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'Tis time, I feel, to leave thee now, While yet my soul is something free;While yet those dangerous eyes allow One minute's thought to stray from thee.Oh! thou becom'st each moment dearer; Every chance that brings me nigh theeBrings my ruin nearer, nearer,-- I am lost, unless I fly thee.Nay, if thou dost not scorn and hate me, Doom me not thus so soon to fallDuties, fame, and hopes await me,-- But that eye would blast them all!For, thou hast heart as false and cold As ever yet allured and swayed,And couldst, without a sigh, behold The ruin which thyself had made.Yet,--could I think that, truly fond, That eye but once would smile on me,Even as thou art, how far beyond ...
Thomas Moore
Dora.
A waxing moon that, crescent yet,In all its silver beauty set,And rose no more in the lonesome nightTo shed full-orbed its longed-for light.Then was it dark; on wold and lea, In home, in heart, the hours were drear.Father and mother could no light see, And the hearts trembled and there was fear.- So on the mount, Christ's chosen three,Unware that glory it did shroud,Feared when they entered into the cloud.She was the best part of love's fairAdornment, life's God-given care,As if He bade them guard His own,Who should be soon anear His throne.Dutiful, happy, and who sayWhen childhood smiles itself away,'More fair than morn shall prove the day.'Sweet souls so nigh to God that rest,How shall be bettering of your best!<...
Jean Ingelow
Carthusians
Through what long heaviness, assayed in what strange fire,Have these white monks been brought into the way of peace,Despising the world's wisdom and the world's desire,Which from the body of this death bring no release?Within their austere walls no voices penetrate;A sacred silence only, as of death, obtains;Nothing finds entry here of loud or passionate;This quiet is the exceeding profit of their pains.From many lands they came, in divers fiery ways;Each knew at last the vanity of earthly joys;And one was crowned with thorns, and one was crowned with bays,And each was tired at last of the world's foolish noise.It was not theirs with Dominic to preach God's holy wrath,They were too stern to bear sweet Francis' gentle sway;Theirs was a hig...
Ernest Christopher Dowson
The Woman Drowned.
[1]I hate that saying, old and savage,"'Tis nothing but a woman drowning."That's much, I say. What grief more keen should have edgeThan loss of her, of all our joys the crowning?Thus much suggests the fable I am borrowing.A woman perish'd in the water,Where, anxiously, and sorrowing,Her husband sought her,To ease the grief he could not cure,By honour'd rites of sepulture.It chanced that near the fatal spot,Along the stream which hadProduced a death so sad,There walk'd some men that knew it not.The husband ask'd if they had seenHis wife, or aught that hers had been.One promptly answer'd, 'No!But search the stream below:It must nave borne her in its flow.''No,' said another; 'search above.In that dir...
Jean de La Fontaine
The Clearer Vision
When, with bowed head,And silent-streaming tears,With mingled hopes and fears,To earth we yield our dead;The Saints, with clearer sight,Do cry in glad accord,--"A soul released from prisonIs risen, is risen,--Is risen to the glory of the Lord."
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Poor Man's Grave. (From The Villager's Verse-Book.)
Old Andrews of the hut is dead,And many a child appears,Whilst slowly "dust to dust" is read,Around his grave in tears.A good man gone where small and great,And poor, and high and low,And Dives, proud in worldly state,And Lazarus, must go.May we among the just be found,Though short our sojourn here,Who, when the trump of death shall sound,May hear it without fear!
William Lisle Bowles
On My First Son
Farewell, thou child of my right hand, and joy;My sin was too much hope of thee, loved boy.Seven years thou wert lent to me, and I thee pay,Exacted by thy fate, on the just day.Oh, could I lose all father now! For whyWill man lament the state he should envy?To have so soon scaped worlds and fleshs rage,And if no other misery, yet age!Rest in soft peace, and asked, say, Here doth lieBen Jonson his best piece of poetry.For whose sake henceforth all his vows be suchAs what he loves may never like too much.
Ben Jonson
The Pilgrims
An uphill path, sun-gleams between the showers,Where every beam that broke the leaden skyLit other hills with fairer ways than ours;Some clustered graves where half our memories lie;And one grim Shadow creeping ever nigh:And this was Life.Wherein we did another's burden seek,The tired feet we helped upon the road,The hand we gave the weary and the weak,The miles we lightened one another's load,When, faint to falling, onward yet we strode:This too was Life.Till, at the upland, as we turned to goAmid fair meadows, dusky in the night,The mists fell back upon the road below;Broke on our tired eyes the western light;The very graves were for a moment bright:And this was Death.
John McCrae
The Bather.
Standing here alone,Let me pause awhile,Drinking in the lightEre, with plunge of white limbs prone,I raise the sparkling flightOf foam-flakes volatile.Now, in natural guise,I woo the deathless breeze,Through me rushing fleetThe joy of life, in swift surprise:I grow with growing wheat,And burgeon with the trees.Lo! I fetter Time,So he cannot run;And in Eden again -Flash of memory sublime! -Dwell naked, without stain,Beneath the dazed sun.All yields brotherhood;Each least thing that lives,Wrought of primal spores,Deepens this wild sense of goodThat, on these shaggy shores,Return to nature gives.Oh, that some solitudeWere ours, in woodlands deep,Where, with lucent ...
