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A Song Before Grief.
Sorrow, my friend,When shall you come again?The wind is slow, and the bent willows sendTheir silvery motions wearily down the plain.The bird is deadThat sang this morning through the summer rain!Sorrow, my friend,I owe my soul to you.And if my life with any glory endOf tenderness for others, and the words are true,Said, honoring, when I'm dead, -Sorrow, to you, the mellow praise, the funeralwreath, are due.And yet, my friend,When love and joy are strong,Your terrible visage from my sight I rendWith glances to blue heaven. Hovering along,By mine your shadow led,"Away!" I shriek, "nor dare to work my new-sprung mercies wrong!"Still, you are near:Who can your care withstand?When deep eternity shall l...
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Riders In The Night
I.MasksDeath rides black-masked to-night; and through the landMadness beside him brandishes a torch.The peaceful farmhouse with its vine-wreathed porchLies in their way. Death lifts a bony handAnd knocks, and Madness makes a wild demandOf fierce Defiance: then the night's deep archReverberates, and under beech and latchA dead face stares; shot where one took his stand.Then down the night wild hoofs; the darkness beats;And like a torrent through the startled townDestruction sweeps; high overhead a flame;And Violence that shoots amid the streets.A piercing whistle: one who gallops down:And Death and Madness go the way they came.II.The RaidRain and black night. Beneath the covered bridgeThe rushing F...
Madison Julius Cawein
Autumn.
The grass is wet with heavy dew,The leaves have changed their bright green hue,To brighter red, or golden;The morning sun shines with a glow,As bright and pure as long ago,In time ye left the olden.One tree is cloth'd with scarlet dress,And one, with brown leaf'd loveliness,Delights the eye that gazes;While others varied tints display,But all, in beauteous array,Delight us, and amaze us.We see the trees in beauty clad,But still that beauty makes us sad,E'en while we may admire,For death has caus'd that sudden bloomStern death, the tenant of the tomb,Or funereal pyre.The ruthless, bitter, biting airHath dried the life which flourish'd there,Throughout the warmer seasons;The nourishment hath ceas'd ...
Thomas Frederick Young
What Is Truth?
I once knew a certain Benedicta whose presence filled the air with the ideal and whose eyes spread abroad the desire of grandeur, of beauty, of glory, and of all that makes man believe in immortality.But this miraculous maiden was too beautiful for long life, so she died soon after I knew her first, and it was I myself who entombed her, upon a day when spring swung her censer even in the burial-ground. It was I myself who entombed her, fast closed in a coffin of perfumed wood, as uncorruptible as the coffers of India.And, as my eyes rested upon the spot where my treasure lay hidden, I became suddenly aware of a little being who singularly resembled the dead; and who, stamping the newly-turned earth with a curious and hysterical violence, burst into laughter, and said:"It is I, the true Benedicta! It is I, the notorious d...
Charles Baudelaire
Tristram of Lyonesse - I - Prelude: Tristram and Iseult
Love, that is first and last of all things made,The light that has the living world for shade,The spirit that for temporal veil has onThe souls of all men woven in unison,One fiery raiment with all lives inwroughtAnd lights of sunny and starry deed and thought,And alway through new act and passion newShines the divine same body and beauty through,The body spiritual of fire and lightThat is to worldly noon as noon to night;Love, that is flesh upon the spirit of manAnd spirit within the flesh whence breath began;Love, that keeps all the choir of lives in chime;Love, that is blood within the veins of time;That wrought the whole world without stroke of hand,Shaping the breadth of sea, the length of land,And with the pulse and motion of his breath
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Bride Of Corinth.
