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A Song In The Night
I would I were an angel strong,An angel of the sun, hasting along!I would I were just come awake,A child outbursting from night's dusky brake!Or lark whose inward, upward fateMocks every wall that masks the heavenly gate!Or hopeful cock whose clarion clearShrills ten times ere a film of dawn appear!Or but a glowworm: even thenMy light would come straight from the Light of Men!I am a dead seed, dark and slow:Father of larks and children, make me grow.
George MacDonald
Among The Tombs
She is a lady fair and wise, Her heart her counsel keeps,And well she knows of time that flies And tide that onward sweeps;But still she sits with restless eyes Where Memory sleeps--- Where Memory sleeps.Ye that have heard the whispering dead In every wind that creeps,Or felt the stir that strains the lead Beneath the mounded heaps,Tread softly, ah! more softly tread Where Memory sleeps--- Where Memory sleeps.
Henry John Newbolt
The Skies.
Ay! gloriously thou standest there,Beautiful, boundles firmament!That, swelling wide o'er earth and air,And round the horizon bent,With thy bright vault, and sapphire wall,Dost overhang and circle all.Far, far below thee, tall old treesArise, and piles built up of old,And hills, whose ancient summits freezeIn the fierce light and cold.The eagle soars his utmost height,Yet far thou stretchest o'er his flight.Thou hast thy frowns, with thee on highThe storm has made his airy seat,Beyond that soft blue curtain lieHis stores of hail and sleet.Thence the consuming lightnings break,There the strong hurricanes awake.Yet art thou prodigal of smiles,Smiles, sweeter than thy frowns are stern:Earth sends, from all...
William Cullen Bryant
Sonnet XVII.
Ah! why have I indulg'd my dazzled sight With scenes in Hope's delusive mirror shown? Scenes, that too seldom human Life has known In kind accomplishment; - but O! how brightThe rays, that gilded them with varied light Alternate! oft swift flashing on the boon That might at FAME's immortal shrine be won; Then shining soft on tender LOVE's delight. -Now, with stern hand, FATE draws the sable veil O'er the frail glass! - HOPE, as she turns away, The darken'd crystal drops. - - Heavy and pale,Rain-pouring clouds quench all the darts of day; Low mourns the wind along the gloomy dale, And tolls the Death-bell in the pausing gale.
Anna Seward
Lines In Memory Of Edmund Morris
Dear Morris - here is your letter -Can my answer reach you now?Fate has left me your debtor,You will remember how;For I went away to Nantucket,And you to the Isle of Orleans,And when I was dawdling and dreamingOver the ways and meansOf answering, the power was denied me,Fate frowned and took her stand;I have your unanswered letterHere in my hand.This - in your famous scribble,It was ever a cryptic fist,Cuneiform or ChaldaicMeanings held in a mist.Dear Morris, (now I'm inditingAnd poring over your script)I gather from the writing,The coin that you had flipt,Turned tails; and so you compel meTo meet you at Touchwood Hills:Or, mayhap, you are trying to tell meThe sum of a painter's ills:Is that...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Dawn In The Alleghanies
The waters leap,The waters roar;And on the shoreOne sycamoreStands, towering hoar.The mountains heapGaunt pines and cragsThat hoar-frost shags;And, pierced with snags,Like horns of stags,The water lags,The water drags,Where trees, like hags,Lean from the steep.The mist beginsTo swirl; then spins'Mid outs and insOf heights; and thinsWhere the torrent dins;And lost in sweepOf its whiteness deepThe valleys sleep.Now morning strikesOn wild rampikesOf forest spikes,And, down dim dykesOf dawn, like sheep,Scatters the mists,And amethystsWith light, that twists,And rifts that runAzure with sun,Wild-whirled and spun,The foggy dun...
Madison Julius Cawein
Yesterdays
Gone! and they return no more,But they leave a light in the heart;The murmur of waves that kiss a shoreWill never, I know, depart.Gone! yet with us still they stay,And their memories throb through life;The music that hushes or stirs to-day,Is toned by their calm or strife.Gone! and yet they never go!We kneel at the shrine of time:'Tis a mystery no man may know,Nor tell in a poet's rhyme.
Abram Joseph Ryan
The River Of Sleep
There are curious isles in the River of Sleep, Curious isles without number.We'll visit them all as we leisurely creepDown the winding stream whose current is deep, In our beautiful barge of Slumber.The very first isle in this wonderful stream Quite close to the shore is lying,And after a supper of cakes and creamWe come to the Night-Mare-Isle with a scream, And hurry away from it crying.And next is the Island-of-Lullaby, And every one there rejoices.The winds are only a perfumed sigh,And the birds that sing in the treetops try To imitate Mothers' voices.A little beyond is the Isle-of-Dreams; Oh, that is the place to be straying.Everything there is just as it seems;Dolls are real and sunshine g...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Duality
Within me are two souls that pity eachThe other for the ends they seek, yet smileForgiveness, as two friends that love the whileThe folly against which each feigns to preach.And while one barters in the market-place,Or drains the cup before the tavern fire,The other, winged with a divine desire,searches the solitary wastes of space.And if o'ercome with pleasure this one sleeps,The other steals away to lay its earUpon some lip just cold, perchance to hearThose wondrous secrets which it knows and keeps!
