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Embers
I said, "My youth is goneLike a fire beaten out by the rain,That will never sway and singOr play with the wind again."I said, "It is no great sorrowThat quenched my youth in me,But only little sorrowsBeating ceaselessly."I thought my youth was gone,But you returned,Like a flame at the call of the windIt leaped and burned;Threw off its ashen cloak,And gowned anewGave itself like a brideOnce more to you.
Sara Teasdale
Lament II
If I had ever thought to write in praiseOf little children and their simple ways,Far rather had I fashioned cradle verseTo rock to slumber, or the songs a nurseMight croon above the baby on her breast.Setting her charge's short-lived woes at rest.For much more useful are such trifling tasksThan that which sad misfortune this day asks:To weep o'er thy deaf grave, dear maiden mine.And wail the harshness of grim Proserpine.But now I have no choice of subject: thenI shunned a theme scarce fitting riper men,And now disaster drives me on by forceTo songs unheeded by the great concourseOf mortals. Verses that I would not singThe living, to the dead I needs must bring.Yet though I dry the marrow from my bones,Weeping another's death, my grief ato...
Jan Kochanowski
A Ghost
Ghosts walk the Earth, that rise not from the grave.The Dead Past hath its living dead. We seeAll suddenly, at times, and shudder then,Their faces pale, and sad accusing eyes.Last night, within the crowded street, I sawA Phantom from the Past, with pallid faceAnd hollow eyes, and pale, cold lips, and hairFaded from that imperial hue of goldWhich was my pride in days that are no more.That pallid face I knew in its young bloom,A radiant lily with a rose-flushed heart,Most beautiful, a vision of delight;And seeing it again, so changed, so changed,I felt as if the icy hand of DeathHad touched my forehead and his voice said Come!Ah, pale, cold lips that once were rosy-red!Lips I have kissed on golden afternoons,Past, past, ...
Victor James Daley
Tides
Love in my heart was a fresh tide flowingWhere the star-like sea gulls soar;The sun was keen and the foam was blowingHigh on the rocky shore.But now in the dusk the tide is turning,Lower the sea gulls soar,And the waves that rose in resistless yearningAre broken forevermore.
Robert Parkes
High travelling winds by royal hillTheir awful anthem sing,And songs exalted flow and fillThe caverns of the spring.To-night across a wild wet plainA shadow sobs and strays;The trees are whispering in the rainOf long departed days.I cannot say what forest saithIts words are strange to me:I only know that in its breathAre tones that used to be.Yea, in these deep dim solitudesI hear a sound I knowThe voice that lived in Penrith woodsTwelve weary years ago.And while the hymn of other yearsIs on a listening land,The Angel of the Past appearsAnd leads me by the hand;And takes me over moaning wave,And tracts of sleepless change,To set me by a lonely graveWithin a lonely range.
Henry Kendall
Song. "Dropt Here And There Upon The Flower"
Dropt here and there upon the flowerI love the dew to see,For then returns the even's hourThat is so dear to me,When silence reigns upon the plain,And night hides all, or nearly;For then I meet the smiles againOf her I love so dearly.O how I love yon dusky plains,Though others there may beAs much belov'd by other swains,But none so dear to me:Their thorn-buds smell as sweet the while,Their brooks may run as clearly;But what are they without the smileOf her I love so dearly.In yonder bower the maid I've met,Whom still I love to meet;The dew-drops fall, the sun has set,O evening thou art sweet!Hope's eye fain breaks the misty glooms,The time's expir'd, or nearly--Ah, faithful still, and here she com...
John Clare
The Outcast's Farewell
The sun is banished,The daylight vanished,No rosy traces Are left behind.Here in the meadowI watch the shadowOf forms and faces Upon your blind.Through swift transitions,In new positions,My eyes still follow One shape most fair.My heart delayingAwhile, is playingWith pleasures hollow, Which mock despair.I feel so lonely,I long once onlyTo pass an hour With you, O sweet!To touch your fingers,Where fragrance lingersFrom some rare flower, And kiss your feet.But not this evenTo me is given.Of all sad mortals Most sad am I,Never to meet you,Never to greet you,Nor pass your portals Before I die.All men scorn ...
Robert Fuller Murray
The Sisters' Tragedy
A. D. 1670AGLAE, a widowMURIEL, her unmarried sister.It happened once, in that brave land that liesFor half the twelvemonth wrapt in sombre skies,Two sisters loved one man. He being dead,Grief loosed the lips of her he had not wed,And all the passion that through heavy yearsHad masked in smiles unmasked itself in tears.No purer love may mortals know than this,The hidden love that guards another's bliss.High in a turret's westward-facing room,Whose painted window held the sunset's bloom,The two together grieving, each to eachUnveiled her soul with sobs and broken speech.Both still were young, in life's rich summer yet;And one was dark, with tints of violetIn hair and eyes, and one was blond as sheWho rose--a seco...
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
The Autumn
Go, sit upon the lofty hill,And turn your eyes around,Where waving woods and waters wildDo hymn an autumn sound.The summer sun is faint on them,The summer flowers depart,Sit still, as all transform'd to stone,Except your musing heart.How there you sat in summer-time,May yet be in your mind;And how you heard the green woods singBeneath the freshening wind.Though the same wind now blows around,You would its blast recall;For every breath that stirs the trees,Doth cause a leaf to fall.Oh! like that wind, is all the mirthThat flesh and dust impart:We cannot bear its visitings,When change is on the heart.Gay words and jests may make us smile,When Sorrow is asleep;But other things must make us smile,
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Despair.