Once a stranger youth to Corinth came,Who in Athens lived, but hoped that heFrom a certain townsman there might claim,As his father's friend, kind courtesy.Son and daughter, theyHad been wont to sayShould thereafter bride and bridegroom be.But can he that boon so highly prized,Save tis dearly bought, now hope to get?They are Christians and have been baptized,He and all of his are heathens yet.For a newborn creed,Like some loathsome weed,Love and truth to root out oft will threat.Father, daughter, all had gone to rest,And the mother only watches late;She receives with courtesy the guest,And conducts him to the room of state.Wine and food are bro...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Fate Knows no Tears
Just as the dawn of Love was breaking Across the weary world of grey,Just as my life once more was waking As roses waken late in May,Fate, blindly cruel and havoc-making, Stepped in and carried you away.Memories have I none in keeping Of times I held you near my heart,Of dreams when we were near to weeping That dawn should bid us rise and part;Never, alas, I saw you sleeping With soft closed eyes and lips apart,Breathing my name still through your dreaming. - Ah! had you stayed, such things had been!But Fate, unheeding human scheming, Serenely reckless came between -Fate with her cold eyes hard and gleaming Unseared by all the sorrow seen.Ah! well-beloved, I never told you, I did...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Saint Maura. A.D. 304
Thank God! Those gazers' eyes are gone at last!The guards are crouching underneath the rock;The lights are fading in the town below,Around the cottage which this morn was ours.Kind sun, to set, and leave us here alone;Alone upon our crosses with our God;While all the angels watch us from the stars.Kind moon, to shine so clear and full on him,And bathe his limbs in glory, for a signOf what awaits him! Oh look on him, Lord!Look, and remember how he saved thy lamb! Oh listen to me, teacher, husband, love,Never till now loved utterly! Oh say,Say you forgive me! No - you must not speak:You said it to me hours ago - long hours!Now you must rest, and when to-morrow comesSpeak to the people, call them home to God,A deacon on the Cr...
Charles Kingsley
The Black Knight
I had not found the road too short,As once I had in days of youth,In that old forest of long ruth,Where my young knighthood broke its heart,Ere love and it had come to part,And lies made mockery of truth.I had not found the road too short.A blind man, by the nightmare way,Had set me right when I was wrong.I had been blind my whole life longWhat wonder then that on this dayThe blind should show me how astrayMy strength had gone, my heart once strong.A blind man pointed me the way.The road had been a heartbreak one,Of roots and rocks and tortured trees,And pools, above my horse's knees,And wandering paths, where spiders spun'Twixt boughs that never saw the sun,And silence of lost centuries.The road had be...
Sonnet: - XV.
Last night I heard the plaintive whippoorwill,And straightway Sorrow shot his swiftest dart.I know not why, but it has chilled my heartLike some dread thing of evil. All night longMy nerves were shaken, and my pulse stood still,And waited for a terror yet to comeTo strike harsh discords through my life's sweet song.Sleep came - an incubus that filled the sumOf wretchedness with dreams so wild and chillThe sweat oozed from me like great drops of gall;An evil spirit kept my mind in thrall,And rolled my body up like a poor scrollOn which is written curses that the soulShrinks back from when it sees some hellish carnival.
Charles Sangster
Memorials Of A Tour In Scotland, 1803 II. At The Grave Of Burns, 1803
SEVEN YEARS AFTER HIS DEATHI shiver, Spirit fierce and bold,At thought of what I now behold:As vapours breathed from dungeons cold,Strike pleasure dead,So sadness comes from out the mouldWhere Burns is laid.And have I then thy bones so near,And thou forbidden to appear?As if it were thyself that's hereI shrink with pain;And both my wishes and my fearAlike are vain.Off weight, nor press on weight! awayDark thoughts! they came, but not to stay;With chastened feelings would I payThe tribute dueTo him, and aught that hides his clayFrom mortal view.Fresh as the flower, whose modest worthHe sang, his genius "glinted" forth,Rose like a star that touching earth,For so it seems,Doth glori...
