]and laugh and chatWith the county attorney, and joke with the jury,When all was over, then go back[1163]for his hat,While Sue was sobbing to break her heart,And all I could do was to stand and stare?[1164]He had pleaded my cause,[1165]he had played his part,And got his fee—and what more[1166]did he care?It’s droll to think how, just out yonder,[1167]The world goes jogging on the same;Old men will save, and boys will squander,And fellows will play at the same old gameOf get-and-spend to-morrow,[1168]next year—And drink and carouse, and who will there beTo remember a comrade buried here?[1169]I am nothing to them, they are nothing to me.And Sue—yes, she will forget me too,I know; already her tears are drying.I believe there is nothing that girl can doSo easy as laughing, and lying, and crying.She clung to me while there was hope,Then broke her heart in that last wild sob;But she ain’t going to sit and mopeWhile I am at work on a five years’ job.They’ll set me to learning a trade, no doubt,And I must forget to speak or smile;I shall go marching in[1170]and out,[1171]One of a silent tramping fileOf felons, at morning, and noon, and night,Just down to the shops[1172]and back to the cells,[1173]And work with a thief at left[1174]and right,[1175]And feed, and sleep, and—nothing else.[1176]Was I born for this?[1177]Will the old folks know?I can see them[1178]now on the old home-place;His gait is feeble, his step is slow,There’s a settled grief on his furrowed face;While she goes wearily groping[1179]aboutIn a sort of dream, so bent, so sad!But this won’t do![1180]I must sing and shout,And forget myself, or else go mad.[1181]I won’t be foolish; although for a minute[1182]I was there[1183]in my little room once more.What wouldn’t I give just now to be in it?The bed is yonder,[1184]and there[1185]is the door;The Bible is here[1186]on the neat, white stand;The summer sweets are ripening now;In the flickering light I reach my hand[1187]From the window, and pluck them from the bough.When I was a child (oh! well for meAnd them if I had never been older!),When he told me stories on his knee,And tossed me, and carried me on his shoulder;When she knelt down and heard my prayer,And gave me in my bed my good-night kiss—Did they ever think that all their careFor an only son could come to this?Foolish again![1188]No sense in tearsAnd gnashing the teeth; and yet,[1189]somehow,I haven’t thought of them so for years;I never knew them, I think, till now.How fondly, how blindly, they trusted me!When I should have been in my bed asleep,I slipped from the window,[1190]and down[1191]the tree,And sowed for the harvest which now I reap.And Jennie—how could I bear to leave her?If I had but wished—but I was a fool!My heart was filled with a thirst and a fever,Which no sweet airs of heaven could cool.I can hear her asking:[1192]“Have you heard?”But mother falters and shakes her head;[1193]“O Jennie! Jennie! never a word!What can it mean? He must be dead!”[1194]Light-hearted, a proud, ambitious lad,I left my home that morning in May;What visions,[1195]what hopes, what plans I had!And what have I[1196]—where are they all[1197]—to-day?Wild fellows, and wine, and debts, and gaming,Disgrace,[1198]and the loss of place and friend;And I was an outlaw,[1199]past reclaiming.Arrest and sentence, and—that is the end![1200]Five years! Shall ever I quit this prison?[1201]Homeless, an outcast, where[1202]shall I go?Return to them, like one arisen[1203]From the grave, that was buried long ago?All is still;[1204]’tis the close of the week;I slink[1205]through the garden, I stop by the well,I see him totter,[1206]I hear her shriek!—What sort of a tale will I have to tell?But here I am![1207]What’s the use of grieving?Five years—will it be too late to begin?Can sober thinking and honest livingStill make me the man I might have been?I’ll sleep. Oh![1208]would I could wake to-morrowIn that old room, to find, at last,That all my troubles and all their sorrowAre only a dream[1209]of the night that is past.—J. T. Trowbridge.[1151]Requires a table and chair.Gestures.[1152]Wave hand.[1153]P. H. O.[1154]Sp. feet.[1155]Nod.[1156]Ind. H. F.[1157]Walk up and down.[1158]Sp.[1159]H. F.[1160]B. H. O. conversational.[1161]H. O.[1162]Imitate.[1163]Left H. L.[1164]Imitate.[1165]B. H. O.[1166]H. L.[1167]L. H. O.[1168]H. F.[1169]D. F.[1170]Hand carried across body and then out to.[1171]H. O.[1172]H. O.[1173]H. F.[1174]Left H. O.[1175]H. O.[1176]Sit.[1177]Left elbow on table, hand to head.[1178]H. O.[1179]P. H. O.[1180]Rise.[1181]To head.[1182]Sit.[1183]H. O.[1184]H. F.[1185]H. O.[1186]Left H. F.[1187]H. O. Sp.[1188]Toss head.[1189]Head in hand.[1190]H. O.[1191]D. O.[1192]To left.[1193]To right.[1194]Rise.[1195]V. H. F.[1196]H. O.[1197]B. H. O.[1198]P. D. O.[1199]H. L.[1200]Look around cell, B. H. O.[1201]Sit.[1202]B. H. O.[1203]Raise P.[1204]P. H. F.[1205]P. Sw. to F.[1206]H. F.[1207]Thumbs in armholes of vest, and lean back in chair.[1208]Head on hand.[1209]V. Sp.
