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Childhood Calls
Come over, come over the deepening river,Come over again the dark torrent of years,Come over, come back where the green leaves quiver,And the lilac still blooms and the grey sky clears.Come, come back to the everlasting garden,To that green heaven, and the blue heaven above.Come back to the time when time brought no burdenAnd love was unconscious, knowing not love.
John Frederick Freeman
The Haunted House
Suggested by a drawing of Thomas Moran, the American painter.This must be the very night!The moon knows it!--and the trees!They stand straight upright,Each a sentinel drawn up,As if they dared not knowWhich way the wind might blow!The very pool, with dead gray eye,Dully expectant, feels it nigh,And begins to curdle and freeze!And the dark night,With its fringe of light,Holds the secret in its cup!II. What can it be, to makeThe poplars cease to shiver and shake,And up in the dismal airStand straight and stiff as the human hairWhen the human soul is dizzy with dread--All but those two that strainAside in a frenzy of speechless pain,Though never a wind sends out a breathTo tunnel the foggy rheum of ...
George MacDonald
Love
I.Thou, from the first, unborn, undying Love,Albeit we gaze not on thy glories near,Before the face of God didst breathe and move,Though night and pain and rain and death reign here.Thou foldest, like a golden atmosphere,The very throne of the eternal God;Passing through thee the edicts of his fearAre mellowed into music, borne abroadBy the loud winds, though they uprend the sea,Even from its central deeps: thine emperyIs over all; thou wilt not brook eclipse;Thou goest and returnest to His leepsLike lightning: thou dost ever brood aboveThe silence of all hearts, unutterable Love.II.To know thee is all wisdom, and old ageIs but to know thee: dimly we behold theeAthwart the veils of evils which infold thee.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Eyes
O strange devices that alone divideThe seër from the seen -The very highway of earth's pomp and prideThat lies betweenThe traveller and the cheating, sweet delightOf where he longs to be,But which, bound hand and foot, he, close on night,Can only see.
Walter De La Mare
Sîta.
Three happy children in a darkened room!What do they gaze on with wide-open eyes?A dense, dense forest, where no sunbeam pries,And in its centre a cleared spot.--There bloomGigantic flowers on creepers that embraceTall trees; there, in a quiet lucid lakeThe white swans glide; there, "whirring from the brake,"The peacock springs; there, herds of wild deer race;There, patches gleam with yellow waving grain;There, blue smoke from strange altars rises light,There, dwells in peace, the poet-anchorite.But who is this fair lady? Not in vainShe weeps,--for lo! at every tear she shedsTears from three pairs of young eyes fall amain,And bowed in sorrow are the three young heads.It is an old, old story, and the layWhich has evoked sad Sîta from the past
Toru Dutt
The Immaculate Conception
Fell the snow on the festival's vigilAnd surpliced the city in white;I wonder who wove the pure flakelets?Ask the Virgin, or God, or the night.It fitted the Feast: 'twas a symbol,And earth wore the surplice at morn,As pure as the vale's stainless lilyFor Mary, the sinlessly born;For Mary, conceived in all sinlessness;And the sun, thro' the clouds of the East,With the brightest and fairest of flashes,Fringed the surplice of white for the Feast.And round the horizon hung cloudlets,Pure stoles to be worn by the Feast;While the earth and the heavens were waitingFor the beautiful Mass of the priest.I opened my window, half dreaming;My soul went away from my eyes,And my heart began saying "Hail Marys"Somewher...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Hermione
On a mound an Arab lay,And sung his sweet regretsAnd told his amulets:The summer birdHis sorrow heard,And, when he heaved a sigh profound,The sympathetic swallow swept the ground.'If it be, as they said, she was not fair,Beauty's not beautiful to me,But sceptred genius, aye inorbed,Culminating in her sphere.This Hermione absorbedThe lustre of the land and ocean,Hills and islands, cloud and tree,In her form and motion.'I ask no bauble miniature,Nor ringlets deadShorn from her comely head,Now that morning not disdainsMountains and the misty plainsHer colossal portraiture;They her heralds be,Steeped in her quality,And singers of her fameWho is their Muse and dame.'Higher, dear...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Good Night.
The sun has sunk behind the hills,The shadows o'er the landscape creep;A drowsy sound the woodland fills,And nature folds her arms to sleep:Good night good night.The chattering jay has ceased his dinThe noisy robin sings no moreThe crow, his mountain haunt within,Dreams 'mid the forest's surly roar:Good night good night.The sunlit cloud floats dim and pale;The dew is falling soft and still;The mist hangs trembling o'er the vale,And silence broods o'er yonder mill:Goodnight good night.The rose, so ruddy in the light,Bends on its stem all rayless now,And by its side the lily whiteA sister shadow, seems to bow:Good night good night.The bat may wheel on silent wingThe fox his guilty vigils keep<...
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
The Forest Way
II climbed a forest path and foundA dim cave in the dripping ground,Where dwelt the spirit of cool sound,Who wrought with crystal triangles,And hollowed foam of rippled bells,A music of mysterious spells.IIWhere Sleep her bubble-jewels spilledOf dreams; and Silence twilight-filledHer emerald buckets, star-instilled,With liquid whispers of lost springs,And mossy tread of woodland things,And drip of dew that greenly clings.IIIHere by those servitors of Sound,Warders of that enchanted ground,My soul and sense were seized and bound,And, in a dungeon deep of treesEntranced, were laid at lazy ease,The charge of woodland mysteries.IVThe minions of Prince Drowsihead,The...