William Wordsworth
The Homeless Ghost
Through still, bare streets, and cold moonshine His homeward way he bent;The clocks gave out the midnight sign As lost in thought he wentAlong the rampart's ocean-line,Where, high above the tossing brine, Seaward his lattice leant.He knew not why he left the throng, Why there he could not rest,What something pained him in the song And mocked him in the jest,Or why, the flitting crowd among,A moveless moonbeam lay so long Athwart one lady's breast!He watched, but saw her speak to none, Saw no one speak to her;Like one decried, she stood alone, From the window did not stir;Her hair by a haunting gust was blown,Her eyes in the shadow strangely shown, She looked a wanderer.H...
George MacDonald
The Death Of Regret
I opened my shutter at sunrise, And looked at the hill hard by,And I heartily grieved for the comrade Who wandered up there to die.I let in the morn on the morrow, And failed not to think of him then,As he trod up that rise in the twilight, And never came down again.I undid the shutter a week thence, But not until after I'd turnedDid I call back his last departure By the upland there discerned.Uncovering the casement long later, I bent to my toil till the gray,When I said to myself, "Ah what ails me, To forget him all the day!"As daily I flung back the shutter In the same blank bald routine,He scarcely once rose to remembrance Through a month of my facing the scene.
Thomas Hardy
Immortality
My window is the open sky,The flower in farthest wood is mine;I am the heir to all gone by,The eldest son of all the line.And when the robbers Time and DeathAthwart my path conspiring stand,I cheat them with a clod, a breath,And pass the sword from hand to hand!
Arthur Sherburne Hardy
When Underneath the Brown Dead Grass
When underneath the brown dead grassMy weary bones are laid,I hope I shall not see the glassAt ninety in the shade.I trust indeed that, when I lieBeneath the churchyard pine,I shall not hear that startling cryThermom is ninety-nine!If one should whisper through my sleepCome up and be alive,Id answer No, unless youll keepThe glass at sixty-five.I might be willing if allowedTo wear old Adams rig,And mix amongst the city crowdLike Polynesian nig.Far better in the sod to lie,With pasturing pig above,Than broil beneath a copper skyIn sight of all I love!Far better to be turned to grassTo feed the poley cow,Than be the half boiled bream, alas,That I am really now!For cow and...
Henry Kendall
Mary
Thus early with the dead - Thou of the young, fair brow, the laughing eye, The light and joyous tread, -Mary, we little thought thou would'st be first to die! A little while ago We saw thee first in girlhood's early bloom; Now thou art lying low,Thy pale hands crossed in slumber, silent in the tomb! Ah me! 'tis hard to speak Of thee as of the dead - the pale, still dead! - 'Tis hard to think the b'eak,Stern blast of winter sweeps above thy low, cold bed! * * * * * Thus early with thy God! 'Twas a rich boon He sent whose loving voice Called thee to His abode,'Mid the s...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Man Was Made To Mourn. - A Dirge.
When chill November's surly blast Made fields and forests bare, One ev'ning as I wandered forth Along the banks of Ayr, I spy'd a man whose aged step Seem'd weary, worn with care; His face was furrow'd o'er with years, And hoary was his hair. "Young stranger, whither wand'rest thou?" Began the rev'rend sage; "Does thirst of wealth thy step constrain, Or youthful pleasure's rage? Or haply, prest with cares and woes, Too soon thou hast began To wander forth, with me to mourn The miseries of man. "The sun that overhangs yon moors, Out-spreading far and wide, Where hundreds labour to support A haughty lordling's pride:<...
Robert Burns
The Hour Of The Angel
Sooner or late, in earnest or in jest,(But the stakes are no jest) Ithuriel's HourWill spring on us, for the first time, the testOf our sole unbacked competence and powerUp to the limit of our years and dowerOf judgment, or beyond. But here we havePrepared long since our garland or our grave.For, at that hour, the sum of all our past,Act, habit, thought, and passion, shall be castIn one addition, be it more or less,And as that reading runs so shall we do;Meeting, astounded, victory at the last,Or, first and last, our own unworthiness.And none can change us though they die to save!
Rudyard