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God's Witnesses. A Pen Picture From The Old Testament.
Upon the plain of Dura stood an image great and high,With golden forehead broad and bright beneath the morning sky;All regal in its majesty and kingly in its mien,The grandest and most glorious thing the world had ever seen!Full sixty cubits high in air the lordly head was reared,And robed in gold from head to foot the stately form appeared;Adown the breast six cubits broad, a flood of yellow gold,All deftly wrought with matchless skill, its shining tresses rolled.And, fronting thus the rising sun, it sent back ray for ray -A golden flood of arrowy light - into-the face of day;While round its feet, in awe and dread, all Shinar stood amazed,And up into that radiant face with reverent wonder gazed.Woke sackbut, psaltery, and harp, woke dulcimer and flu...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Resignation.
When I am only fit to go to bed,Or hobble out to sit within the sun,Ring down the curtain, say the play is done,And the last petals of the poppy shed!I do not want to live when I am old,I have no use for things I cannot love;And when the day that I am talking of(Which God forfend!) is come, it will be cold.But if there is another place than this,Where all the men will greet me as "Old Man,"And all the women wrap me in a smile,Where money is more useless than a kiss,And good wine is not put beneath the ban,I will go there and stay a little while.
Bliss Carman
The Long Lane
All through the summer night, down the long lane in flower, The moon-white lane,All through the summer night,--dim as a shower, Glimmer and fade the Twain:Over the cricket hosts, throbbing the hour by hour, Young voices bloom and wane.Down the long lane they go, and past one window, pale With visions silver-blurred;Stirring the heart that waits,--the eyes that fail After a spring deferred.Query, and hush, and Ah!--dim through a moon-lit veil, The same one word.Down the long lane, entwined with all the fragrance there; The lane in flower somehowWith youth, and plighted hands, and star-strewn air, And muted 'Thee' and 'Thou':--All the wild bloom an...
Josephine Preston Peabody
To Tirzah
Whate'er is born of mortal birthMust be consumed with the earth,To rise from generation free:Then what have I to do with thee?The sexes sprang from shame and pride,Blown in the morn, in evening died;But mercy changed death into sleep;The sexes rose to work and weep.Thou, mother of my mortal part,With cruelty didst mould my heart,And with false self-deceiving tearsDidst bind my nostrils, eyes, and ears,Didst close my tongue in senseless clay,And me to mortal life betray.The death of Jesus set me free:Then what have I to do with thee?
William Blake
Solitude.
Now as even's warning bellRings the day's departing knell,Leaving me from labour free,Solitude, I'll walk with thee:Whether 'side the woods we rove,Or sweep beneath the willow grove;Whether sauntering we proceedCross the green, or down the mead;Whether, sitting down, we lookOn the bubbles of the brook;Whether, curious, waste an hour,Pausing o'er each tasty flower;Or, expounding nature's spells,From the sand pick out the shells;Or, while lingering by the streams,Where more sweet the music seems,Listen to the soft'ning swellsOf some distant chiming bellsMellowing sweetly on the breeze,Rising, falling by degrees,Dying now, then wak'd againIn full many a 'witching strain,Sounding, as the gale flits by,Flats...
John Clare
Epitaph - On the Countess Dowager of Pembroke
Underneath this sable herseLies the subject of all verse:Sidney's sister, Pembroke's mother:Death, ere thou hast slain another,Fair and learn'd, and good as she,Time shall throw a dart at thee.Marble piles let no man raiseTo her name: for after daysSome kind woman born as she,Reading this, like NiobeShall turn marble, and becomeBoth her mourner and her tomb.
William Browne
The Angel With The Book
When to that house I came which, long ago,My heart had builded of its joy and woe,Upon its threshold, lo! I paused again,Dreading to enter; fearing to beholdThe place wherein my Love had lived of old,And where my other self lay dead and slain.I feared to see some shape, some Hope once dear,Behind the arras dead; some face of Fear,With eyes accusing, that would sear my soul,Taking away my manhood and my strengthWith heartbreak memories.... And yet, at length,Again I stood within that house of dole.Sombre and beautiful with stately thingsThe long hall lay; and by the stairs the wingsOf Life and Love rose marble and unmarred:And all the walls, hung grave with tapestry,Gesticulated sorrow; gazed at me,Strange speculation in their ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Memorial Verses - April 1850
Goethe in Weimar sleeps, and Greece,Long since, saw Byron's struggle cease.But one such death remain'd to come;The last poetic voice is dumbWe stand to-day by Wordsworth's tomb.When Byron's eyes were shut in death,We bow'd our head and held our breath.He taught us little; but our soulHad felt him like the thunder's roll.With shivering heart the strife we sawOf passion with eternal law;And yet with reverential aweWe watch'd the fount of fiery lifeWhich served for that Titanic strife.When Goethe's death was told, we said:Sunk, then, is Europe's sagest head.Physician of the iron age,Goethe has done his pilgrimage.He took the suffering human race,He read each wound, each weakness clear;And struck his finger on th...