I am all right! Good-bye,[1152]old chap!Twenty-four hours, that won’t be long;Nothing to do but take a nap,And—say![1153]can a fellow sing a song?Will the light fantastic be in order—A pigeon-wing[1154]on your pantry floor?What are the rules for a regular boarder?Be quiet? All right![1155]Cling-clang goes the door.Clang-clinkthe bolts, and I am locked in;Some pious reflection and repentanceCome next, I suppose, for I just beginTo perceive the sting[1156]in the tail of my sentence—“One day whereof shall be solitary.”Here I am at the end of my journey,And[1157]—well, it ain’t jolly, not so very—I’d like to throttle[1158]that sharp attorney.He took my money, the very last dollar,[1159]Didn’t leave me so much as a dime,Not enough to buy me a paper collarTo wear at my trial; he knew all the time[1160]’Twas some that I got for the stolen silver.Why hasn’t he been indicted, too?If he doesn’t exactly rob and pilfer,He lives by the plunder[1161]of them that do.Then didn’t it put me into a fury,To see him step up,[1162]and laugh and chatWith the county attorney, and joke with the jury,When all was over, then go back[1163]for his hat,While Sue was sobbing to break her heart,And all I could do was to stand and stare?[1164]He had pleaded my cause,[1165]he had played his part,And got his fee—and what more[1166]did he care?It’s droll to think how, just out yonder,[1167]The world goes jogging on the same;Old men will save, and boys will squander,And fellows will play at the same old gameOf get-and-spend to-morrow,[1168]next year—And drink and carouse, and who will there beTo remember a comrade buried here?[1169]I am nothing to them, they are nothing to me.And Sue—yes, she will forget me too,I know; already her tears are drying.I believe there is nothing that girl can doSo easy as laughing, and lying, and crying.She clung to me while there was hope,Then broke her heart in that last wild sob;But she ain’t going to sit and mopeWhile I am at work on a five years’ job.They’ll set me to learning a trade, no doubt,And I must forget to speak or smile;I shall go marching in[1170]and out,[1171]One of a silent tramping fileOf felons, at morning, and noon, and night,Just down to the shops[1172]and back to the cells,[1173]And work with a thief at left[1174]and right,[1175]And feed, and sleep, and—nothing else.[1176]Was I born for this?[1177]Will the old folks know?I can see them[1178]now on the old home-place;His gait is feeble, his step is slow,There’s a settled grief on his furrowed face;While she goes wearily groping[1179]aboutIn a sort of dream, so bent, so sad!But this won’t do![1180]I must sing and shout,And forget myself, or else go mad.[1181]I won’t be foolish; although for a minute[1182]I was there[1183]in my little room once more.What wouldn’t I give just now to be in it?The bed is yonder,[1184]and there[1185]is the door;The Bible is here[1186]on the neat, white stand;The summer sweets are ripening now;In the flickering light I reach my hand[1187]From the window, and pluck them from the bough.When I was a child (oh! well for meAnd them if I had never been older!),When he told me stories on his knee,And tossed me, and carried me on his shoulder;When she knelt down and heard my prayer,And gave me in my bed my good-night kiss—Did they ever think that all their careFor an only son could come to this?Foolish again![1188]No sense in tearsAnd gnashing the teeth; and yet,[1189]somehow,I haven’t thought of them so for years;I never knew them, I think, till now.How fondly, how blindly, they trusted me!When I should have been in my bed asleep,I slipped from the window,[1190]and down[1191]the tree,And sowed for the harvest which now I reap.And Jennie—how could I bear to leave her?If I had but wished—but I was a fool!My heart was filled with a thirst and a fever,Which no sweet airs of heaven could cool.I can hear her asking:[1192]“Have you heard?”But mother falters and shakes her head;[1193]“O Jennie! Jennie! never a word!What can it mean? He must be dead!”[1194]Light-hearted, a proud, ambitious lad,I left my home that morning in May;What visions,[1195]what hopes, what plans I had!And what have I[1196]—where are they all[1197]—to-day?Wild fellows, and wine, and debts, and gaming,Disgrace,[1198]and the loss of place and friend;And I was an outlaw,[1199]past reclaiming.Arrest and sentence, and—that is the end![1200]Five years! Shall ever I quit this prison?[1201]Homeless, an outcast, where[1202]shall I go?Return to them, like one arisen[1203]From the grave, that was buried long ago?All is still;[1204]’tis the close of the week;I slink[1205]through the garden, I stop by the well,I see him totter,[1206]I hear her shriek!—What sort of a tale will I have to tell?But here I am![1207]What’s the use of grieving?Five years—will it be too late to begin?Can sober thinking and honest livingStill make me the man I might have been?I’ll sleep. Oh![1208]would I could wake to-morrowIn that old room, to find, at last,That all my troubles and all their sorrowAre only a dream[1209]of the night that is past.—J. T. Trowbridge.
I am all right! Good-bye,[1152]old chap!Twenty-four hours, that won’t be long;Nothing to do but take a nap,And—say![1153]can a fellow sing a song?Will the light fantastic be in order—A pigeon-wing[1154]on your pantry floor?What are the rules for a regular boarder?Be quiet? All right![1155]Cling-clang goes the door.Clang-clinkthe bolts, and I am locked in;Some pious reflection and repentanceCome next, I suppose, for I just beginTo perceive the sting[1156]in the tail of my sentence—“One day whereof shall be solitary.”Here I am at the end of my journey,And[1157]—well, it ain’t jolly, not so very—I’d like to throttle[1158]that sharp attorney.He took my money, the very last dollar,[1159]Didn’t leave me so much as a dime,Not enough to buy me a paper collarTo wear at my trial; he knew all the time[1160]’Twas some that I got for the stolen silver.Why hasn’t he been indicted, too?If he doesn’t exactly rob and pilfer,He lives by the plunder[1161]of them that do.Then didn’t it put me into a fury,To see him step up,[1162]and laugh and chatWith the county attorney, and joke with the jury,When all was over, then go back[1163]for his hat,While Sue was sobbing to break her heart,And all I could do was to stand and stare?[1164]He had pleaded my cause,[1165]he had played his part,And got his fee—and what more[1166]did he care?It’s droll to think how, just out yonder,[1167]The world goes jogging on the same;Old men will save, and boys will squander,And fellows will play at the same old gameOf get-and-spend to-morrow,[1168]next year—And drink and carouse, and who will there beTo remember a comrade buried here?[1169]I am nothing to them, they are nothing to me.And Sue—yes, she will forget me too,I know; already her tears are drying.I believe there is nothing that girl can doSo easy as laughing, and lying, and crying.She clung to me while there was hope,Then broke her heart in that last wild sob;But she ain’t going to sit and mopeWhile I am at work on a five years’ job.They’ll set me to learning a trade, no doubt,And I must forget to speak or smile;I shall go marching in[1170]and out,[1171]One of a silent tramping fileOf felons, at morning, and noon, and night,Just down to the shops[1172]and back to the cells,[1173]And work with a thief at left[1174]and right,[1175]And feed, and sleep, and—nothing else.[1176]Was I born for this?[1177]Will the old folks know?I can see them[1178]now on the old home-place;His gait is feeble, his step is slow,There’s a settled grief on his furrowed face;While she goes wearily groping[1179]aboutIn a sort of dream, so bent, so sad!But this won’t do![1180]I must sing and shout,And forget myself, or else go mad.[1181]I won’t be foolish; although for a minute[1182]I was there[1183]in my little room once more.What wouldn’t I give just now to be in it?The bed is yonder,[1184]and there[1185]is the door;The Bible is here[1186]on the neat, white stand;The summer sweets are ripening now;In the flickering light I reach my hand[1187]From the window, and pluck them from the bough.When I was a child (oh! well for meAnd them if I had never been older!),When he told me stories on his knee,And tossed me, and carried me on his shoulder;When she knelt down and heard my prayer,And gave me in my bed my good-night kiss—Did they ever think that all their careFor an only son could come to this?Foolish again![1188]No sense in tearsAnd gnashing the teeth; and yet,[1189]somehow,I haven’t thought of them so for years;I never knew them, I think, till now.How fondly, how blindly, they trusted me!When I should have been in my bed asleep,I slipped from the window,[1190]and down[1191]the tree,And sowed for the harvest which now I reap.And Jennie—how could I bear to leave her?If I had but wished—but I was a fool!My heart was filled with a thirst and a fever,Which no sweet airs of heaven could cool.I can hear her asking:[1192]“Have you heard?”But mother falters and shakes her head;[1193]“O Jennie! Jennie! never a word!What can it mean? He must be dead!”[1194]Light-hearted, a proud, ambitious lad,I left my home that morning in May;What visions,[1195]what hopes, what plans I had!And what have I[1196]—where are they all[1197]—to-day?Wild fellows, and wine, and debts, and gaming,Disgrace,[1198]and the loss of place and friend;And I was an outlaw,[1199]past reclaiming.Arrest and sentence, and—that is the end![1200]Five years! Shall ever I quit this prison?[1201]Homeless, an outcast, where[1202]shall I go?Return to them, like one arisen[1203]From the grave, that was buried long ago?All is still;[1204]’tis the close of the week;I slink[1205]through the garden, I stop by the well,I see him totter,[1206]I hear her shriek!—What sort of a tale will I have to tell?But here I am![1207]What’s the use of grieving?Five years—will it be too late to begin?Can sober thinking and honest livingStill make me the man I might have been?I’ll sleep. Oh![1208]would I could wake to-morrowIn that old room, to find, at last,That all my troubles and all their sorrowAre only a dream[1209]of the night that is past.—J. T. Trowbridge.
I am all right! Good-bye,[1152]old chap!
Twenty-four hours, that won’t be long;
Nothing to do but take a nap,
And—say![1153]can a fellow sing a song?
Will the light fantastic be in order—
A pigeon-wing[1154]on your pantry floor?
What are the rules for a regular boarder?
Be quiet? All right![1155]Cling-clang goes the door.
Clang-clinkthe bolts, and I am locked in;Some pious reflection and repentanceCome next, I suppose, for I just beginTo perceive the sting[1156]in the tail of my sentence—“One day whereof shall be solitary.”Here I am at the end of my journey,And[1157]—well, it ain’t jolly, not so very—I’d like to throttle[1158]that sharp attorney.
Clang-clinkthe bolts, and I am locked in;
Some pious reflection and repentance
Come next, I suppose, for I just begin
To perceive the sting[1156]in the tail of my sentence—
“One day whereof shall be solitary.”
Here I am at the end of my journey,
And[1157]—well, it ain’t jolly, not so very—
I’d like to throttle[1158]that sharp attorney.
He took my money, the very last dollar,[1159]Didn’t leave me so much as a dime,Not enough to buy me a paper collarTo wear at my trial; he knew all the time[1160]’Twas some that I got for the stolen silver.Why hasn’t he been indicted, too?If he doesn’t exactly rob and pilfer,He lives by the plunder[1161]of them that do.
He took my money, the very last dollar,[1159]
Didn’t leave me so much as a dime,
Not enough to buy me a paper collar
To wear at my trial; he knew all the time[1160]
’Twas some that I got for the stolen silver.
Why hasn’t he been indicted, too?
If he doesn’t exactly rob and pilfer,
He lives by the plunder[1161]of them that do.
Then didn’t it put me into a fury,To see him step up,[1162]and laugh and chatWith the county attorney, and joke with the jury,When all was over, then go back[1163]for his hat,While Sue was sobbing to break her heart,And all I could do was to stand and stare?[1164]He had pleaded my cause,[1165]he had played his part,And got his fee—and what more[1166]did he care?
Then didn’t it put me into a fury,
To see him step up,[1162]and laugh and chat
With the county attorney, and joke with the jury,
When all was over, then go back[1163]for his hat,
While Sue was sobbing to break her heart,
And all I could do was to stand and stare?[1164]
He had pleaded my cause,[1165]he had played his part,
And got his fee—and what more[1166]did he care?
It’s droll to think how, just out yonder,[1167]The world goes jogging on the same;Old men will save, and boys will squander,And fellows will play at the same old gameOf get-and-spend to-morrow,[1168]next year—And drink and carouse, and who will there beTo remember a comrade buried here?[1169]I am nothing to them, they are nothing to me.
It’s droll to think how, just out yonder,[1167]
The world goes jogging on the same;
Old men will save, and boys will squander,
And fellows will play at the same old game
Of get-and-spend to-morrow,[1168]next year—
And drink and carouse, and who will there be
To remember a comrade buried here?[1169]
I am nothing to them, they are nothing to me.
And Sue—yes, she will forget me too,I know; already her tears are drying.I believe there is nothing that girl can doSo easy as laughing, and lying, and crying.She clung to me while there was hope,Then broke her heart in that last wild sob;But she ain’t going to sit and mopeWhile I am at work on a five years’ job.
And Sue—yes, she will forget me too,
I know; already her tears are drying.
I believe there is nothing that girl can do
So easy as laughing, and lying, and crying.
She clung to me while there was hope,
Then broke her heart in that last wild sob;
But she ain’t going to sit and mope
While I am at work on a five years’ job.
They’ll set me to learning a trade, no doubt,And I must forget to speak or smile;I shall go marching in[1170]and out,[1171]One of a silent tramping fileOf felons, at morning, and noon, and night,Just down to the shops[1172]and back to the cells,[1173]And work with a thief at left[1174]and right,[1175]And feed, and sleep, and—nothing else.[1176]
They’ll set me to learning a trade, no doubt,
And I must forget to speak or smile;
I shall go marching in[1170]and out,[1171]
One of a silent tramping file
Of felons, at morning, and noon, and night,
Just down to the shops[1172]and back to the cells,[1173]
And work with a thief at left[1174]and right,[1175]
And feed, and sleep, and—nothing else.[1176]
Was I born for this?[1177]Will the old folks know?I can see them[1178]now on the old home-place;His gait is feeble, his step is slow,There’s a settled grief on his furrowed face;While she goes wearily groping[1179]aboutIn a sort of dream, so bent, so sad!But this won’t do![1180]I must sing and shout,And forget myself, or else go mad.[1181]
Was I born for this?[1177]Will the old folks know?
I can see them[1178]now on the old home-place;
His gait is feeble, his step is slow,
There’s a settled grief on his furrowed face;
While she goes wearily groping[1179]about
In a sort of dream, so bent, so sad!
But this won’t do![1180]I must sing and shout,
And forget myself, or else go mad.[1181]
I won’t be foolish; although for a minute[1182]I was there[1183]in my little room once more.What wouldn’t I give just now to be in it?The bed is yonder,[1184]and there[1185]is the door;The Bible is here[1186]on the neat, white stand;The summer sweets are ripening now;In the flickering light I reach my hand[1187]From the window, and pluck them from the bough.
I won’t be foolish; although for a minute[1182]
I was there[1183]in my little room once more.
What wouldn’t I give just now to be in it?
The bed is yonder,[1184]and there[1185]is the door;
The Bible is here[1186]on the neat, white stand;
The summer sweets are ripening now;
In the flickering light I reach my hand[1187]
From the window, and pluck them from the bough.
