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To Mistress Amy Potter.
Ay me! I love; give him your hand to kissWho both your wooer and your poet is.Nature has precompos'd us both to love:Your part's to grant; my scene must be to move.Dear, can you like, and liking love your poet?If you say "Aye," blush-guiltiness will show it.Mine eyes must woo you, though I sigh the while:True love is tongueless as a crocodile.And you may find in love these different parts--Wooers have tongues of ice, but burning hearts.
Robert Herrick
Song Of Jealousy, In Love Triumphant.
What state of life can be so blest As love, that warms a lover's breast? Two souls in one, the same desire To grant the bliss, and to require! But if in heaven a hell we find, 'Tis all from thee, O Jealousy! 'Tis all from thee, O Jealousy! Thou tyrant, tyrant Jealousy, Thou tyrant of the mind! All other ills, though sharp they prove, Serve to refine, and perfect love: In absence, or unkind disdain, Sweet hope relieves the lover's pain. But, ah! no cure but death we find, To set us free From Jealousy: O Jealousy! Thou tyrant, tyrant Jealousy, Thou tyrant of the mind! False in thy glass all objects are, Some set too near, and some too f...
John Dryden
Lines Suggested By The Fourteenth Of February.
Darkness succeeds to twilight:Through lattice and through skylightThe stars no doubt, if one looked out,Might be observed to shine:And sitting by the embersI elevate my membersOn a stray chair, and then and thereCommence a Valentine.Yea! by St. Valentinus,Emma shall not be minusWhat all young ladies, whate'er their grade is,Expect to-day no doubt:Emma the fair, the stately -Whom I beheld so lately,Smiling beneath the snow-white wreathWhich told that she was "out."Wherefore fly to her, swallow,And mention that I'd "follow,"And "pipe and trill," et cetera, tillI died, had I but wings:Say the North's "true and tender,"The South an old offender;And hint in fact, with your well-known tact,All kin...
Charles Stuart Calverley
Mary's Death
Mary, ah me! gentle Mary, Can it be you're lying there,Pale and still, and cold as marble, You that was so young and fair.Seemeth it as yestereven, When the golden autumn smiled,On our meeting, gentle Mary, You were then a very child.Busy fingers, flitting footsteps, Never resting all day long;Shy and bashful, and the sweet voice Ever breaking into songAlways gentle, kind and thoughtful, Blameless and so free from art,'Twas no wonder one so lovely Found a place within my heart.You, while life was in its spring time, Made the Scripture Mary's choice;Jesus saw you, loved you, called you, And you listened to His voice.Ever patient and rejoicing, Shielded t...
Nora Pembroke
Trusting Still.
When shall we meet again?One more year passed;One more of grief and pain; -Maybe the last.Are the years sending usFarther apart?Or love still blending usHeart into heart?Do love's fond memoriesBrighten the way,Or faith's fell enemiesDarken thy day?Oh! could the word unkindBe recalled now,Or in the years behindBuried lie low,How would my heart rejoiceAs round it fell,Sweet cadence of thy voice,Still loved so well.Sometimes when sad it seemsWhisperings say:"Cherish thy baseless dreams,Yet whilst thou may,Try not to pierce the veil,Lest thou should'st see,Only a dark'ning valeStretching for thee."But Hope's mist-shrouded sunOnce more breaks out,Chasing the shadows ...
John Hartley
Sympathy.
There should be no despair for youWhile nightly stars are burning;While evening pours its silent dew,And sunshine gilds the morning.There should be no despair, though tearsMay flow down like a river:Are not the best beloved of yearsAround your heart for ever?They weep, you weep, it must be so;Winds sigh as you are sighing,And winter sheds its grief in snowWhere Autumn's leaves are lying:Yet, these revive, and from their fateYour fate cannot be parted:Then, journey on, if not elate,Still, NEVER broken-hearted!
Emily Bronte
Still Be A Child.
("O vous que votre âge défende")[IX., February, 1840.]In youthful spirits wild,Smile, for all beams on thee;Sport, sing, be still the child,The flower, the honey-bee.Bring not the future near,For Joy too soon declines -What is man's mission here?Toil, where no sunlight shines!Our lot is hard, we know;From eyes so gayly beaming,Whence rays of beauty flow,Salt tears most oft are streaming.Free from emotions past,All joy and hope possessing,With mind in pureness cast,Sweet ignorance confessing.Plant, safe from winds and showers,Heart with soft visions glowing,In childhood's happy hoursA mother's rapture showing.Loved by each anxious friend,No carking c...
Victor-Marie Hugo
To The Willow Tree
Thou art to all lost love the best,The only true plant found,Wherewith young men and maids distrestAnd left of love, are crown'd.When once the lover's rose is deadOr laid aside forlorn,Then willow-garlands, 'bout the head,Bedew'd with tears, are worn.When with neglect, the lover's bane,Poor maids rewarded be,For their love lost their only gainIs but a wreath from thee.And underneath thy cooling shade,When weary of the light,The love-spent youth, and love-sick maid,Come to weep out the night.