Madison Julius Cawein
Translations. - Expectation And Fulfilment. (From Schiller.)
In these epigrams I have altered the form, which in the original is the elegiac distich.Thousand-masted, mighty float,Out to sea Youth's navy goes:Silent, in his one saved boat,Age into the harbour rows.
Unrecorded.
The splendors of a southern sun Caress the glowing sky;O'er crested waves, the colors glance And gleaming, softly die.A gentle calm from heaven falls And weaves a mystic spell;A glowing grace that charms the soul-- Whose glory none can tell.Oh, warm sweet treasures of a sun Of endless fire and love;Those dying embers are the flames From heavenly fires above.Unto the water's edge they creep And bathe the seas in red;Then die like shadows on the deep With glory cold and dead.A ship--a lone, dark wanderer Upon the southern seas,Speeds like a white-faced messenger Before the dying breeze.Her masts are tipped with amethyst, A splendor all untold;A crimson mantle wraps h...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Moonset
Past seven o'clock: time to be gone;Twelfth-night's over and dawn shivering up:A hasty cut of the loaf, a steaming cup,Down to the door, and there is Coachman John.Ruddy of cheek is John and bright of eye;But John it appears has none of your grins and winks;Civil enough, but short: perhaps he thinks:Words come once in a mile, and always dry.Has he a mind or not? I wonder; but soonWe turn through a leafless wood, and there to the right,Like a sun bewitched in alien realms of night,Mellow and yellow and rounded hangs the moon.Strangely near she seems, and terribly great:The world is dead: why are we travelling still?Nightmare silence grips my struggling will;We are driving for ever and ever to find a gate."When you come to...
Henry John Newbolt
Sonnet CLXV.
L' aura soave ch' al sol spiega e vibra.HIS HEART LIES TANGLED IN HER HAIR. The pleasant gale, that to the sun unplaitsAnd spreads the gold Love's fingers weave, and braidO'er her fine eyes, and all around her head,Fetters my heart, the wishful sigh creates:No nerve but thrills, no artery but beats,Approaching my fair arbiter with dread,Who in her doubtful scale hath ofttimes weigh'dWhether or death or life on me awaits;Beholding, too, those eyes their fires display,And on those shoulders shine such wreaths of hair,Whose witching tangles my poor heart ensnare.But how this magic's wrought I cannot say;For twofold radiance doth my reason blind,And sweetness to excess palls and o'erpowers my mind.NOTT....
Francesco Petrarca
The Twilight Hour.
Slowly I dawn on the sleepless eye,Like a dreaming thought of eternity;But darkness hangs on my misty vest,Like the shade of care on the sleeper's breast;A light that is felt--but dimly seen,Like hope that hangs life and death between;And the weary watcher will sighing say,"Lord, I thank thee! 'twill soon be day;"The lingering night of pain is past,Morning breaks in the east at last. Mortal!--thou mayst see in meA type of feeble infancy,--A dim, uncertain, struggling ray,The promise of a future day!
Susanna Moodie
Grandeur.
Dedicated to the mountains of the San Juan district, Colorado, as seen from the summit of Mt. Wilson.I stood at sunrise, on the topmost partOf lofty mountain, massively sublime;A pinnacle of trachyte, seamed and scarredBy countless generations' ceaseless warAnd struggle with the restless elements;A rugged point, which shot into the air,As by ambition or desire impelledTo pierce the eternal precincts of the sky. Below, outspread,A scene of such terrific grandeur layThat reeled the brain at what the eyes beheld;The hands would clench involuntarilyAnd clutch from intuition for support;The eyes by instinct closed, nor dared to gazeOn such an awful and inspiring sight.The sun arose with bright transcendent ray,Up...
Alfred Castner King
After Thomas Kempis
I. Who follows Jesus shall not walk In darksome road with danger rife; But in his heart the Truth will talk, And on his way will shine the Life. So, on the story we must pore Of him who lives for us, and died, That we may see him walk before, And know the Father in the guide. II. In words of truth Christ all excels, Leaves all his holy ones behind; And he in whom his spirit dwells Their hidden manna sure shall find. Gather wouldst thou the perfect grains, And Jesus fully understand? Thou must obey him with huge pains, And to God's will be as Christ's hand. III. What profits it to reason high And in hard q...
Passageways
Greet the days - greet the moon, gather the stars.. . Man is not at one with himself - collars the infidel ways of his race under pressure domes of widening silence. I scan the horizon barely cognizant of the metallic bits that pierce the night's crown - no jewelled orb stabs this queen's spectre. I am running and lost. . . ever slow to breech this reasoning. Honeysuckle mist with armfuls of orange lilies with scent stronger than the carriage needed in their gathering. Place the constellations upon their heads, the colour so transcends. And then there are the bludgeoned stars fallen into the eyes of my farmhouse scene. The sphin...
Paul Cameron Brown
Unforgotten
Do you ever think of me? you who died Ere our Youth's first fervour chilled,With your soft eyes and your pulses stilled Lying alone, aside,Do you ever think of me, left in the light,From the endless calm of your dawnless night?I am faithful always: I do not say That the lips which thrilled to your lips of oldTo lesser kisses are always cold; Had you wished for this in its narrow sense Our love perhaps had been less intense;But as we held faithfulness, you and I, I am faithful always, as you who lie, Asleep for ever, beneath the grass, While the days and nights and the seasons pass, - Pass away.I keep your memory near my heart, My brilliant, beautiful guiding Star,Till long live over, I too d...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson