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The Sentimentalist
There lies a photograph of youDeep in a box of broken things.This was the face I loved and knewFive years ago, when life had wings;Five years ago, when through a townOf bright and soft and shadowy bowersWe walked and talked and trailed our gownRegardless of the cinctured hours.The precepts that we held I kept;Proudly my ways with you I went:We lived our dreams while others slept,And did not shrink from sentiment.Now I go East and you stay WestAnd when between us Europe liesI shall forget what I loved bestAway from lips and hands and eyes.But we were Gods then: we were theyWho laughed at fools, believed in friends,And drank to all that golden dayBefore us, which this poem ends.
James Elroy Flecker
The Coward
He found the road so long and loneThat he was fain to turn again.The bird's faint note, the bee's low droneSeemed to his heart to monotoneThe unavailing and the vain,And dirge the dreams that life had slain.And for a while he sat him thereBeside the way, and bared his head:He felt the hot sun on his hair;And weed-warm odors everywhereWaked memories, forgot or dead,Of days when love this way had ledTo that old house beside the roadWith white board-fence and picket gate,And garden plot that gleamed and glowedWith color, and that overflowedWith fragrance; where, both soon and late,She 'mid the flowers used to wait.Was it the same? or had it changed,As he and she, with months and years?How long now had they been estranged?
Madison Julius Cawein
Dawn, Noon And Dewfall.
I. Dawn, noon and dewfall! Bluebird and robin Up and at it airly, and the orchard-blossoms bobbin'! Peekin' from the winder, half-awake, and wishin' I could go to sleep agin as well as go a-fishin'! II. On the apern o' the dam, legs a-danglin' over, Drowsy-like with sound o' worter and the smell o' clover: Fish all out a visitin' - 'cept some dratted minnor! Yes, and mill shet down at last and hands is gone to dinner. III. Trompin' home acrost the fields: Lightnin'-bugs a-blinkin' In the wheat like sparks o' things feller keeps a-thinkin': - Mother waitin' supper, and the childern there to cherr me! And fiddle on the kitchen-wall a-jist a-eechin' fer me!
James Whitcomb Riley
Locksley Hall
Comrades, leave me here a little, while as yet 't is early morn:Leave me here, and when you want me, sound upon the bugle-horn.'T is the place, and all around it, as of old, the curlews call,Dreary gleams about the moorland flying over Locksley Hall;Locksley Hall, that in the distance overlooks the sandy tracts,And the hollow ocean-ridges roaring into cataracts.Many a night from yonder ivied casement, ere I went to rest,Did I look on great Orion sloping slowly to the West.Many a night I saw the Pleiads, rising thro' the mellow shade,Glitter like a swarm of fire-flies tangled in a silver braid.Here about the beach I wander'd, nourishing a youth sublimeWith the fairy tales of science, and the long result of Time;When the centuries beh...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Mother
IYour love was like moonlightturning harsh things to beauty,so that little wry soulsreflecting each other obliquelyas in cracked mirrors...beheld in your luminous spirittheir own reflection,transfigured as in a shining stream,and loved you for what they are not.You are less an image in my mindthan a lusterI see you in gleamspale as star-light on a gray wall...evanescent as the reflection of a white swanshimmering in broken water.II(To E. S.)You inevitable,Unwieldy with enormous births,Lying on your back, eyes open, sucking down stars,Or you kissing and picking over fresh deaths...Filth... worms... flowers...Green and succulent pods...Tremulous gestationOf dark w...
Lola Ridge
Home Again.
Far down the laneA window paneGleams 'mid the trees through night and rain.The weeds are denseThrough which a fenceOf pickets rambles, none sees whence,Before a porch, all indistinct of line,O'er-grown and matted with wistaria-vine.No thing is heard,No beast or bird,Only the rain by which are stirredThe draining leaves,And trickling eavesOf crib and barn one scarce perceives;And garden-beds where old-time flow'rs hang wetThe phlox, the candytuft, and mignonette.The hour is lateAt any rateShe has not heard him at the gate:Upon the roofThe rain was proofAgainst his horse's galloping hoof:And when the old gate with its weight and chainCreaked, she imagined 't was the wind and rain.A...
