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To The Memory Of Thomas Shipley
Gone to thy Heavenly Father's rest!The flowers of Eden round thee blowing,And on thine ear the murmurs blestOf Siloa's waters softly flowing!Beneath that Tree of Life which givesTo all the earth its healing leavesIn the white robe of angels clad,And wandering by that sacred river,Whose streams of holiness make gladThe city of our God forever!Gentlest of spirits! not for theeOur tears are shed, our sighs are given;Why mourn to know thou art a freePartaker of the joys of heaven?Finished thy work, and kept thy faithIn Christian firmness unto death;And beautiful as sky and earth,When autumn's sun is downward going,The blessed memory of thy worthAround thy place of slumber glowing!But woe for us! who linger stillWith fe...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Burden Of Desire
I.In some glad way I know thereof:A garden glows down in my heart,Wherein I meet and often partWith many an ancient tale of loveA Romeo garden, banked with bloom,And trellised with the eglantine;In which a rose climbs to a room,A balcony one mass of vine,Dim, haunted of perfumeA balcony, whereon she gleams,The soft Desire of all Dreams,And smiles and bends like Juliet,Year after year.While to her side, all dewy wet,A rose stuck in his ear,Love climbs to draw her near.II.And in another way I know:Down in my soul a graveyard lies,Wherein I meet, in ghostly wise,With many an ancient tale of woeA graveyard of the Capulets,Deep-vaulted with ancestral gloom,Through whose dark yews the ...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Sonnets XLV - The other two, slight air, and purging fire
The other two, slight air, and purging fireAre both with thee, wherever I abide;The first my thought, the other my desire,These present-absent with swift motion slide.For when these quicker elements are goneIn tender embassy of love to thee,My life, being made of four, with two aloneSinks down to death, oppressd with melancholy;Until lifes composition be recurdBy those swift messengers returnd from thee,Who even but now come back again, assurd,Of thy fair health, recounting it to me:This told, I joy; but then no longer glad,I send them back again, and straight grow sad.
William Shakespeare
The Happy Ending
STANZAS WRITTEN IN DEJECTIONI am tired of the day with its profitless labours,And tired of the night with its lack of repose,I am sick of myself, my surroundings, and neighbours,Especially Aryan Brothers and crows;O land of illusory hope for the needy,O centre of soldiering, thirst, and shikar,When a broken-down exile begins to get seedy,What a beast of a country you are!There are many, I know, that have honestly drawn aMost moving description of pleasures to winBy the exquisite carnage of such of your faunaAs Nature provides with a 'head' or a 'skin';I know that a pig is magnificent sticking;But good as you are in the matter of sports,When a person's alive, so to put it, and kicking,You're a brute when a man's out of sorts.
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
Canzone XIV.
Chiare, fresche e dolci acque.TO THE FOUNTAIN OF VAUOLUSE--CONTEMPLATIONS OF DEATH. Ye limpid brooks, by whose clear streamsMy goddess laid her tender limbs!Ye gentle boughs, whose friendly shadeGave shelter to the lovely maid!Ye herbs and flowers, so sweetly press'dBy her soft rising snowy breast!Ye Zephyrs mild, that breathed aroundThe place where Love my heart did wound!Now at my summons all appear,And to my dying words give ear.If then my destiny requires,And Heaven with my fate conspires,That Love these eyes should weeping close,Here let me find a soft repose.So Death will less my soul affright,And, free from dread, my weary sprightNaked alone will dare t' essayThe still unknown, though b...
Francesco Petrarca
Mine Host
There stands a hostel by a travelled way;Life is the road and Death the worthy host;Each guest he greets, nor ever lacks to say,"How have ye fared?"They answer him, the most,"This lodging place is other than we sought;We had intended farther, but the gloomCame on apace, and found us ere we thought:Yet will we lodge.Thou hast abundant room."Within sit haggard men that speak no word,No fire gleams their cheerful welcome shed;No voice of fellowship or strife is heardBut silence of a multitude of dead."Naught can I offer ye," quoth Death, "but rest!"And to his chamber leads each tired guest.
