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Jessy.
Tune - "Here's a health to them that's awa."I. Here's a health to ane I lo'e dear; Here's a health to ane I lo'e dear; Thou art sweet as the smile when fond lovers meet, And soft as their parting tear - Jessy!II. Altho' thou maun never be mine, Altho' even hope is denied; 'Tis sweeter for thee despairing, Then aught in the world beside - Jessy!III. I mourn through the gay, gaudy day, As, hopeless, I muse on thy charms: But welcome the dream o' sweet slumber, For then I am lockt in thy arms - Jessy!IV. I guess by the dear angel smile, I guess by the love rolling e'e; But why urge the tender...
Robert Burns
Thou Wilt Think Of Me, Love.
When these eyes, long dimmed with weeping,In the silent dust are sleeping;When above my narrow bedThe breeze shall wave the thistle's head-- Thou wilt think of me, love!When the queen of beams and showersComes to dress the earth with flowers;When the days are long and bright,And the moon shines all the night-- Thou wilt think of me, love!When the tender corn is springing,And the merry thrush is singing;When the swallows come and go,On light wings flitting to and fro-- Thou wilt think of me, love!When laughing childhood learns by roteThe cuckoo's oft-repeated note;When the meads are fresh and green,And the hawthorn buds are seen-- Thou...
Susanna Moodie
Dedication
DedicationThese to His Memory--since he held them dear,Perchance as finding there unconsciouslySome image of himself--I dedicate,I dedicate, I consecrate with tears--These Idylls.And indeed He seems to meScarce other than my king's ideal knight,`Who reverenced his conscience as his king;Whose glory was, redressing human wrong;Who spake no slander, no, nor listened to it;Who loved one only and who clave to her--'Her--over all whose realms to their last isle,Commingled with the gloom of imminent war,The shadow of His loss drew like eclipse,Darkening the world. We have lost him: he is gone:We know him now: all narrow jealousiesAre silent; and we see him as he moved,How modest, kindly, all-accomplished, wise,With what sublim...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Best Thing In The World
What's the best thing in the world?June-rose, by May-dew impearled;Sweet south-wind, that means no rain;Truth, not cruel to a friend;Pleasure, not in haste to end;Beauty, not self-decked and curledTill its pride is over-plain;Love, when, so, you're loved again.What's the best thing in the world?Something out of it, I think.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Grandfather's Love
They said he sent his love to me,They wouldn't put it in my hand,And when I asked them where it wasThey said I couldn't understand.I thought they must have hidden it,I hunted for it all the day,And when I told them so at nightThey smiled and turned their heads away.They say that love is something kind,That I can never see or touch.I wish he'd sent me something else,I like his cough-drops twice as much.
Sara Teasdale
To Maria ------
Since now the hour is come at last,When you must quit your anxious lover,Since now, our dream of bliss is past,One pang, my girl, and all is over.Alas! that pang will be severe,Which bids us part, to meet no more;Which tears me far from one so dear,Departing for a distant shore.Well! we have pass'd some happy hours,And joy will mingle with our tears;When thinking on these ancient towers,The shelter of our infant years.Where from this gothic casement's height,We view'd the lake, the park, the dell,And still though tears obstruct our sight,We lingering look a last farewell. -O'er fields, through which we us'd to run,And spend the hours in childish play,O'er shades where, when our race was done,Reposing on...
George Gordon Byron
With A Golden Necklace.
This page a chain to bring thee burns,That, train'd to suppleness of old,On thy fair neck to nestle, yearns,In many a hundred little fold.To please the silly thing consent!'Tis harmless, and from boldness free;By day a trifling ornament,At night 'tis cast aside by thee.But if the chain they bring thee ever,Heavier, more fraught with weal or woe,I'd then, Lisette, reproach thee neverIf thou shouldst greater scruples show.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Moonlight
It will not hurt me when I am old,A running tide where moonlight burnedWill not sting me like silver snakes;The years will make me sad and cold,It is the happy heart that breaks.The heart asks more than life can give,When that is learned, then all is learned;The waves break fold on jewelled fold,But beauty itself is fugitive,It will not hurt me when I am old.
What Happens?
When thy hand touches mine, through all the mesh Of intricate and interlaced veins Shoot swift delights that border on keen pains:Flesh thrills to thrilling flesh.When in thine eager eyes I look to find A comrade to my thought, thy ready brain Delves down and makes its inmost meaning plain:Mind answers unto mind.When hands and eyes are hid by seas that roll Wide wastes between us, still so near thou art I count the very pulses of thy heart:Soul speaketh unto soul.So every law, or human or divine,In heart and brain and spirit makes thee mine.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Change.
