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North Wind
I love you, malcontentMale wind -Shaking the pollen from a flowerOr hurling the sea backward from the grinning sand.Blow on and over my dreams...Scatter my sick dreams...Throw your lusty arms about me...Envelop all my hot body...Carry me to pine forests -Great, rough-bearded forests...Bring me to stark plains and steppes...I would have the North to-night -The cold, enduring North.And if we should meet the Snow,Whirling in spirals,And he should blind my eyes...Ally, you will defend me -You will hold me close,Blowing on my eyelids.
Lola Ridge
Letter To James Tennant, Of Glenconner.
Auld comrade dear, and brither sinner, How's a' the folk about Glenconner? How do you this blae eastlin wind, That's like to blaw a body blind? For me, my faculties are frozen, My dearest member nearly dozen'd, I've sent you here, by Johnie Simson, Twa sage philosophers to glimpse on; Smith, wi' his sympathetic feeling, An' Reid, to common sense appealing. Philosophers have fought and wrangled, An' meikle Greek and Latin mangled, Till wi' their logic-jargon tir'd, An' in the depth of science mir'd, To common sense they now appeal, What wives and wabsters see and feel. But, hark ye, friend! I charge you strictly Peruse them, an' return them quickly, For now I'm grown sae curse...
Robert Burns
Satires Of Circumstances In Fifteen Glimpses - VII Outside The Window
"My stick!" he says, and turns in the laneTo the house just left, whence a vixen voiceComes out with the firelight through the pane,And he sees within that the girl of his choiceStands rating her mother with eyes aglareFor something said while he was there."At last I behold her soul undraped!"Thinks the man who had loved her more than himself;"My God 'tis but narrowly I have escaped. -My precious porcelain proves it delf."His face has reddened like one ashamed,And he steals off, leaving his stick unclaimed.
Thomas Hardy
Rosamond's Song Of Hope.
Sweet Hope, so oft my childhood's friend,I will believe thee still,For thou canst joy with sorrow blend,Where grief alone would kill.When disappointments wrung my heart,Ill brook'd in tender years,Thou, like a sun, perform'dst thy part,And dried my infant tears.When late I wore the bloom of health,And love had bound me fast,My buoyant heart would sigh by stealthFor fear it might not last.My sickness came, my bloom decay'd,But Philip still was by;And thou, sweet Hope, so kindly said,"He'll weep if thou should'st die."Thou told'st me too, that genial SpringWould bring me health again;I feel its power, but cannot singIts glories yet for pain.But thou canst still my heart inspire,And Heave...
Robert Bloomfield
I Heard A Voice Upon The Window Beat
I heard a voice upon the window beatAnd then grow dim, grow still.Opening I saw the snowy sillMarked with the robin's feet.Chill was the air and chillThe thoughts that in my bosom beat.I thought of all that wide and hopeless snowCrusting the frozen lands.Of small birds that in famished bandsA-chill and silent grow.And how Earth's myriad handsClutched only hills of frosted snow.And then I thought of Love that beat and criedFamishing at my breast;How I, by chilling care distrest,Denied him, and Love died....O, with what sore unrestLove's ghost woke with the bird that cried!
John Frederick Freeman
Autumn's Gold
Along the tops of all the yellow trees, The golden-yellow trees, the sunshine lies; And where the leaves are gone, long rays surpriseLone depths of thicket with their brightnesses;And through the woods, all waste of many a breeze, Cometh more joy of light for Poet's eyes-- Green fields lying yellow underneath the skies,And shining houses and blue distances.By the roadside, like rocks of golden ore That make the western river-beds so bright, The briar and the furze are all alight!Perhaps the year will be so fair no more, But now the fallen, falling leaves are gay, And autumn old has shone into a Day!
George MacDonald
To The Author Of A Poem Entitled Successio
Begone, ye Critics, and restrain your spite,Codrus writes on, and will for ever write,The heaviest Muse the swiftest course has gone,As clocks run fastest when most lead is on;What tho' no bees around your cradle flew,Nor on your lips distill'd their golden dew;Yet have we oft discover'd in their steadWhen you, like Orpheus, strike the warbling lyre.Attentive blocks stand round you and admire.Wit pass'd through thee no longer is the same,As meat digested takes a diff'rent name;But sense must sure thy safest plunder be,Since no reprisals can be made on thee.Thus thou may'st rise, and in thy daring flight(Though ne'er so weighty) reach a wondrous height.So, forced from engines, lead itself can fly,Sure Bavius copied Maevius to the full,And ...
Alexander Pope
To Burns.
Suggested on returning home for my holidays by an old portrait of the poet, which hangs in my room. Old friend! - I always loved thee; In childhood's early days, Delighted I would listen With laughter to thy lays. And better still I loved thee, To riper boyhood grown; Because thou wert the pride of The land that's part my own. But with devotion deepened I greet thee now anew, Of love, because thou singest So simple, sweet, and true.
W. M. MacKeracher
The Rain-Crow.
Thee freckled August, dozing hot and blondeOft 'neath a wheat-stack in the white-topped mead -In her full hair brown ox-eyed daisies wound -O water-gurgler, lends a sleepy heed:Half-lidded eyes a purple iron-weedBlows slimly o'er; beyond, a path-found pondBasks flint-bright, hedged with pink-plumed pepper-grasses,A coigne for vainest dragonflies, which glasses Their blue in diamond.Oft from some dusty locust, that thick weavesWith crescent pulse-pods its thin foliage gray,Thou, - o'er the shambling lane, which past the sheavesOf sun-tanned oats winds, red with rutty clay,One league of rude rail-fence, - some panting day,When each parched meadow quivering vapor grieves,Nature's Astrologist, dost promise rain,In seeping language of t...