John McCrae
Rhymes And Rhythms - VI
Space and dread and the dark,Over a livid stretch of skyCloud-monsters crawling like a funeral trainOf huge primeval presencesStooping beneath the weightOf some enormous, rudimentary grief;While in the haunting lonelinessThe far sea waits and wanders, with a soundAs of the trailing skirts of DestinyPassing unseenTo some immitigable endWith her grey henchman, Death.What larve, what spectre is thisThrilling the wilderness to lifeAs with the bodily shape of Fear?What but a desperate sense,A strong foreboding of those dim,Interminable continents, forlornAnd many-silenced in a duskInviolable utterly, and deadAs the poor dead it huddles and swarms and styesIn hugger-mugger through eternity?Life, life, l...
William Ernest Henley
A Wedding In War-Time
Our God who made two lovers in a garden,And smote them separate and set them free,Their four eyes wild for wonder and wrath and pardonAnd their kiss thunder as lips of land and sea:Each rapt unendingly beyond the other,Two starry worlds of unknown gods at war,Wife and not mate, a man and not a brother,We thank thee thou hast made us what we are.Make not the grey slime of infinityTo swamp these flowers thou madest one by one;Let not the night that was thine enemyMix a mad twilight of the moon and sun;Waken again to thunderclap and clamourThe wonder of our sundering and the song,Or break our hearts with thine hell-shattering hammerBut leave a shade between us all day long.Shade of high shame and honourable blindnessWhen youth, i...
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Panthera
Yea, as I sit here, crutched, and cricked, and bent,I think of Panthera, who underwentMuch from insidious aches in his decline;But his aches were not radical like mine;They were the twinges of old wounds - the feelOf the hand he had lost, shorn by barbarian steel,Which came back, so he said, at a change in the air,Fingers and all, as if it still were there.My pains are otherwise: upclosing crampsAnd stiffened tendons from this country's damps,Where Panthera was never commandant. -The Fates sent him by way of the Levant.He had been blithe in his young manhood's time,And as centurion carried well his prime.In Ethiop, Araby, climes fair and fell,He had seen service and had borne him well.Nought shook him then: he was serene as brave;Yet late...
Thomas Hardy
In The Ember Days Of My Last Free Summer
In the ember days of my last free summer,here I lie, outside myself, watchingthe gross body eating a poor curry:satisfied at what I have done, scared of whatI have to do in my last free winter.
Ben Jonson
The Widow On Windermere Side
IHow beautiful when up a lofty heightHonour ascends among the humblest poor,And feeling sinks as deep! See there the doorOf One, a Widow, left beneath a weightOf blameless debt. On evil Fortune's spiteShe wasted no complaint, but strove to makeA just repayment, both for conscience-sakeAnd that herself and hers should stand uprightIn the world's eye. Her work when daylight failedPaused not, and through the depth of night she keptSuch earnest vigils, that belief prevailedWith some, the noble Creature never slept;But, one by one, the hand of death assailedHer children from her inmost heart bewept.IIThe Mother mourned, nor ceased her tears to flow,Till a winter's noonday placed her buried SonBefore her eyes, last child...
William Wordsworth
Beyond.
1Hangs stormed with stars the night,Deep over deep,A majesty, a might,To feel and keep.2Ah! what is such and such,Love, canst thou tell?That shrinks - though 'tis not much -To weep farewell.3That hates the dawn and lark;Would have the wail, -Sobbed through the ceaseless dark, -O' the nightingale.4Yes, earth, thy life were worthNot much to me,Were there not after earthEternity.5God gave thee life to keep -And what hath life? -Love, faith, and care, and sleepWhere dreams are rife.6Death's sleep, whose shadows startThe tears in eyesOf love, that fill the heartThat breaks and d...
