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The Afterglow
Oh, for the fire that used to glowIn those my days of old!I never thought a man could growSo callous and so cold.Ah, for the heart that used to acheFor those in sorrows ways;I often wish my heart could breakAs it did in those dead days.Along my track of storm and stress,And it is plain to trace,I look back from the lonelinessAnd the depth of my disgrace.Twas fate and only fate I know,But all mistakes are plain,Tis sadder than the afterglow,More dreary than the rain.But still there lies a patch of sunThat neer will come again,Those golden days when I was oneOf Natures gentlemen.And if there is a memoryCould break me down at last,It sure would be the thought of this,The sunshine in the pa...
Henry Lawson
Her Secret
That love's dull smart distressed my heart He shrewdly learnt to see,But that I was in love with a dead man Never suspected he.He searched for the trace of a pictured face, He watched each missive come,And a note that seemed like a love-line Made him look frozen and glum.He dogged my feet to the city street, He followed me to the sea,But not to the neighbouring churchyard Did he dream of following me.
Thomas Hardy
Letter In Verse
Like boys that run behind the loaded wainFor the mere joy of riding back again,When summer from the meadow carts the hayAnd school hours leave them half a day to play;So I with leisure on three sides a sheetOf foolscap dance with poesy's measured feet,Just to ride post upon the wings of timeAnd kill a care, to friendship turned in rhyme.The muse's gallop hurries me in sportWith much to read and little to divert,And I, amused, with less of wit than will,Run till I tire.--And so to cheat her still.Like children running races who shall beFirst in to touch the orchard wall or tree,The last half way behind, by distance vext,Turns short, determined to be first the next;So now the muse has run me hard and long--I'll leave at once her races and h...
John Clare
Substratum.
Hear you r o music in the creaks Made by the sallow grasshopper,Who in the hot weeds sharply breaks The mellow dryness with his cheer? Or did you by the hearthstones hearThe cricket's kind, shrill strain when frost Worked mysteries of silver nearUpon the casement's panes, and lostWithout the gate-post seemed a sheeted ghost?Or through the dank, dim Springtide's night Green minstrels of the marshlands tuneTheir hoarse lyres in the pale twilight, Hailing the sickle of the moon From flag-thronged pools that glassed her lune?Or in the Summer, dry and loud, The hard cicada whirr aboonHis long lay in a poplar's cloud,When the thin heat rose wraith-like in a shroud?The cloud that lids the naked moon,
Madison Julius Cawein
Under The Snow
Over the mountains, under the snowLieth a valley cold and low,'Neath a white, immovable pall,Desolate, dreary, soulless all,And soundless, save when the wintry blastSweeps with funeral music past. Yet was that valley not always so,For I trod its summer-paths long ago;And I gathered flowers of fairest dyesWhere now the snow-drift heaviest lies;And I drank from rills that, with murmurous song,Wandered in golden light alongThrough bowers, whose ever-fragrant airWas heavy with perfume of flowrets fair, -Through cool, green meadows where, all day long,The wild bee droned his voluptuous song;While over all shone the eye of LoveIn the violet-tinted heavens above. And through that valley ran veins of gold,And the...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Ditty
(E. L G.)Beneath a knap where flownNestlings play,Within walls of weathered stone,Far awayFrom the files of formal houses,By the bough the firstling browses,Lives a Sweet: no merchants meet,No man barters, no man sellsWhere she dwells.Upon that fabric fair"Here is she!"Seems written everywhereUnto me.But to friends and nodding neighbours,Fellow-wights in lot and labours,Who descry the times as I,No such lucid legend tellsWhere she dwells.Should I lapse to what I wasEre we met;(Such can not be, but becauseSome forgetLet me feign it) none would noticeThat where she I know by rote isSpread a strange and withering change,Like a drying of the wellsWhere s...
Sonnet CCXXI.
Cercato ho sempre solitaria vita.THINKING ALWAYS OF LAURA, IT PAINS HIM TO REMEMBER WHERE SHE IS LEFT. Still have I sought a life of solitude;The streams, the fields, the forests know my mind;That I might 'scape the sordid and the blind,Who paths forsake trod by the wise and good:Fain would I leave, were mine own will pursued,These Tuscan haunts, and these soft skies behind,Sorga's thick-wooded hills again to find;And sing and weep in concert with its flood.But Fortune, ever my sore enemy,Compels my steps, where I with sorrow seeCast my fair treasure in a worthless soil:Yet less a foe she justly deigns to prove,For once, to me, to Laura, and to love;Favouring my song, my passion, with her smile.NOTT.
Francesco Petrarca
Miscellaneous Sonnets, 1842 - VII - Men Of The Western World
Men of the Western World! in Fate's dark bookWhence these opprobrious leaves of dire portent?Think ye your British Ancestors forsookTheir native Land, for outrage provident;From unsubmissive necks the bridle shookTo give, in their Descendants, freer ventAnd wider range to passions turbulent,To mutual tyranny a deadlier look?Nay, said a voice, soft as the south wind's breath,Dive through the stormy surface of the floodTo the great current flowing underneath;Explore the countless springs of silent good;So shall the truth be better understood,And thy grieved Spirit brighten strong in faith.