The Minute Before Meeting
The grey gaunt days dividing us in twainSeemed hopeless hills my strength must faint to climb,But they are gone; and now I would detainThe few clock-beats that part us; rein back Time,And live in close expectance never closedIn change for far expectance closed at last,So harshly has expectance been imposedOn my long need while these slow blank months passed.And knowing that what is now about to beWill all HAVE BEEN in O, so short a space!I read beyond it my despondencyWhen more dividing months shall take its place,Thereby denying to this hour of graceA full-up measure of felicity.1871.
Thomas Hardy
To a River in the South
Call me no more, O gentle stream, To wander through thy sunny dream, No more to lean at twilight cool Above thy weir and glimmering pool. Surely I know thy hoary dawns, The silver crisp on all thy lawns, The softly swirling undersong That rocks thy reeds the winter long. Surely I know the joys that ring Through the green deeps of leafy spring; I know the elfin cups and domes That are their small and secret homes. Yet is the light for ever lost That daily once thy meadows crossed, The voice no more by thee is heard That matched the song of stream and bird. Call me no more!--thy waters roll Here, in the world that is my soul, And here, though Earth be dr...
Henry John Newbolt
November
As I walk the misty hillAll is languid, fogged, and still;Not a note of any birdNor any motion's hint is heard,Save from soaking thickets roundTrickle or water's rushing sound,And from ghostly trees the dripOf runnel dews or whispering slipOf leaves, which in a body launchListlessly from the stagnant branchTo strew the marl, already strown,With litter sodden as its own,A rheum, like blight, hangs on the briars,And from the clammy ground suspiresA sweet frail sick autumnal scentOf stale frost furring weeds long spent;And wafted on, like one who sleeps,A feeble vapour hangs or creeps,Exhaling on the fungus mouldA breath of age, fatigue, and cold.Oozed from the bracken's desolate track,By dark rains havock...
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols
Sonnet LII.
L' aspetto sacro della terra vostra.THE VIEW OF ROME PROMPTS HIM TO TEAR HIMSELF FROM LAURA, BUT LOVE WILL NOT ALLOW HIM. The solemn aspect of this sacred shoreWakes for the misspent past my bitter sighs;'Pause, wretched man! and turn,' as conscience cries,Pointing the heavenward way where I should soar.But soon another thought gets mastery o'erThe first, that so to palter were unwise;E'en now the time, if memory err not, flies,When we should wait our lady-love before.I, for his aim then well I apprehend,Within me freeze, as one who, sudden, hearsNews unexpected which his soul offend.Returns my first thought then, that disappears;Nor know I which shall conquer, but till nowWithin me they contend, nor hope of rest allow!
Francesco Petrarca
One Day.
The trees rustle; the wind blowsMerrily out of the town;The shadows creep, the sun goesSteadily over and down.In a brown gloom the moats gleam;Slender the sweet wife stands;Her lips are red; her eyes dream;Kisses are warm on her hands.The child moans; the hours slipBitterly over her head:In a gray dusk, the tears drip;Mother is up there dead.The hermit hears the strange brightMurmur of life at play;In the waste day and the waste nightTimes to rebel and to pray.The laborer toils in gray wise,Godlike and patient and calm;The beggar moans; his bleared eyesMeasure the dust in his palm.The wise man marks the flow and ebbHidden and held aloof:In his deep mind is laid the web,Shut...
Archibald Lampman
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XI.
Se lamentar augelli, o Verdi fronde.SHE IS EVER PRESENT TO HIM. If the lorn bird complain, or rustling sweepSoft summer airs o'er foliage waving slow,Or the hoarse brook come murmuring down the steep,Where on the enamell'd bank I sit belowWith thoughts of love that bid my numbers flow;'Tis then I see her, though in earth she sleep!Her, form'd in heaven! I see, and hear, and know!Responsive sighing, weeping as I weep:"Alas," she pitying says, "ere yet the hour,Why hurry life away with swifter flight?Why from thy eyes this flood of sorrow pour?No longer mourn my fate! through death my daysBecome eternal! to eternal lightThese eyes, which seem'd in darkness closed, I raise!"DACRE. Where the gr...