Arthur Sherburne Hardy
They Are Blind
They are blind, and they are dead: We will wake them as we go;There are words have not been said, There are sounds they do not know: We will pipe and we will sing-- With the Music and the Spring Set their hearts a wondering!They are tired of what is old, We will give it voices new;For the half hath not been told Of the Beautiful and True. Drowsy eyelids shut and sleeping! Heavy eyes oppressed with weeping! Flashes through the lashes leaping!Ye that have a pleasant voice, Hither come without delay;Ye will never have a choice Like to that ye have to-day: Round the wide world we will go, Singing through the frost and snow Till the d...
To Mrs. Henry Tighe, On Reading Her "Psyche."
Tell me the witching tale again, For never has my heart or earHung on so sweet, so pure a strain, So pure to feel, so sweet to hear.Say, Love, in all thy prime of fame, When the high heaven itself was thine;When piety confest the flame, And even thy errors were divine;Did ever Muse's hand, so fair, A glory round thy temple spread?Did ever lip's ambrosial air Such fragrance o'er thy altars shed?One maid there was, who round her lyre The mystic myrtle wildly wreathed;--But all her sighs were sighs of fire, The myrtle withered as she breathed.Oh! you that love's celestial dream, In all its purity, would know,Let not the senses' ardent beam Too strongly through the visio...
Thomas Moore
The Snow Spirit.
No, ne'er did the wave in its element steep An island of lovelier charms;It blooms in the giant embrace of the deep, Like Hebe in Hercules' arms.The blush of your bowers is light to the eye, And their melody balm to the ear;But the fiery planet of day is too nigh, And the Snow Spirit never comes here.The down from his wing is as white as the pearl That shines through thy lips when they part,And it falls on the green earth as melting, my girl, As a murmur of thine on the heart.Oh! fly to the clime, where he pillows the death, As he cradles the birth of the year;Bright are your bowers and balmy their breath, But the Snow Spirit cannot come here.How sweet to behold him when borne on the gale, And bright...
Called Into Play
Fall fell:so that's it for the leaf poetry:some flurries have whitened the edges of roadsand lawns: time for that, the snow stuff: &turkeys and old St. Nick: where am I going tofind something to write about I haven't alreadywritten away: I will have to stop short, lookdown, look up, look close, think, think, think:but in what range should I think: should Ifigure colors and outlines, given forms, saymailboxes, or should I try to plumb what isbehind what and what behind that, deep downwhere the surface has lost its semblance: orshould I think personally, such as, this weekseems to have been crafted in hell: what: issomething going on: something besides thisdiddledeediddle everyday matter-of-fact: I
A. R. Ammons
The Evening Hour.
Like the herald hope of a fairer clime,The brightest link in the chain of time,The youngest and loveliest child of day,I mingle and soften each glowing ray;Weaving together a tissue brightOf the beams of day and the gems of night.--I pitch my tent in the glowing west,And receive the sun as he sinks to rest;He flings in my lap his ruby crown,And lays at my feet his glory down;But ere his burning eyelids close,His farewell glance the day-king throwsOn Nature's face--till the twilight shroudsThe monarch's brow in a veil of clouds--Oh then, by the light of mine own fair star,I unyoke the steeds from his beamy car.Away they start from the fiery rein,With flashing hoofs, and flying mane,Like meteors speeding on the wind,They lea...
Susanna Moodie
Morning In Constantinople
She has an early morning of her own, A blending of the mist and sea and sun Into an undistinguishable one, And Saint Sophia, from her lordly throne Rises above the opalescent cloud, A shadowy dome and soaring minaret Visable though the base be hidden yet Beneath the veiling wreaths of milky shroud, As some dark Turkish beauty haughtily Glances above the yashmak's snowy fold. Beyond Stamboul's long stretch, a bar of gold Falls from the sun across the distant sea.
Victoria Mary Sackville-West
Even As A Dragons Eye That Feels The Stress
Even as a dragon's eye that feels the stressOf a bedimming sleep, or as a lampSuddenly glaring through sepulchral damp,So burns yon Taper 'mid a black recessOf mountains, silent, dreary, motionless:The lake below reflects it not; the sky,Muffled in clouds, affords no companyTo mitigate and cheer its loneliness.Yet, round the body of that joyless ThingWhich sends so far its melancholy light,Perhaps are seated in domestic ringA gay society with faces bright,Conversing, reading, laughing; or they sing,While hearts and voices in the song unite.
William Wordsworth
Fate
Her planted eye to-day controls,Is in the morrow most at home,And sternly calls to being soulsThat curse her when they come.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Her Violin.
IHer violin! - Again beginThe dream-notes of her violin;And dim and fair, with gold-brown hair,I seem to see her standing there,Soft-eyed and sweetly slender:The room again, with strain on strain,Vibrates to LOVE's melodious pain,As, sloping slow, is poised her bow,While round her form the golden glowOf sunset spills its splendour.IIHer violin! - now deep, now thin,Again I hear her violin;And, dream by dream, again I seemTo see the love-light's tender gleamBeneath her eyes' long lashes:While to my heart she seems a partOf her pure song's inspirèd art;And, as she plays, the rosy graysOf twilight halo hair and face,While sunset burns to ashes.IIIO violin! - Cease,...