When I was a child (oh! well for meAnd them if I had never been older!),When he told me stories on his knee,And tossed me, and carried me on his shoulder;When she knelt down and heard my prayer,And gave me in my bed my good-night kiss—Did they ever think that all their careFor an only son could come to this?
When I was a child (oh! well for me
And them if I had never been older!),
When he told me stories on his knee,
And tossed me, and carried me on his shoulder;
When she knelt down and heard my prayer,
And gave me in my bed my good-night kiss—
Did they ever think that all their care
For an only son could come to this?
Foolish again![1188]No sense in tearsAnd gnashing the teeth; and yet,[1189]somehow,I haven’t thought of them so for years;I never knew them, I think, till now.How fondly, how blindly, they trusted me!When I should have been in my bed asleep,I slipped from the window,[1190]and down[1191]the tree,And sowed for the harvest which now I reap.
Foolish again![1188]No sense in tears
And gnashing the teeth; and yet,[1189]somehow,
I haven’t thought of them so for years;
I never knew them, I think, till now.
How fondly, how blindly, they trusted me!
When I should have been in my bed asleep,
I slipped from the window,[1190]and down[1191]the tree,
And sowed for the harvest which now I reap.
And Jennie—how could I bear to leave her?If I had but wished—but I was a fool!My heart was filled with a thirst and a fever,Which no sweet airs of heaven could cool.I can hear her asking:[1192]“Have you heard?”But mother falters and shakes her head;[1193]“O Jennie! Jennie! never a word!What can it mean? He must be dead!”
And Jennie—how could I bear to leave her?
If I had but wished—but I was a fool!
My heart was filled with a thirst and a fever,
Which no sweet airs of heaven could cool.
I can hear her asking:[1192]“Have you heard?”
But mother falters and shakes her head;
[1193]“O Jennie! Jennie! never a word!
What can it mean? He must be dead!”
[1194]Light-hearted, a proud, ambitious lad,I left my home that morning in May;What visions,[1195]what hopes, what plans I had!And what have I[1196]—where are they all[1197]—to-day?Wild fellows, and wine, and debts, and gaming,Disgrace,[1198]and the loss of place and friend;And I was an outlaw,[1199]past reclaiming.Arrest and sentence, and—that is the end![1200]
[1194]Light-hearted, a proud, ambitious lad,
I left my home that morning in May;
What visions,[1195]what hopes, what plans I had!
And what have I[1196]—where are they all[1197]—to-day?
Wild fellows, and wine, and debts, and gaming,
Disgrace,[1198]and the loss of place and friend;
And I was an outlaw,[1199]past reclaiming.
Arrest and sentence, and—that is the end![1200]
Five years! Shall ever I quit this prison?[1201]Homeless, an outcast, where[1202]shall I go?Return to them, like one arisen[1203]From the grave, that was buried long ago?All is still;[1204]’tis the close of the week;I slink[1205]through the garden, I stop by the well,I see him totter,[1206]I hear her shriek!—What sort of a tale will I have to tell?
Five years! Shall ever I quit this prison?[1201]
Homeless, an outcast, where[1202]shall I go?
Return to them, like one arisen[1203]
From the grave, that was buried long ago?
All is still;[1204]’tis the close of the week;
I slink[1205]through the garden, I stop by the well,
I see him totter,[1206]I hear her shriek!—
What sort of a tale will I have to tell?
But here I am![1207]What’s the use of grieving?Five years—will it be too late to begin?Can sober thinking and honest livingStill make me the man I might have been?I’ll sleep. Oh![1208]would I could wake to-morrowIn that old room, to find, at last,That all my troubles and all their sorrowAre only a dream[1209]of the night that is past.—J. T. Trowbridge.
But here I am![1207]What’s the use of grieving?
Five years—will it be too late to begin?
Can sober thinking and honest living
Still make me the man I might have been?
I’ll sleep. Oh![1208]would I could wake to-morrow
In that old room, to find, at last,
That all my troubles and all their sorrow
Are only a dream[1209]of the night that is past.
—J. T. Trowbridge.
Gestures.