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Confessions
What is he buzzing in my ears?Now that I come to die,Do I view the world as a vale of tears?Ah, reverend sir, not I!What I viewed there once, what I view againWhere the physic bottles standOn the tables edge, is a suburb lane,With a wall to my bedside hand.That lane sloped, much as the bottles do,From a house you could descryOer the garden-wall; is the curtain blueOr green to a healthy eye?To mine, it serves for the old June weatherBlue above lane and wall;And that farthest bottle labelled EtherIs the house oertopping all.At a terrace, somewhere near the stopper,There watched for me, one June,A girl: I know, sir, its improper,My poor minds out of tune.Only, there was a way . . . you...
Robert Browning
The Dead Oread
Her heart is still and leaps no moreWith holy passion when the breeze,Her whilom playmate, as before,Comes with the language of the bees,Sad songs her mountain cedars sing,And water-music murmuring.Her calm white feet, erst fleet and fastAs Daphne's when a god pursued,No more will dance like sunlight pastThe gold-green vistas of the wood,Where every quailing floweretSmiled into life where they were set.Hers were the limbs of living light,And breasts of snow; as virginalAs mountain drifts; and throat as whiteAs foam of mountain waterfall;And hyacinthine curls, that streamedLike crag-born mists, and gloomed and gleamed.Her presence breathed such scents as hauntMoist, mountain dells and solitudes;Aromas wi...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto XX
Ill strives the will, 'gainst will more wise that strivesHis pleasure therefore to mine own preferr'd,I drew the sponge yet thirsty from the wave.Onward I mov'd: he also onward mov'd,Who led me, coasting still, wherever placeAlong the rock was vacant, as a manWalks near the battlements on narrow wall.For those on th' other part, who drop by dropWring out their all-infecting malady,Too closely press the verge. Accurst be thou!Inveterate wolf! whose gorge ingluts more prey,Than every beast beside, yet is not fill'd!So bottomless thy maw!--Ye spheres of heaven!To whom there are, as seems, who attributeAll change in mortal state, when is the dayOf his appearing, for whom fate reservesTo chase her hence?--With wary steps and slowWe pass'...
Dante Alighieri
Wife To Husband
Pardon the faults in me, For the love of years ago: Good-bye.I must drift across the sea, I must sink into the snow, I must die.You can bask in this sun, You can drink wine, and eat: Good-bye.I must gird myself and run, Though with unready feet: I must die.Blank sea to sail upon, Cold bed to sleep in: Good-bye.While you clasp, I must be gone For all your weeping: I must die.A kiss for one friend, And a word for two,-- Good-bye:--A lock that you must send, A kindness you must do: I must die.Not a word for you, Not a lock or kiss, Good-bye.We, one, must part in two; Verily death is this: ...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Sickness
Waving slowly before me, pushed into the dark,Unseen my hands explore the silence, drawing the barkOf my body slowly behind.Nothing to meet my fingers but the fleece of nightInvisible blinding my face and my eyes! What if in their flightMy hands should touch the door!What if I suddenly stumble, and push the doorOpen, and a great grey dawn swirls over my feet, beforeI can draw back!What if unwitting I set the door of eternity wideAnd am swept away in the horrible dawn, am gone down the tideOf eternal hereafter!Catch my hands, my darling, between your breasts.Take them away from their venture, before fate wrestsThe meaning out of them.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Ghost Glen
Shut your ears, stranger, or turn from Ghost Glen now,For the paths are grown over, untrodden by men now;Shut your ears, stranger, saith the grey mother, crooningHer sorcery runic, when sets the half-moon in.To-night the north-easter goes travelling slowly,But it never stoops down to that hollow unholy;To-night it rolls loud on the ridges red-litten,But it cannot abide in that forest, sin-smitten.For over the pitfall the moon-dew is thawing,And, with never a body, two shadows stand sawingThe wraiths of two sawyers (step under and under),Who did a foul murder and were blackened with thunder!Whenever the storm-wind comes driven and driving,Through the blood-spattered timber you may see the saw strivingYou may see the saw heaving, and fall...
