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Lines On The Death Of Captain Hiram A. Coats, My Old Schoolmate And Friend.
Dead? or is it a dreamOnly the voice of a dream?Dead in the prime of his years,And laid in the lap of the dust;Only a handful of ashesMoldering down into dust.Strong and manly was he,Strong and tender and true;Proud in the prime of his years;Strong in the strength of the just:A heart that was half a lion's,And half the heart of a girl;Tender to all that was tender,And true to all that was true;Bold in the battle of life,And bold on the bloody field;First at the call of his country,First in the front of the foe.Hope of the years was hisThe golden and garnered sheaves;Fair on the hills of autumnReddened the apples of peace.Dead? or is it a dream?Dead in the prime of his years,And laid in...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
My Namesake
Addressed to Francis Greenleaf Allison of Burlington, New Jersey.You scarcely need my tardy thanks,Who, self-rewarded, nurse and tendA green leaf on your own Green BanksThe memory of your friend.For me, no wreath, bloom-woven, hidesThe sobered brow and lessening hairFor aught I know, the myrtled sidesOf Helicon are bare.Their scallop-shells so many bringThe fabled founts of song to try,They've drained, for aught I know, the springOf Aganippe dry.Ah well! The wreath the Muses braidProves often Folly's cap and bell;Methinks, my ample beaver's shadeMay serve my turn as well.Let Love's and Friendship's tender debtBe paid by those I love in life.Why should the unborn critic whetFor m...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Wealth
Who shall tell what did befall,Far away in time, when once,Over the lifeless ball,Hung idle stars and suns?What god the element obeyed?Wings of what wind the lichen bore,Wafting the puny seeds of power,Which, lodged in rock, the rock abrade?And well the primal pioneerKnew the strong task to it assigned,Patient through Heaven's enormous yearTo build in matter home for mind.From air the creeping centuries drewThe matted thicket low and wide,This must the leaves of ages strewThe granite slab to clothe and hide,Ere wheat can wave its golden pride.What smiths, and in what furnace, rolled(In dizzy aeons dim and muteThe reeling brain can ill compute)Copper and iron, lead and gold?What oldest star the fame can saveOf...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Light And Glory Of The Word.
The Spirit breathes upon the Word,And brings the truth to sight;Precepts and promises affordA sanctifying light.A glory gilds the sacred page,Majestic like the sun;It gives a light to every age,It gives, but borrows none.The hand that gave it still suppliesThe gracious light and heat:His truths upon the nations rise,They rise, but never set.Let everlasting thanks be thine,For such a bright display,As makes a world of darkness shineWith beams of heavenly day.My soul rejoices to pursueThe steps of him I love,Till glory breaks upon my viewIn brighter worlds above.
William Cowper
Contemplation.
'They are all up - the innumerable stars -And hold their place in heaven. My eyes have beenSearching the pearly depths through which they springLike beautiful creations, till I feelAs if it were a new and perfect world,Waiting in silence for the word of GodTo breathe it into motion. There they stand,Shining in order, like a living hymnWritten in light, awaking at the breathOf the celestial dawn, and praising HimWho made them, with the harmony of spheres.I would I had an angel's ear to listThat melody! I would that I might floatUp in that boundless element, and feelIts ravishing vibrations, like a pulseBeating in heaven! My spirit is athirstFor music - rarer music! I would batheMy soul in a serener atmosphereThan this! I long to ming...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Sonnets Of Old Egypt
IThe SphinxThe spires of sand spring up at every gustThat bids them dance and scatter and lays them low:He sits impassive, as the ages flowAnd bear superbly the mirage of lust.The moonbright steel he has witnessed redden and rust,He has seen storm-proud deep-rooted empires grow,And watched victorious gods flash forth and go;And still before him spins the aspiring dust.What has he seen in that hoar-centuried landMore strange and dreadful in its long delightOf vain hope-haunted ever-starting questThan I can follow across this burning sandWherefrom the dizzying phantoms take their flightWithin the compass of a wanderers breast?IINicholson Museum: Exhibit 32The curious look and pass, be...
