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Confession
IHow shall a maid make answer to a manWho summons her, by love's supreme decree,To open her whole heart, that he may seeThe intricate strange ways that love began.So many streams from that great fountain ranTo feed the river that now rushes free,So deep the heart, so full of mystery;How shall a maid make answer to a man?If I turn back each leaflet of my heart,And let your eyes scan all the records there,Of dreams of love that came before I KNEW,Though in those dreams you had no place or part,Yet, know that each emotion was a stairWhich led my ripening womanhood to YOU.IINay, I was not insensate till you came;I know man likes to think a woman clay,Devoid of feeling till the warming ray<...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Rhymes On The Road. Extract XVI. Les Charmettes.
A Visit to the house where Rousseau lived with Madame de Warrens.-- Their Menage.--Its Grossness.--Claude Anet.--Reverence with which the spot is now visited.--Absurdity of this blind Devotion to Fame.--Feelings excited by the Beauty and Seclusion of the Scene. Disturbed by its Associations with Rousseau's History.--Impostures of Men of Genius.--Their Power of mimicking all the best Feelings, Love, Independence, etc.Strange power of Genius, that can throwRound all that's vicious, weak, and low,Such magic lights, such rainbows dyesAs dazzle even the steadiest eyes. * * * * *'Tis worse than weak--'tis wrong, 'tis shame,This mean prostration before Fame;This casting down beneath the carOf Idols, whatsoe'...
Thomas Moore
The shepherd's brow
The shepherd's brow fronting forked lightning, ownsThe horror and the havoc and the gloryOf it. Angels fall, they are towers, from heaven - a storyOf just, majestical, and giant groans.But man - we, scaffold of score brittle bones;Who breathe, from groundlong babyhood to hoaryAge gasp; whose breath is our memento mori -What bass is our viol for tragic tones?He! Hand to mouth he lives, and voids with shame;And, blazoned in however bold the name,Man Jack the man is, just; his mate a hussy.And I that die these deaths, that feed this flame,That ... in smooth spoons spy life's masque mirrored: tameMy tempests there, my fire and fever fussy.
Gerard Manley Hopkins
The Settler
Here, where my fresh-turned furrows run,And the deep soil glistens red,I will repair the wrong that was doneTo the living and the dead.Here, where the senseless bullet fell,And the barren shrapnel burst,I will plant a tree, I will dig a well,Against the heat and the thirst.Here, in a large and a sunlit land,Where no wrong bites to the bone,I will lay my hand in my neighbour's hand,And together we will atoneFor the set folly and the red breachAnd the black waste of it all;Giving and taking counsel eachOver the cattle-kraal.Here will we join against our foes,The hailstroke and the storm,And the red and rustling cloud that blowsThe locust's mile-deep swarm.Frost and murrain and floods let loose...
Rudyard
Charles Sumner
Garlands upon his grave, And flowers upon his hearse,And to the tender heart and brave The tribute of this verse. His was the troubled life, The conflict and the pain,The grief, the bitterness of strife, The honor without stain. Like Winkelried, he took Into his manly breastThe sheaf of hostile spears, and broke A path for the oppressed. Then from the fatal field Upon a nation's heartBorne like a warrior on his shield!-- So should the brave depart. Death takes us by surprise, And stays our hurrying feet;The great design unfinished lies, Our lives are incomplete. But in the dark unknown Perfect their circles seem,Even as a bridge...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Old Gentleman With The Amber Snuff-Box
The old gentleman, tapping his amber snuff-box(A heart-shaped snuff-box with a golden clasp)Stared at the dying fire. "I'd like them allTo understand, when I am gone," he muttered."But how to do it delicately! I can'tApologize. I'll hint at it ... in verse;And, to be sure that Rosalind reads it through,I'll make it an appendix to my will!"--Still cynical, you see. He couldn't help it.He had seen much, felt much. He snapped the snuff box,Shook his white periwig, trimmed a long quill pen,And then began to write, most carefully,These couplets, in the old heroic style:--O, had I known in boyhood, only knownThe few sad truths that time has made my own,I had not lost the best that youth can give,Nay, life itself, in learning how to live....
Alfred Noyes
To His Girls, Who Would Have Him Sportful.
Alas! I can't, for tell me, howCan I be gamesome, aged now?Besides, ye see me daily growHere, winter-like, to frost and snow;And I, ere long, my girls, shall seeYe quake for cold to look on me.
Robert Herrick
County Guy
Ah! County Guy, the hour is nigh,The sun has left the lea,The orange flower perfumes the bower,The breeze is on the sea.The lark his lay who thrill'd all daySits hush'd his partner nigh:Breeze, bird, and flower confess the hour,But where is County Guy?The village maid steals through the shade,Her shepherd's suit to hear;To beauty shy, by lattice high,Sings high-born Cavalier.The star of Love, all stars aboveNow reigns o'er earth and sky;And high and low the influence knowBut where is County Guy?
Walter Scott
The Subalterns
I"Poor wanderer," said the leaden sky,"I fain would lighten thee,But there be laws in force on highWhich say it must not be."II- "I would not freeze thee, shorn one," criedThe North, "knew I but howTo warm my breath, to slack my stride;But I am ruled as thou."III- "To-morrow I attack thee, wight,"Said Sickness. "Yet I swearI bear thy little ark no spite,But am bid enter there."IV- "Come hither, Son," I heard Death say;"I did not will a graveShould end thy pilgrimage to-day,But I, too, am a slave!"VWe smiled upon each other then,And life to me wore lessThat fell contour it wore ere whenThey owned their passiveness.