Madison Julius Cawein
Dead Roses.
He placed a rose in my nut-brown hair--A deep red rose with a fragrant heartAnd said: "We'll set this day apart,So sunny, so wondrous fair."His face was full of a happy light,His voice was tender and low and sweet,The daisies and the violets grew at our feet--Alas, for the coming of night!The rose is black and withered and dead!'Tis hid in a tiny box away;The nut-brown hair is turning to gray,And the light of the day is fled!The light of the beautiful day is fled,Hush'd is the voice so sweet and low--And I--ah, me! I loved him so--And the daisies grow over his head!
Eugene Field
Under the Cedarcroft Chestnut.
Trim set in ancient sward, his manful boleUpbore his frontage largely toward the sky.We could not dream but that he had a soul:What virtue breathed from out his bravery!We gazed o'erhead: far down our deepening eyesRained glamours from his green midsummer mass.The worth and sum of all his centuriesSuffused his mighty shadow on the grass.A Presence large, a grave and steadfast FormAmid the leaves' light play and fantasy,A calmness conquered out of many a storm,A Manhood mastered by a chestnut-tree!Then, while his monarch fingers downward heldThe rugged burrs wherewith his state was rife,A voice of large authoritative EldSeemed uttering quickly parables of life:`How Life in truth was sharply set with ills;A kernel ca...
Sidney Lanier
On The Death Of Sir James Hunter Blair.
The lamp of day, with ill-presaging glare, Dim, cloudy, sunk beneath the western wave; Th' inconstant blast howl'd thro' the darkening air, And hollow whistled in the rocky cave. Lone as I wander'd by each cliff and dell, Once the lov'd haunts of Scotia's royal train;[1] Or mus'd where limpid streams once hallow'd well,[2] Or mould'ring ruins mark the sacred fane.[3] Th' increasing blast roared round the beetling rocks, The clouds, swift-wing'd, flew o'er the starry sky, The groaning trees untimely shed their locks, And shooting meteors caught the startled eye. The paly moon rose in the livid east, And 'mong the cliffs disclos'd a stately for...
Foreboding
O linger late, poor yellow whispering leaves!As yet the evesAre golden and the simple moon looks throughThe clouds and you.O linger yet although the night be blind,And in the windYou wake and lisp and shiver at the stirAnd sigh of herWhose rimy fingers chill you each and all:And so you fallAs dead as hopes or dreams or whispered vows....O then the boughsThat bore your busy multitude shall feelThe cold light stealBetween them, and the timorous child shall start,Hearing his heartDrubbing affrighted at the frail gates, for lo,The ghostly glowOf the wild moon, caught in the barren armsOf leafless branches loud with night's alarms!
Improvisations: Light And Snow: 12
How many times have we been interruptedJust as I was about to make up a story for you!One time it was because we suddenly saw a fireflyLighting his green lantern among the boughs of a fir-tree.Marvellous! Marvellous! He is making for himselfA little tent of light in the darkness!And one time it was because we saw a lilac lightning flashRun wrinkling into the blue top of the mountain,We heard boulders of thunder rolling down upon usAnd the plat-plat of drops on the window,And we ran to watch the rainCharging in wavering clouds across the long grass of the field!Or at other times it was because we saw a starSlipping easily out of the sky and falling, far off,Among pine-dark hills;Or because we found a crimson eftDarting in the cold grass!Th...
Conrad Aiken
In Front Of The Landscape
Plunging and labouring on in a tide of visions, Dolorous and dear,Forward I pushed my way as amid waste waters Stretching around,Through whose eddies there glimmered the customed landscape Yonder and near,Blotted to feeble mist. And the coomb and the upland Foliage-crowned,Ancient chalk-pit, milestone, rills in the grass-flat Stroked by the light,Seemed but a ghost-like gauze, and no substantial Meadow or mound.What were the infinite spectacles bulking foremost Under my sight,Hindering me to discern my paced advancement Lengthening to miles;What were the re-creations killing the daytime As by the night?O they were speechful faces, gazing insistent, Some as with smiles,Some ...
Fragment
The furl of fresh-leaved dogrose downHis cheeks the forth-and-flaunting sunHad swarthed about with lion-brownBefore the Spring was done.His locks like all a ravel-rope's-end,With hempen strands in spray -Fallow, foam-fallow, hanks - fall'n off their ranks,Swung down at a disarray.Or like a juicy and jostling shockOf bluebells sheaved in MayOr wind-long fleeces on the flockA day off shearing day.Then over his turnèd temples - here -Was a rose, or, failing that,Rough-Robin or five-lipped campion clearFor a beauty-bow to his hat,And the sunlight sidled, like dewdrops, like dandled diamondsThrough the sieve of the straw of the plait.
Gerard Manley Hopkins
Burns And Scott In Edinburgh.
When Burns did make triumphant entry 'Mong Edina's famous gentry, A discussion did there arise Among those solons learned and wise, About some lines by a new poet. The author's name none did know it, Poem was of Canadian snow And how o'er it the blood did flow, For it had then been swept by war Where armies met in deadly jar. But 'mong philosophers was boy Of tender years now Scotland's joy, He there did quickly quote each line And author's name he did define, Burns glanced at him with loving eyes, Youth ever more that look did prize, The happiest moment in his lot Ever revered by Walter Scott. ...
James McIntyre
Cross And Pile.
Fair and foul days trip cross and pile; the fairFar less in number than our foul days are.
Robert Herrick