We catch a glimpse of it, gaunt and gray, When the golden sunbeams are all abroad; We sober a moment, then softly say: The world still lies in the hand of God. We watch it stealthily creeping o'er The threshold leading to somebody's soul; A shadow, we cry, it cannot be more When faith is one's portion and Heaven one's goal. A ghost that comes stealing its way along, Affrighting the weak with its gruesome air, But who that is young and glad and strong Fears for a moment to meet Despair? To this heart of ours we have thought so bold All uninvited it comes one day - Lo! faith grows wan, and love grows cold, And the heaven of our dreams lies far away.
Jean Blewett
Hearts Of Women
It is hard for a man to tellThe hidden thought in his friend's heart,And the thought in a man's own heartIs a thing darker.If you have seen a woman's heartBare to your eyes,Go quickly away and never tellWhat you have seen there.Street Song of Manchuria.
Edward Powys Mathers
New Love And Old
In my heart the old loveStruggled with the new;It was ghostly wakingAll night through.Dear things, kind things,That my old love said,Ranged themselves reproachfullyRound my bed.But I could not heed them,For I seemed to seeThe eyes of my new loveFixed on me.Old love, old love,How can I be true?Shall I be faithless to myselfOr to you?
Home ...
'We're going home!' I heard two lovers say, They kissed their friends and bade them bright good-byes; I hid the deadly hunger in my eyes,And, lest I might have killed them, turned away.Ah, love! we too once gambolled home as they, Home from the town with such fair merchandise, - Wine and great grapes - the happy lover buys:A little cosy feast to crown the day.Yes! we had once a heaven we called a home Its empty rooms still haunt me like thine eyes,When the last sunset softly faded there;Each day I tread each empty haunted room, And now and then a little baby cries, Or laughs a lovely laughter worse to bear.
Richard Le Gallienne
A Lover's Vows
Scenes of love and days of pleasure,I must leave them all, lassie.Scenes of love and hours of leisure,All are gone for aye, lassie.No more thy velvet-bordered dressMy fond and longing een shall bless,Thou lily in the wilderness;And who shall love thee then, lassie?Long I've watched thy look so tender,Often clasped thy waist so slender:Heaven, in thine own love defend her,God protect my own lassie.By all the faith I've shown afore thee,I'll swear by more than that, lassie:By heaven and earth I'll still adore thee,Though we should part for aye, lassie!By thy infant years so loving,By thy woman's love so moving,That white breast thy goodness proving,I'm thine for aye, through all, lassie!By the sun that shines for eve...
The White Vigil.
Last night I dreamed I saw you lying dead,And by your sheeted form stood all alone:Frail as a flow'r you lay upon your bed,And on your still face, through the casement, shoneThe moon, as lingering to kiss you thereFall'n asleep, white violets in your hair.Oh, sick to weeping was my soul, and sadTo breaking was my heart that would not break;And for my soul's great grief no tear I had,No lamentation for my heart's deep ache;Yet all I bore seemed more than I could bearBeside you dead, white violets in your hair.A white rose, blooming at your window-bar,And glimmering in it, like a fire-fly caughtUpon the thorns, the light of one white star,Looked on with me; as if they felt and thoughtAs did my heart, "How beautiful and fairAnd y...
Madison Julius Cawein
Rizpah.
And he delivered them into the hands of the Gibeonites, and they hanged them in the hill before the Lord; and they fell all seven together, and were put to death in the days of the harvest, in the first days, in the beginning of barley-harvest.And Rizpah, the daughter of Aiah, took sackcloth, and spread it for her upon the rock, from the beginning of harvest until the water dropped upon them out of heaven, and suffered neither the birds of the air to rest upon them by day, nor the beasts of the field by night.2 Samuel, xxi. 10.Hear what the desolate Rizpah said,As on Gibeah's rocks she watched the dead.The sons of Michal before her lay,And her own fair children, dearer than they:By a death of shame they all had died,And were stretched on the bare rock, side by side.
William Cullen Bryant
Hesperia
Out of the golden remote wild west where the sea without shore is,Full of the sunset, and sad, if at all, with the fulness of joy,As a wind sets in with the autumn that blows from the region of stories,Blows with a perfume of songs and of memories beloved from a boy,Blows from the capes of the past oversea to the bays of the present,Filled as with shadow of sound with the pulse of invisible feet,Far out to the shallows and straits of the future, by rough ways or pleasant,Is it thither the winds wings beat? is it hither to me, O my sweet?For thee, in the stream of the deep tide-wind blowing in with the water,Thee I behold as a bird borne in with the wind from the west,Straight from the sunset, across white waves whence rose as a daughterVenus thy mother, in years when the w...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Ghazal Of Majid Shah
Grief is hard upon me, Master, for she has left me;The black dust has covered my pretty one.My heart is black, for the tomb has taken my friend;How pleasantly would go the days if my friend were here.I can only dream of the stature of my friend;The flowers are dying in my heart, my breast is a fading garden.Her breast is a sweet garden now, and her garments are gold flowers;I am an orchard at night, for my friend has gone a journey.I am Majid Shah, a slave that ministers to the dead;Abdel Qadir Gilani, even the Master, shall not save me.From the Pus'hto (Afghans, nineteenth century).