Thomas Hardy
A Dialogue To The Memory Of Mr. Alexander Pope.
"Non injussa cano."Virg.POET. I sing of POPE--FRIEND. What, POPE, the Twitnam Bard,Whom Dennis, Cibber, Tibbald push'd so hard!POPE of the Dunciad! POPE who dar'd to woo,And then to libel, Wortley-Montagu!POPE of the Ham-walks story--P. Scandals all!Scandals that now I care not to recall.Surely a little, in two hundred Years,One may neglect Contemporary Sneers:--Surely Allowance for the Man may makeThat had all Grub-street yelping in his Wake!And who (I ask you) has been never Mean,When urged by Envy, Anger or the Spleen?No: I prefer to look on POPE as oneNot rightly happy till his Life was done;Whose whole Career, romance it as you please,Was (what he call'd it) but a "long Disease:"Think of his ...
Henry Austin Dobson
The Summons
A sterner errand to the silken troopHas quenched the uneasy blush that warmed my cheek;I am commissioned in my day of joyTo leave my woods and streams and the sweet slothOf prayer and song that were my dear delight,To leave the rudeness of my woodland life,Sweet twilight walks and midnight solitudeAnd kind acquaintance with the morning starsAnd the glad hey-day of my household hours,The innocent mirth which sweetens daily bread,Railing in love to those who rail again,By mind's industry sharpening the love of life--Books, Muses, Study, fireside, friends and love,I loved ye with true love, so fare ye well!I was a boy; boyhood slid gayly byAnd the impatient years that trod on itTaught me new lessons in the lore of life.I've learned the...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Departure Of Summer.
Summer is gone on swallows' wings,And Earth has buried all her flowers:No more the lark,--the linnet--sings,But Silence sits in faded bowers.There is a shadow on the plainOf Winter ere he comes again,--There is in woods a solemn soundOf hollow warnings whisper'd round,As Echo in her deep recessFor once had turn'd a prophetess.Shuddering Autumn stops to list,And breathes his fear in sudden sighs,With clouded face, and hazel eyesThat quench themselves, and hide in mist.Yes, Summer's gone like pageant bright;Its glorious days of golden lightAre gone--the mimic suns that quiver,Then melt in Time's dark-flowing river.Gone the sweetly-scented breezeThat spoke in music to the trees;Gone--for damp and chilly breath,A...
Thomas Hood
Beclouded.
The sky is low, the clouds are mean,A travelling flake of snowAcross a barn or through a rutDebates if it will go.A narrow wind complains all dayHow some one treated him;Nature, like us, is sometimes caughtWithout her diadem.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Improvisations: Light And Snow: 09
This girl gave her heart to me,And this, and this.This one looked at me as if she loved me,And silently walked away.This one I saw once and loved, and never saw her again.Shall I count them for you upon my fingers?Or like a priest solemnly sliding beads?Or pretend they are roses, pale pink, yellow, and white,And arrange them for you in a wide bowlTo be set in sunlight?See how nicely it sounds as I count them for youThis girl gave her heart to meAnd this, and this, . . . !And nevertheless, my heart breaks when I think of them,When I think their names,And how, like leaves, they have changed and blownAnd will lie, at last, forgotten,Under the snow.
Conrad Aiken
Love's Young Dream.
Oh! the days are gone, when Beauty bright My heart's chain wove;When my dream of life, from morn till night, Was love, still love. New hope may bloom, And days may come, Of milder, calmer beam,But there's nothing half so sweet in life As love's young dream;No, there's nothing half so sweet in life As love's young dream.Tho' the bard to purer fame may soar, When wild youth's past;Tho' he win the wise, who frowned before, To smile at last; He'll never meet A joy so sweet, In all his noon of fame,As when first he sung to woman's ear His soul-felt flame,And, at every close, she blushed to hear The one lov'd name....
The River Duddon - A Series Of Sonnets, 1820. - VII - Change Me, Some God
"Change me, some God, into that breathing rose!"The love-sick Stripling fancifully sighs,The envied flower beholding, as it liesOn Laura's breast, in exquisite repose;Or he would pass into her bird, that throwsThe darts of song from out its wiry cage;Enraptured, could he for himself engageThe thousandth part of what the Nymph bestows;And what the little careless innocentUngraciously receives. Too daring choice!There are whose calmer mind it would contentTo be an unculled floweret of the glen,Fearless of plough and scythe; or darkling wrenThat tunes on Duddon's banks her slender voice.
William Wordsworth
A Poet To His Grandchild - Sequel To The Foregoing
"Son of my buried Son, while thus thy hand""Is clasping mine, it saddens me to think""How Want may press thee down, and with thee sink""Thy children left unfit, through vain demand""Of culture, even to feel or understand""My simplest Lay that to their memory""May cling; hard fate! which haply need not be""Did Justice mould the statutes of the Land.""A Book time-cherished and an honoured name""Are high rewards; but bound they Nature's claim""Or Reason's? No hopes spun in timid line""From out the bosom of a modest home""Extend through unambitious years to come,""My careless Little-one, for thee and thine!"
The Mountain.
The mountain sat upon the plainIn his eternal chair,His observation omnifold,His inquest everywhere.The seasons prayed around his knees,Like children round a sire:Grandfather of the days is he,Of dawn the ancestor.