Casha
A child-like fawn moistened nudging & joyous breath, an allowance for leave as her gentle hand budges my sibling cupping. And walking in a field of gardens - our Jardin des Plantes - a molecule in depth flowery pennons near Picardy wet. Casha tendrils here pinion the eye, little Annabel Lee with the sunshine wet in her parting hand that all the birds in grace sigh at Saint Francis breathless.
Paul Cameron Brown
A garden
We have a little garden, A garden of our own,And every day we water there The seeds that we have sown.We love our little garden, And tend it with such care,You will not find a faded leaf Or blighted blossom there.
Helen Beatrix Potter
Dedication - A Channel Passage and Other Poems
The sea that is life everlastingAnd death everlasting as lifeAbides not a pilot's forecasting,Foretells not of peace or of strife.The might of the night that was hiddenArises and darkens the day,A glory rebuked and forbidden,Time's crown, and his prey.No sweeter, no kindlier, no fairer,No lovelier a soul from its birthWore ever a brighter and rarerLife's raiment for life upon earthThan his who enkindled and cherishedArt's vestal and luminous flame,That dies not when kingdoms have perishedIn storm or in shame.No braver, no trustier, no purer,No stronger and clearer a soulBore witness more splendid and surerFor manhood found perfect and wholeSince man was a warrior and dreamerThan his who in hatred of wrongWoul...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Anniversaries
Once more the windless days are here,Quiet of autumn, when the yearHalts and looks backward and draws breathBefore it plunges into death.Silver of mist and gossamers,Through-shine of noonday's glassy gold,Pale blue of skies, where nothing stirsSave one blanched leaf, weary and old,That over and over slowly fallsFrom the mute elm-trees, hanging on airLike tattered flags along the wallsOf chapels deep in sunlit prayer.Once more ... Within its flawless glassTo-day reflects that other day,When, under the bracken, on the grass,We who were lovers happily layAnd hardly spoke, or framed a thoughtThat was not one with the calm hillsAnd crystal sky. Ourselves were nought,Our gusty passions, our burning willsDissolved in boundlessn...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
To My Lady
When the tender hand of NightLike a rose-leaf fallsSoftly on your starry eyes;When the Sleep-God calls,And the gate of dreams is wide,Wide the painted halls,Dream the dream I send to youThrough your spirits walls!Dream a lowly lover came,Lady fair to woo;Dream that I the lover was,And the lady, you;Dream your answer was a kiss,Warm as summer dew,Waking, in the rosy dawn,Let the dream be true!
Victor James Daley
To ----
Is it a sin to wish that I may meet thee In that dim world whither our spirits stray, When sleep and darkness follow life and day?Is it a sin, that there my voice should greet thee With all that love that I must die concealing? Will my tear-laden eyes sin in revealingThe agony that preys upon my soul?Is't not enough through the long, loathsome day,To hold each look, and word, in stern control? May I not wish the staring sunlight gone, Day and its thousand torturing moments done,And prying sights and sounds of men away? Oh, still and silent Night! when all things sleep, Locked in thy swarthy breast my secret keep: Come, with thy vision'd hopes and blessings now! I dream the only happiness I know.
Frances Anne Kemble
Valentines From A Commercial Lover
If I were but a syndicate, And love were merchandise,I'd buy it at the market rate, And hold it for a rise.And should the price of all this love Bound upward like a ball,And reach 1000 or above, Still you should have it all.
Arthur Macy
A Love-Song.
(XVIII. CENT.)When first in CELIA'S ear I pouredA yet unpractised pray'r,My trembling tongue sincere ignoredThe aids of "sweet" and "fair."I only said, as in me lay,I'd strive her "worth" to reach;She frowned, and turned her eyes away,--So much for truth in speech.Then DELIA came. I changed my plan;I praised her to her face;I praised her features,--praised her fan,Her lap-dog and her lace;I swore that not till Time were deadMy passion should decay;She, smiling, gave her hand, and said'Twill last then--for a DAY.
Henry Austin Dobson
Selene
My beloved, is it nothingThough we meet not, neither can,That I see thee, and thou me,That we see, and see we see,When I see I also feel thee;Is it nothing, my beloved!Thy luminous clear beautyBrightens on me in my night,I withdraw into my darknessTo allure thee into light.About me and upon me I feel them pass and stay,About me, deep into me, every lucid tender ray.And thou, thou also feelestWhen thou stealestShamefaced and half afraidTo the chamber of thy shade,Thou in thy turn,Thou too feelestSomething follow, something yearn,A full orb blaze and burn.My full orb upon thine,As thine erst, gently smiling,Softly wooing, sweetly wiling,Gleamed on mine;So mine on thine in turnWhen ...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Oh, Ask Me Not
Love, should I set my heart upon a crown, Squander my years, and gain it, What recompense of pleasure could I own? For youth's red drops would stain it. Much have I thought on what our lives may mean, And what their best endeavor, Seeing we may not come again to glean, But, losing, lose forever. Seeing how zealots, making choice of pain, From home and country parted, Have thought it life to leave their fellows slain, Their women broken-hearted; How teasing truth a thousand faces claims, As in a broken mirror, And what a father died for in the flames His own son scorns as error; ...
John Charles McNeill