Henry Kendall
C.L.M.
In the dark womb where I beganMy mother's life made me a man.Through all the months of human birthHer beauty fed my common earth.I cannot see, nor breathe, nor stir,But through the death of some of her.Down in the darkness of the graveShe cannot see the life she gave.For all her love, she cannot tellWhether I use it ill or well,Nor knock at dusty doors to findHer beauty dusty in the mind.If the grave's gates could be undone,She would not know her little son,I am so grown. If we should meetShe would pass by me in the street,Unless my soul's face let her seeMy sense of what she did for me.What have I done to keep in mindMy debt to her and womankind?What woman's happier life repaysHer for those month...
John Masefield
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LIV.
Mai non vedranno le mie luci asciutte.TO THE MEMORY OF GIACOMO COLONNA, WHO DIED BEFORE PETRARCH COULD REPLY TO A LETTER OF HIS. Ne'er shall I see again with eyes unwet,Or with the sure powers of a tranquil mind,Those characters where Love so brightly shined,And his own hand affection seem'd to set;Spirit! amid earth's strifes unconquer'd yet,Breathing such sweets from heaven which now has shrined,As once more to my wandering verse has join'dThe style which Death had led me to forget.Another work, than my young leaves more bright,I thought to show: what envying evil starSnatch'd thee, my noble treasure, thus from me?So soon who hides thee from my fond heart's sight,And from thy praise my loving tongue would bar?My soul has...
Francesco Petrarca
The Return
They turned him loose; he bowed his head, A felon, bent and grey. His face was even as the Dead, He had no word to say. He sought the home of his old love, To look on her once more; And where her roses breathed above, He cowered beside the door. She sat there in the shining room; Her hair was silver grey. He stared and stared from out the gloom; He turned to go away. Her roses rustled overhead. She saw, with sudden start. "I knew that you would come," she said, And held him to her heart. Her face was rapt and angel-sweet; She touched his hair of grey; . . . . . BUT HE, SOB-SHAKEN, AT HER FEET, COULD ONLY PRAY AND PRAY.
Robert William Service
Bayard Taylor
Dead he lay among his books!The peace of God was in his looks.As the statues in the gloomWatch o'er Maximilian's tomb,So those volumes from their shelvesWatched him, silent as themselves.Ah! his hand will nevermoreTurn their storied pages o'er;Nevermore his lips repeatSongs of theirs, however sweet.Let the lifeless body rest!He is gone, who was its guest;Gone, as travellers haste to leaveAn inn, nor tarry until eve.Traveller! in what realms afar,In what planet, in what star,In what vast, aerial space,Shines the light upon thy face?In what gardens of delightRest thy weary feet to-night?Poet! thou, whose latest verseWas a garland on thy hearse;Th...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
E Tenebris
Come down, O Christ, and help me! reach Thy hand,For I am drowning in a stormier seaThan Simon on Thy lake of Galilee:The wine of life is spilt upon the sand,My heart is as some famine-murdered landWhence all good things have perished utterly,And well I know my soul in Hell must lieIf I this night before God's throne should stand.'He sleeps perchance, or rideth to the chase,Like Baal, when his prophets howled that nameFrom morn to noon on Carmel's smitten height.'Nay, peace, I shall behold, before the night,The feet of brass, the robe more white than flame,The wounded hands, the weary human face.
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
The Rainbow.
The shower is past, and the skyO'erhead is both mild and serene,Save where a few drops from on high,Like gems, twinkle over the green:And glowing fair, in the black north,The rainbow o'erarches the cloud;The sun in his glory comes forth,And larks sweetly warble aloud.That dismally grim northern skySays God in His vengeance once frowned,And opened His flood-gates on high,Till obstinate sinners were drowned:The lively bright south, and that bow,Say all this dread vengeance is o'er;These colours that smilingly glowSay we shall be deluged no more.Ever blessed be those innocent days,Ever sweet their remembrance to me;When often, in silent amaze,Enraptured, I'd gaze upon thee!Whilst arching adown the black sky
Patrick Bronte
Autumn.