John Le Gay Brereton
Give
Live, and thou shalt receive. Give thoughts of cheer, Of courage and success, to friend and stranger.And from a thousand sources, far and near, Strength will be sent thee in thy hour of danger.Give words of comfort, of defence, and hope, To mortals crushed by sorrow and by error.And though thy feet through shadowy paths may grope, Thou shalt not walk in loneliness or terror.Give of thy gold, though small thy portion be. Gold rusts and shrivels in the hand that keeps it.It grows in one that opens wide and free. Who sows his harvest is the one who reaps it.Give of thy love, nor wait to know the worth Of what thou lovest; and ask no returning.And wheresoe'er thy pathway leads on earth, There thou shalt find t...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Mutability.
1.The flower that smiles to-dayTo-morrow dies;All that we wish to stayTempts and then flies.What is this world's delight?Lightning that mocks the night,Brief even as bright.2.Virtue, how frail it is!Friendship how rare!Love, how it sells poor blissFor proud despair!But we, though soon they fall,Survive their joy, and allWhich ours we call.3.Whilst skies are blue and bright,Whilst flowers are gay,Whilst eyes that change ere nightMake glad the day;Whilst yet the calm hours creep,Dream thou - and from thy sleepThen wake to weep.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
A Summons
Men of the North-land! where's the manly spiritOf the true-hearted and the unshackled gone?Sons of old freemen, do we but inheritTheir names alone?Is the old Pilgrim spirit quenched within us,Stoops the strong manhood of our souls so low,That Mammon's lure or Party's wile can win usTo silence now?Now, when our land to ruin's brink is verging,In God's name, let us speak while there is time!Now, when the padlocks for our lips are forging,Silence is crime!What! shall we henceforth humbly ask as favorsRights all our own? In madness shall we barter,For treacherous peace, the freedom Nature gave us,God and our charter?Here shall the statesman forge his human fetters,Here the false jurist human rights deny,And in the church, their proud an...
The Longest Day
Let us quit the leafy arbor,And the torrent murmuring by;For the sun is in his harbor,Weary of the open sky.Evening now unbinds the fettersFashioned by the glowing light;All that breathe are thankful debtorsTo the harbinger of night.Yet by some grave thoughts attendedEve renews her calm career;For the day that now is ended,Is the longest of the year.Dora! sport, as now thou sportest,On this platform, light and free;Take thy bliss, while longest, shortest,Are indifferent to thee!Who would check the happy feelingThat inspires the linnet's song?Who would stop the swallow, wheelingOn her pinions swift and strong?Yet at this impressive season,Words which tenderness can speakFrom the t...
William Wordsworth
To Maecenas. III-29 (From The Odes Of Horace)
Mæcenas, scion of Tyrrhenian rulers, A jar, as yet unpierced, of mellow wine Long waits thee here, with balm for thee made ready And blooming roses in thy locks to twine. No more delay, nor always look with favor The sloping fields of Æsula upon; Why gaze so long on ever marshy Tibur Near by the mount of murderer Telegon? Give up thy luxury - it palls upon thee - Thy tower that reaches yonder lofty cloud; Cease to admire the smoke, the wealth, the uproar, And all that well hath made our Rome so proud. Sometimes a change is grateful to the rich man, A simple meal beneath a humble roof Has often smoothed from care the furrowed forehead, Though unadorned t...
Helen Leah Reed
Power And Peace.
'Tis never, or but seldom known,Power and peace to keep one throne.