Changed? Yes, I will confess it - I have changed. I do not love in the old fond way. I am your friend still - time has not estranged One kindly feeling of that vanished day. But the bright glamour which made life a dream, The rapture of that time, its sweet content, Like visions of a sleeper's brain they seem - And yet I cannot tell you how they went. Why do you gaze with such accusing eyes Upon me, dear? Is it so very strange That hearts, like all things underneath God's skies Should sometimes feel the influence of change? The birds, the flowers, the foliage of the trees, The stars which seem so fixed and so sublime, Vast continents and the eternal seas -...
The Cynic's Fealty.
We all have hearts that shake alikeBeneath the arias of Fate's hand;Although the cynics sneering stand,These too the deathless powers strike.A trembling lover's infinite trust,To the last drop of doating blood,Feels not alone the ocean floodOf desperate grief, when dreams are dust.The scornfullest souls, with mourning eyes,Pant o'er again their ghostly ways; -Dread night-paths, where were gleaming daysWhen life was lovelier than the skies!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Bond And Free
Love has earth to which she clingsWith hills and circling arms about,Wall within wall to shut fear out.But Though has need of no such things,For Thought has a pair of dauntless wings.On snow and sand and turn, I seeWhere Love has left a printed traceWith straining in the world's embrace.And such is Love and glad to beBut Though has shaken his ankles free.Though cleaves the interstellar gloomAnd sits in Sirius' disc all night,Till day makes him retrace his flightWith smell of burning on every plume,Back past the sun to an earthly room.His gains in heaven are what they are.Yet some say Love by being thrallAnd simply staying possesses allIn several beauty that Thought fares farTo find fused in another star.
Robert Lee Frost
The Last Song
She sleeps; he sings to her. The day was long,And, tired out with too much happiness,She fain would have him sing of old Provence;Quaint songs, that spoke of love in such soft tones,Her restless soul was straight besieged of dreams,And her wild heart beleagured of deep peace,And heart and soul surrendered unto sleep.--Like perfect sculpture in the moon she lies,Its pallor on her through heraldic panesOf one tall casement's gulèd quarterings.--Beside her couch, an antique table, weighedWith gold and crystal; here, a carven chair,Whereon her raiment,--that suggests sweet curvesOf shapely beauty,--bearing her limbs' impress,Is richly laid: and, near the chair, a glass,An oval mirror framed in ebony:And, dim and deep,--investing all the roomW...
Madison Julius Cawein
Unrequited
Passion? not hers, within whose virgin eyesAll Eden lay. And I remember howI drank the Heaven of her gaze with sighsShe never sighed, nor gave me kiss or vow.So have I seen a clear October pool,Cold, liquid topaz, set within the searGold of the woodland, tremorless and cool,Reflecting all the heartbreak of the year.Sweetheart? not she whose voice was music sweet;Whose face was sweeter than melodious prayer.Sweetheart I called her. When did she repeatSweet to one hope or heart to one despair?So have I seen a rose set round with thorn,Sung to and sung to by a bird of spring,And when, breast-pierced, the bird lay all forlorn,The rose bloomed on, fair and unnoticing.
Song.
Once as the aureole Day left the earth, Faded, a twilight soul, Memory, had birth:Young were her sister souls, Sorrow and Mirth. Dark mirrors are her eyes: Wherein who gaze See wan effulgencies Flicker and blaze -Lorn fleeting shadows of beautiful days. Scan those deep mirrors well After long years: Lo! what aforetime fell In rain of tears,In radiant glamour-mist now reappears. See old wild gladness Tamed now and coy; Grief that was madness Turned into joy.Fate cannot harr...
Thomas Runciman
The Star
Last nightI watched a star fall like a great pearl into the sea,Till my ego expanding encompassed sea and star,Containing both as in a trembling cup.
Lola Ridge
Sonnet XIX.
Mille fiate, o dolce mia guerrera.HIS HEART, REJECTED BY LAURA, WILL PERISH, UNLESS SHE RELENT. A thousand times, sweet warrior, have I tried,Proffering my heart to thee, some peace to gainFrom those bright eyes, but still, alas! in vain,To such low level stoops not thy chaste pride.If others seek the love thus thrown aside,Vain were their hopes and labours to obtain;The heart thou spurnest I alike disdain,To thee displeasing, 'tis by me denied.But if, discarded thus, it find not theeIts joyless exile willing to befriend,Alone, untaught at others' will to wend,Soon from life's weary burden will it flee.How heavy then the guilt to both, but moreTo thee, for thee it did the most adore.MACGREGOR....
Francesco Petrarca
To D--- [1]
1.In thee, I fondly hop'd to claspA friend, whom death alone could sever;Till envy, with malignant grasp,Detach'd thee from my breast for ever.2.True, she has forc'd thee from my breast,Yet, in my heart, thou keep'st thy seat;There, there, thine image still must rest,Until that heart shall cease to beat.3.And, when the grave restores her dead,When life again to dust is given,On thy dear breast I'll lay my head -Without thee! where would be my Heaven?