Fancy And The Poet.
POET.Enchanting spirit! at thy votive shrineI lowly bend one simple wreath to twine;O come from thy ideal world and flingThy airy fingers o'er my rugged string;Sweep the dark chords of thought and give to earthThe wild sweet song that tells thy heavenly birth--FANCY.Happiness, when from earth she fled, I passed on her heaven-ward flight,--"Take this wreath," the spirit said, "And bathe it in floods of light;To the sons of sorrow this token give,And bid them follow my steps and live!"I took the wreath from her radiant hand, Each flower was a silver star;I turned this dark earth to a fairy land, When I hither drove my car;But I wove the wreath round my tresses bright,And man only saw its...
Susanna Moodie
Forth From A Jutting Ridge, Around Whose Base
Forth from a jutting ridge, around whose baseWinds our deep Vale, two heath-clad Rocks ascendIn fellowship, the loftiest of the pairRising to no ambitious height; yet both,O'er lake and stream, mountain and flowery mead,Unfolding prospects fair as human eyesEver beheld. Up-led with mutual help,To one or other brow of those twin PeaksWere two adventurous Sisters wont to climb,And took no note of the hour while thence they gazed,The blooming heath their couch, gazed, side by side,In speechless admiration. I, a witnessAnd frequent sharer of their calm delightWith thankful heart, to either EminenceGave the baptismal name each Sister bore.Now are they parted, far as Death's cold handHath power to part the Spirits of those who loveAs they did l...
William Wordsworth
Sonnet CCXX.
Vive faville uscian de' duo bei lumi.A SMILING WELCOME, WHICH LAURA GAVE HIM UNEXPECTEDLY, ALMOST KILLS HIM WITH JOY. Live sparks were glistening from her twin bright eyes,So sweet on me whose lightning flashes beam'd,And softly from a feeling heart and wise,Of lofty eloquence a rich flood stream'd:Even the memory serves to wake my sighsWhen I recall that day so glad esteem'd,And in my heart its sinking spirit diesAs some late grace her colder wont redeem'd.My soul in pain and grief that most has been(How great the power of constant habit is!)Seems weakly 'neath its double joy to lean:For at the sole taste of unusual bliss,Trembling with fear, or thrill'd by idle hope,Oft on the point I've been life's door to ope.
Late November
I.MorningDeep in her broom-sedge, burs and iron-weeds,Her frost-slain asters and dead mallow-moons,Where gray the wilding clematis balloonsThe brake with puff-balls: where the slow stream leadsHer sombre steps: decked with the scarlet beadsOf hip and haw: through dolorous maroonsAnd desolate golds, she goes: the wailing tunesOf all the winds about her like wild reeds.The red wrought-iron hues that flush the greenOf blackberry briers, and the bronze that stainsThe oak's sere leaves, are in her cheeks: the grayOf forest pools, clocked thin with ice, is keenIn her cold eyes: and in her hair the rain'sChill silver glimmers like a winter ray.II.NoonLost in the sleepy grays and drowsy brownsOf woodlands...
Parliament Hill In The Evening
The houses fade in a melt of mist Blotching the thick, soiled airWith reddish places that still resist The Night's slow care.The hopeless, wintry twilight fades, The city corrodes out of sightAs the body corrodes when death invades That citadel of delight.Now verdigris smoulderings softly spread Through the shroud of the town, as slowNight-lights hither and thither shed Their ghastly glow.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Monody
To have known him, to have loved himAfter loneness long;And then to be estranged in life,And neither in the wrong;And now for death to set his seal--Ease me, a little ease, my song!By wintry hills his hermit-moundThe sheeted snow-drifts drape,And houseless there the snow-bird flitsBeneath the fir-trees' crape:Glazed now with ice the cloistral vineThat hid the shyest grape.
Herman Melville