Robert Herrick
An Outdoor Reception
On these green banks, where falls too soonThe shade of Autumn's afternoon,The south wind blowing soft and sweet,The water gliding at nay feet,The distant northern range uplitBy the slant sunshine over it,With changes of the mountain mistFrom tender blush to amethyst,The valley's stretch of shade and gleamFair as in Mirza's Bagdad dream,With glad young faces smiling nearAnd merry voices in my ear,I sit, methinks, as Hafiz mightIn Iran's Garden of Delight.For Persian roses blushing red,Aster and gentian bloom instead;For Shiraz wine, this mountain air;For feast, the blueberries which I shareWith one who proffers with stained handsHer gleanings from yon pasture lands,Wild fruit that art and culture spoil,The harvest o...
The Unknowing
If the bird knew how through the wintry weatherAn empty nest would swing by day and night,It would not weave the strands so close togetherOr sing for such delight.And if the rosebud dreamed e'er its awakingHow soon its perfumed leaves would drift apart,Perchance 'twould fold them close to still the achingWithin its golden heart.If the brown brook that hurries through the grassesKnew of drowned sailors - and of storms to be -Methinks 'twould wait a little e'er it passesTo meet the old grey sea.If youth could understand the tears and sorrow,The sombre days that age and knowledge bring,It would not be so eager for the morrowOr spendthrift of the spring.If love but learned how soon life treads its measure,How short and...
Virna Sheard
Through Foulest Fogs
Through foulest fogs of my own sluggish soul,Through midnight glooms of all the wide world's guilt,Through sulphurous cannon-clouds that surge and rollAbove the steam of blood in anger spilt;Through all the sombre earth-oppressing pilesOf old cathedral temples which expandSepulchral vaults and monumental aisles,Hopeless and freezing in the lifeful land;I gaze and seek with ever-longing eyesFor God, the Love-Supreme, all-wise, all-good:Alas! in vain; for over all the skiesA dark and awful shadow seems to brood,A numbing, infinite, eternal gloom:I tremble in the consciousness of Doom.
James Thomson
Bring Your Beauty
Bring your beauty, bring your laughter, bring even your fears,Bring the grief that is, the joy that was in other years,Bring again the happiness, bring love, bring tears.There was laughter once, there were grave, happy eyes,Talk of firm earth, old earth-sweeping mysteries:There were great silences under clear dark skies.Now is silence, now is loneliness complete; all is done.The thrush sings at dawn, too sweet, up creeps the sun:But all is silent, silent, for all that was is done.Yet bring beauty and bring laughter, and bring even tears,And cast them down; strew your happiness and fears,Then leave them to the darkness of thought and years.Fears in that darkness die; they have no spring.Grief in that darkness is a bird that wants wing....<...
John Frederick Freeman
Mentem Mortalia Tangunt
Now lonely is the wood: No flower now lingers, none!The virgin sisterhood Of roses, all are gone;Now Autumn sheds her latest leaf;And in my heart is grief.Ah me, for all earth rears, The appointed bound is placed!After a thousand years The great oak falls at last:And thou, more lovely, canst not stay,Sweet rose, beyond thy day.Our life is not the life Of roses and of leaves;Else wherefore this deep strife, This pain, our soul conceives?The fall of ev'n such short-lived thingsTo us some sorrow brings.And yet, plant, bird, and fly Feel no such hidden fire.Happy they live; and die Happy, with no desire.They in their brief life have fulfill'dAll Nature in them will'...
Manmohan Ghose
Wonder
Following upon the faint wind's fickle coursesA feather drifts and strays.My thought after her thoughtFloated--how many ways and days!She swayed me as the wind swayeth a feather.I was a leaf uponHer breath, a dream withinHer dream. The dream how soon was done!For now all's changed, not Time's change more wondrous,I am her sun, and she(Herself doth swear) the moon;Or she the ship upon my sea.How should this be? I know not; I so grosslyMastering her spirit pure.O, how can her bird's breastMy nervous and harsh hand endure?Tell me if this be love indeed, fond lovers,That high stoop to low,Soul be to flesh subdued;That the sun around the earth should go?I know not: I but know that love is misery,...