George Parsons Lathrop
Acceptance.
Yea, she hath looked Truth grimly face to face, And drained unto the lees the proffered cup.This silence is not patience, nor the grace Of recognition, meekly offered up,But mere acceptance fraught with keenest pain,Seeing that all her struggles must be vain.Her future clear and terrible outlies, - This burden to be borne through all her days,This crown of thorns pressed down above her eyes, This weight of trouble she may never raise.No reconcilement doth she ask nor wait;Knowing such things are, she endures her fate.No brave endeavor of the broken will To cling to such poor stays as will abide(Although the waves be wild and angry still) After the lapsing of the swollen tide.No fear of further loss, no ...
Emma Lazarus
The Victim
I.A plague upon the people fell,A famine after laid them low;Then thorpe and byre arose in fire,For on them brake the sudden foe;So thick they died the people cried,The Gods are moved against the land.The Priest in horror about his altarTo Thor and Odin lifted a hand:Help us from famineAnd plague and strife!What would you have of us?Human life?Were it our nearest,Were it our dearest,Answer, O answer!We give you his life.II.But still the foeman spoild and burnd,And cattle died, and deer in wood,And bird in air, and fishes turndAnd whitend all the rolling flood;And dead men lay all over the way,Or down in a furrow scathed with flame;And ever and aye the Priesthood m...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Crazy Jane On The Day Of Judgment
'Love is allUnsatisfiedThat cannot take the wholeBody and soul';And that is what Jane said.'Take the sourIf you take meI can scoff and lourAnd scold for an hour.'"That's certainly the case,' said he.'Naked I lay,The grass my bed;Naked and hidden away,That black day';And that is what Jane said.'What can be shown?What true love be?All could be known or shownIf Time were but gone.''That's certainly the case,' said he.
William Butler Yeats
The Battle-Field.
Once this soft turf, this rivulet's sands,Were trampled by a hurrying crowd,And fiery hearts and armed handsEncountered in the battle cloud.Ah! I never shall the land forgetHow gushed the life-blood of her brave,Gushed, warm with hope and courage yet,Upon the soil they fought to save.Now all is calm, and fresh, and still,Alone the chirp of flitting bird,And talk of children on the hill,And bell of wandering kine are heard.No solemn host goes trailing byThe black-mouthed gun and staggering wain;Men start not at the battle-cry,Oh, be it never heard again!Soon rested those who fought; but thouWho minglest in the harder strifeFor truths which men receive not nowThy warfare only ends with life.A ...
William Cullen Bryant
Death Of Captain Cooke, - Of "The Bellerophon," Killed In The Same Battle
When anxious Spain, along her rocky shore,From cliff to cliff returned the sea-fight's roar;When flash succeeding flash, tremendous brokeThe haze incumbent, and the clouds of smoke,As oft the volume rolled away, thy mien,Thine eye, serenely terrible, was seen,My gallant friend. Hark! the shrill bugle[1] calls,Is the day won! alas, he falls he falls!His soul from pain, from agony release!Hear his last murmur, Let me die in peace![2]Yet still, brave Cooke, thy country's grateful tear,Shall wet the bleeding laurel on thy bier.But who shall wake to joy, through a long lifeOf sadness, thy beloved and widowed wife,Who now, perhaps, thinks how the green seas foam,That bear thy victor ship impatient home!Alas! the well-known views...
On the Paroo
As when the strong stream of a wintering seaRolls round our coast, with bodeful breaks of storm,And swift salt rain, and bitter wind that saithWild things and woeful of the White South LandAlone with God and silence in the coldAs when this cometh, men from dripping doorsLook forth, and shudder for the marinersAbroad, so we for absent brothers lookedIn days of drought, and when the flying floodsSwept boundless; roaring down the bald, black plainsBeyond the farthest spur of western hills.For where the Barwon cuts a rotten land,Or lies unshaken, like a great blind creek,Between hot mouldering banks, it came to this,All in a time of short and thirsty sighs,That thirty rainless months had left the poolsAnd grass as dry as ashes: then it was
Henry Kendall
His Charge To Julia At His Death.
Dearest of thousands, now the time draws nearThat with my lines my life must full-stop here.Cut off thy hairs, and let thy tears be shedOver my turf when I am buried.Then for effusions, let none wanting be,Or other rites that do belong to me;As love shall help thee, when thou dost go henceUnto thy everlasting residence.
Robert Herrick
Sacrifice
Though love repine, and reason chafe,There came a voice without reply,--''T is man's perdition to be safe,When for the truth he ought to die.'
Ralph Waldo Emerson
This Living Hand
This living hand, now warm and capableOf earnest grasping, would, if it were coldAnd in the icy silence of the tomb,So haunt thy days and chill thy dreaming nightsThat thou wouldst wish thine own heart dry of bloodSo in my veins red life might stream again,And thou be conscience-calmed, see here it isI hold it towards you.
John Keats