Mariana
With blackest moss the flower-plotsWere thickly crusted, one and all:The rusted nails fell from the knotsThat held the pear to the gable-wall.The broken sheds look'd sad and strange:Unlifted was the clinking latch;Weeded and worn the ancient thatchUpon the lonely moated grange.She only said, "My life is dreary,He cometh not," she said;She said, "I am aweary, aweary,I would that I were dead!"Her tears fell with the dews at even;Her tears fell ere the dews were dried;She could not look on the sweet heaven,Either at morn or eventide.After the flitting of the bats,When thickest dark did trance the sky,She drew her casement-curtain by,And glanced athwart the glooming flats.She only said, "My life is dreary,He come...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Last Oracle
eipate toi basilei, xamai pese daidalos aula.ouketi PHoibos exei kaluban, ou mantida daphnen,ou pagan laleousan . apesbeto kai lalon udor.Years have risen and fallen in darkness or in twilight,Ages waxed and waned that knew not thee nor thine,While the world sought light by night and sought not thy light,Since the sad last pilgrim left thy dark mid shrine.Dark the shrine and dumb the fount of song thence welling,Save for words more sad than tears of blood, that said:Tell the king, on earth has fallen the glorious dwelling,And the watersprings that spake are quenched and dead.Not a cell is left the God, no roof, no coverIn his hand the prophet laurel flowers no more.And the great king's high sad heart, thy true last lover,Felt thine answer pierce and ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Mother.
There is a land whereon the sun's warm gaze, God-like, all-seeing, falls right down through space,And the weak Earth, quite smitten by its rays, Lies scorch'd and powerless with mute silent face,Like a tranced body, where no changing glowTells that the life-streams through its channels flow.Peopled it is by nations scant and few, Set far apart among the trackless sands,Unlearn'd, uncultured, wild and swart of hue, Roaming the deserts in divided bands,Where the green pastures call them, and the deerTroop yet within the range of bow and spear.Unhappy Afric! can thy boundless plains, Where the royal lion snuffs the free pure air,And every breeze laughs at the tyrant's chains, Be but the nest of slavery and despair,Rea...
Walter R. Cassels
Requiem
Not under foreign skiesNor under foreign wings protected -I shared all this with my own peopleThere, where misfortune had abandoned us.[1961]INSTEAD OF A PREFACEDuring the frightening years of the Yezhov terror, Ispent seventeen months waiting in prison queues inLeningrad. One day, somehow, someone 'picked me out'.On that occasion there was a woman standing behind me,her lips blue with cold, who, of course, had never inher life heard my name. Jolted out of the torporcharacteristic of all of us, she said into my ear(everyone whispered there) - 'Could one ever describethis?' And I answered - 'I can.' It was then thatsomething like a smile slid across what had previouslybeen just a face.[The 1st of April in the year 1957. Leningr...
Anna Akhmatova
Epilogue.
Beyond the moon, within a land of mist, Lies the dim Garden of all Dead Desires,Walled round with morning's clouded amethyst, And haunted of the sunset's shadowy fires;There all lost things we loved hold ghostly tryst - Dead dreams, dead hopes, dead loves, and dead desires.Sad are the stars that day and night exist Above the Garden of all Dead Desires;And sad the roses that within it twist Deep bow'rs; and sad the wind that through it quires;But sadder far are they who there hold tryst - Dead dreams, dead hopes, dead loves, and dead desires.There, like a dove, upon the twilight's wrist, Soft in the Garden of all Dead Desires,Sleep broods; and there, where never a serpent hissed, On the wan willows music hangs her l...
Bad Dreams IV
It happened thus: my slab, though new,Was getting weather-stained, beside,Herbage, balm, peppermint, oergrewLetter and letter: till you triedSomewhat, the Name was scarce descried.That strong stern man my lover came:Was he my lover? Call him, pray,My lifes cold critic bent on blameOf all poor I could do or sayTo make me worth his love one day,One far day when, by diligentAnd dutiful amending faults,Foibles, all weaknesses which wentTo challenge and excuse assaultsOf culture wronged by taste that halts,Discrepancies should mar no planSymmetric of the qualitiesClaiming respect from, say, a manThats strong and stem. Once more he priesInto me with those critic eyes!No question! so, Conclude, con...
Robert Browning