William Wordsworth
Four Songs Of Four Seasons
I. Winter in NorthumberlandOutside the gardenThe wet skies harden;The gates are barred onThe summer side:"Shut out the flower-time,Sunbeam and shower-time;Make way for our time,"Wild winds have cried.Green once and cheery,The woods, worn weary,Sigh as the drearyWeak sun goes home:A great wind grapplesThe wave, and dapplesThe dead green floor of the sea with foam.Through fell and moorland,And salt-sea foreland,Our noisy norlandResounds and rings;Waste waves thereunderAre blown in sunder,And winds make thunderWith cloudwide wings;Sea-drift makes dimmerThe beacon's glimmer;Nor sail nor swimmerCan try the tides;And snowdrifts thickenWhere, when leaves qu...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
A Dream
In visions of the dark nightI have dreamed of joy departedBut a waking dream of life and lightHath left me broken-hearted.Ah! what is not a dream by dayTo him whose eyes are castOn things around him with a rayTurned back upon the past?That holy dream that holy dream,While all the world were chiding,Hath cheered me as a lovely beam,A lonely spirit guiding.What though that light, thro' storm and night,So trembled from afarWhat could there be more purely brightIn Truth's day star?
Edgar Allan Poe
The Close Of Summer
The wild-plum tree, whose leaves grow thin,Has strewn the way with half its fruit:The grasshopper's and cricket's dinGrows hushed and mute;The veery seems a far-off fluteWhere Summer listens, hand on chin,And taps an idle foot.A silvery haze veils half the hills,That crown themselves with clouds like cream;The crow its clamor almost stills,The hawk its scream;The aster stars begin to gleam;And 'mid them, by the sleepy rills,The Summer dreams her dream.The butterfly upon its weedDroops as if weary of its wings;The bee, 'mid blooms that turn to seed,Half-hearted clings,Sick of the only song it sings,While Summer tunes a drowsy reedAnd dreams of far-off things.Passion, of which unrest is part,T...
Late Snow
The heavy train through the dim country went rolling, rolling,Interminably passing misty snow-covered plough-land ridgesThat merged in the snowy sky; came turning meadows, fences,Came gullies and passed, and ice-coloured streams under frozen bridges.Across the travelling landscape evenly drooped and liftedThe telegraph wires, thick ropes of snow in the windless air;They drooped and paused and lifted again to unseen summits,Drawing the eyes and soothing them, often, to a drowsy stare.Singly in the snow the ghosts of trees were softly pencilled,Fainter and fainter, in distance fading, into nothingness gliding,But sometimes a crowd of the intricate silver trees of fairylandPassed, close and intensely clear, the phantom world hiding.O untroubled these mo...
John Collings Squire, Sir
A Caged Mocking-Bird
I pass a cobbler's shop along the street And pause a moment at the door-step, where, In nature's medley, piping cool and sweet, The songs that thrill the swamps when spring is near, Fly o'er the fields at fullness of the year, And twitter where the autumn hedges run, Join all the months of music into one. I shut my eyes: the shy wood-thrush is there, And all the leaves hang still to catch his spell; Wrens cheep among the bushes; from somewhere A bluebird's tweedle passes o'er the fell; From rustling corn bob-white his name doth tell; And when the oriole sets his full heart free Barefooted boyhood comes again to me. ...
John Charles McNeill
Lines Suggested By The Fourteenth Of February.
Ere the morn the East has crimsoned,When the stars are twinkling there,(As they did in Watts's Hymns, andMade him wonder what they were:)When the forest-nymphs are beadingFern and flower with silvery dew -My infallible proceedingIs to wake, and think of you.When the hunter's ringing bugleSounds farewell to field and copse,And I sit before my frugalMeal of gravy-soup and chops:When (as Gray remarks) "the mopingOwl doth to the moon complain,"And the hour suggests eloping -Fly my thoughts to you again.May my dreams be granted never?Must I aye endure afflictionRarely realised, if ever,In our wildest works of fiction?Madly Romeo loved his Juliet;Copperfield began to pineWhen he hadn't been to school ye...
Charles Stuart Calverley
Paul Verlaine
You would have understood me, had you waited;I could have loved you, dear! as well as he:Had we not been impatient, dear! and fatedAlways to disagree.What is the use of speech? Silence were fitter:Lest we should still be wishing things unsaid.Though all the words we ever spake were bitter,Shall I reproach you dead?Nay, let this earth, your portion, likewise coverAll the old anger, setting us apart:Always, in all, in truth was I your lover;Always, I held your heart.I have met other women who were tender,As you were cold, dear! with a grace as rare.Think you, I turned to them, or made surrender,I who had found you fair?Had we been patient, dear! ah, had you waited,I had fought death for you, better than he:But ...
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Henry Tripp
The bank broke and I lost my savings. I was sick of the tiresome game in Spoon River And I made up my mind to run away And leave my place in life and my family; But just as the midnight train pulled in, Quick off the steps jumped Cully Green And Martin Vise, and began to fight To settle their ancient rivalry, Striking each other with fists that sounded Like the blows of knotted clubs. Now it seemed to me that Cully was winning, When his bloody face broke into a grin Of sickly cowardice, leaning on Martin And whining out "We're good friends, Mart, You know that I'm your friend." But a terrible punch from Martin knocked him Around and around and into a heap. And then they arrested me as...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Flower
Once in a golden hourI cast to earth a seed.Up there came a flower,The people said, a weed.To and fro they wentThro' my garden bower,And muttering discontentCursed me and my flower.Then it grew so tallIt wore a crown of light,But thieves from o'er the wallStole the seed by night.Sow'd it far and wideBy every town and tower,Till all the people cried,"Splendid is the flower!"Read my little fable:He that runs may read.Most can raise the flowers now,For all have got the seed.And some are pretty enough,And some are poor indeed;And now again the peopleCall it but a weed.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Millar.
And Millar poet of Sierras, For bold deeds he doth prepare us, And now he lives by the golden gate, Honored in California's state, To poet 'tis position grand, Commissioner of Forest land.
James McIntyre