Tainted with death? Ah then, the taint is sweet!As if God took the essences of lifeAnd burned them in a brazier at his feet,The smoke of them ascending rich and rifeTo please his nostrils! What if man be loathTo your deep bosom, and would have the SpringHis bride forever! He who made you bothKnoweth your beauty for as fair a thing;Like that of one who long hath been a wife.And mothered men! As piercing as a knife,And rich beyond all mortal imaging!
Margaret Steele Anderson
The Plague. A Phantasy.
Plague's contagious murderous breathGod's strong might with terror reveals,As through the dreary valley of deathWith its brotherhood fell it steals!Fearfully throbs the anguish-struck heart,Horribly quivers each nerve in the frame;Frenzy's wild laughs the torment proclaim,Howling convulsions disclose the fierce smart.Fierce delirium writhes upon the bedPoisonous mists hang o'er the cities dead;Men all haggard, pale, and wan,To the shadow-realm press on.Death lies brooding in the humid air,Plague, in dark graves, piles up treasures fair,And its voice exultingly raises.Funeral silence churchyard calm,Rapture change to dread alarm.Thus the plague God wildly praises!
Friedrich Schiller
And The Laughter Of The Young And Gay Was Far Too Glad And Loud.
Hush, hush! my thoughts are resting on a changeless world of bliss;Oh! come not with the voice of mirth to lure them back to this.'Tis true, we've much of sadness in our weary sojourn here,That fades, and leaves no deeper trace than childhood's reckless tear;But there are woes which scathe the heart till all its bloom is o'er,A deadly blight we feel but once, that once for evermore.Oh, then, 'tis sweet on fancy's wing to cleave that bright domain!The loved and the redeemed are there, why lure me back again?The cadences of gladness to your hearts may yet be dear;They have no melody for mine, all, all is desert here.The sunshine still is bright to you, the moonlight and the flowers;To me they tell a harrowing tale of dear departed hours.I would not cu...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
The Death-Song.
Mother, mother! my heart is wild, Hold me upon your bosom dear,Do not frown on your own poor child, Death is darkly drawing near.Mother, mother! the bitter shame Eats into my very soul;And longing love, like a wrapping flame, Burns me away without control.Mother, mother! upon my brow The clammy death-sweats coldly rise;How dim and strange your features grow Through the hot mist that veils my eyes!Mother, mother! sing me the song They sing on sunny August eves,The rustling barley-fields along, Binding up the ripe, red sheaves.Mother, mother! I do not hear Your voice - but his, - oh, guard me well!His breathing makes me faint with fear, His clasping arms are round me still...
Frances Anne Kemble
Autumn In Cornwall
The year lies fallen and fadedOn cliffs by clouds invaded,With tongues of storms upbraided,With wrath of waves bedinned;And inland, wild with warning,As in deaf ears or scorning,The clarion even and morningRings of the south-west wind.The wild bents wane and witherIn blasts whose breath bows hitherTheir grey-grown heads and thither,Unblest of rain or sun;The pale fierce heavens are crowdedWith shapes like dreams beclouded,As though the old year enshroudedLay, long ere life were done.Full-charged with oldworld wonders,From dusk Tintagel thundersA note that smites and sundersThe hard frore fields of air;A trumpet stormier-soundedThan once from lists reboundedWhen strong men sense-confoundedFel...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Burden of Austria
O daughter of pride, wasted with misery,With all the glory that thy shame put onStripped off thy shame, O daughter of Babylon,Yea, whoso be it, yea, happy shall he beThat as thou hast served us hath rewarded thee.Blessed, who throweth against war's boundary stoneThy warrior brood, and breaketh bone by boneMisrule thy son, thy daughter Tyranny.That landmark shalt thou not remove for shame,But sitting down there in a widow's weedWail; for what fruit is now of thy red fame?Have thy sons too and daughters learnt indeedWhat thing it is to weep, what thing to bleed?Is it not thou that now art but a name?1