Reincarnation

by David Banks Sickels

It cannot be that He who made   This wondrous world for our delight, Designed that all its charms should fade   And pass forever from our sight; That all shall wither and decay,   And know on earth no life but this, With only one finite survey   Of all its beauty and its bliss. It cannot be that all the years   Of toil and care and grief we live Shall find no recompense but tears,   No sweet return that earth can give; That all that leads us to aspire,   And struggle onward to achieve, And every unattained desire   Were given only to deceive. It cannot be that, after all   The mighty conquests of the mind, Our thoughts shall pass beyond recall   And leave no record here behind; That all our dreams of love and fame,   And hopes that time has swept away,— All that enthralled this mortal frame,—   Shall not return some other day. It cannot be that all the ties   Of kindred souls and loving hearts Are broken when this body dies,   And the immortal mind departs; That no serener light shall break   At last upon our mortal eyes, To guide us as our footsteps make   The pilgrimage to Paradise.