Matthew Arnold
Sonnet XI.
Se la mia vita dall' aspro tormento.HE HOPES THAT TIME WILL RENDER HER MORE MERCIFUL. If o'er each bitter pang, each hidden throeSadly triumphant I my years drag on,Till even the radiance of those eyes is gone,Lady, which star-like now illume thy brow;And silver'd are those locks of golden glow,And wreaths and robes of green aside are thrown,And from thy cheek those hues of beauty flown,Which check'd so long the utterance of my woe,Haply my bolder tongue may then revealThe bosom'd annals of my heart's fierce fire,The martyr-throbs that now in night I veil:And should the chill Time frown on young Desire.Still, still some late remorse that breast may feel,And heave a tardy sigh--ere love with life expire.WRANGHAM...
Francesco Petrarca
Fragment: The Sepulchre Of Memory.
And where is truth? On tombs? for such to theeHas been my heart - and thy dead memoryHas lain from childhood, many a changeful year,Unchangingly preserved and buried there.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Tyrant Sway.
The heart that owns thy tyrant sway, Whate'er its hopes may be,Is like a bark that drifts away Upon a shoreless sea!No compass left to guide her on,Upon the surge she's tempest-torn-- And such is life to me!And what is life when love is fled? The world, unshared by thee?I'd rather slumber with the dead, Than such a waif to be!The bark that by no compass steersIs lost, which way soe'er she veers-- And such is life to me!
George Pope Morris
Has Been
That melancholy phrase "It might have been," However sad, doth in its heart enfold A hidden germ of promise! for I holdWHATEVER MIGHT HAVE BEEN SHALL BE. Though inSome other realm and life, the soul must win The goal that erst was possible. But cold And cruel as the sound of frozen mouldDropped on a coffin, are the words "Has been.""She has been beautiful" -"he has been great," "Rome has been powerful," we sigh and say. It is the pitying crust we toss decay,The dirge we breathe o'er some degenerate state,An epitaph for fame's unburied dead.God pity those who live to hear it said!
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Alaric at Rome
Admire, exult, despise, laugh, weep, for hereThere is such matter for all feeling.- Childe Harold.IUnwelcome shroud of the forgotten dead,Oblivions dreary fountain, where art thou:Why speedst thou not thy deathlike wave to shedOer humbled pride, and self-reproaching woe:Or times stern hand, why blots it not awayThe saddening tale that tells of sorrow and decay?IIThere are, whose glory passeth not awayEven in the grave their fragrance cannot fade:Others there are as deathless full as they,Who for themselves a monument have madeBy their own cringesa lesson to all eyesOf wonder to the foolof warning to the wise.IIIYes, there are stories registered on high,Yes, there are stains times fingers...
The Orphan Maid of Glencoe.
NOTE: - The tale is told a few years after the massacre of Glencoe, by a wandering bard, who had formerly been piper to MacDonald of Glencoe, but had escaped the fate of his kinsmen.I tell a tale of woful tragedy,Resulting from that fearful infamy;That unsurpassed, unrivalled treachery,That merciless, that beastlike butchery.Upon the evening calm and bright,That followed on the fatal night,Just as the sun was setting redBehind Benmore's sequestered head,And weeping tears of yellow light,That, streaming down, bedimmed his sight,As he prepared to make his graveBeneath the deep Atlantic wave;I stood and viewed with starting tearsThe silent scene of glorious years,And thought me on my former pride,As when I marched my chief beside,
W. M. MacKeracher
Ex Tenebra.
Ex Tenebra. The winds have shower'd their rains upon the sod, And flowers and trees have murmur'd as with lips. The very silence has appeal'd to God. In man's behalf, though smitten by His rod, 'Twould seem as if the blight of some eclipse Had dull'd the skies, - as if, on mountain tips, The winds of Heaven had spurn'd the life terrene, And clouds were foundering like benighted ships. But what is this, exultant, unforseen, Which cleaves the dark? A fearful, burning thing! Is it the moon? Or Saturn's scarlet ring
Eric Mackay
A Prayer - In The Prospect Of Death.
O Thou unknown, Almighty Cause Of all my hope and fear? In whose dread presence, ere an hour Perhaps I must appear! If I have wander'd in those paths Of life I ought to shun; As something, loudly, in my breast, Remonstrates I have done; Thou know'st that Thou hast formed me, With passions wild and strong; And list'ning to their witching voice Has often led me wrong. Where human weakness has come short, Or frailty stept aside, Do Thou, All-Good! for such thou art, In shades of darkness hide. Where with intention I have err'd, No other plea I have, But, Thou art good; and goodness still Delighteth to forgi...
Robert Burns
On the Fifth of November. - Anno Aetates 17.
Am pius extrema veniens Jacobus ab arctoTeucrigenas populos, lateque patentia regnaAlbionum tenuit, jamque inviolabile foedusSceptra Caledoniis conjunxerat Anglica Scotis:Pacificusque novo felix divesque sedebatIn solio, occultique doli securus & hostis:Cum ferus ignifluo regnans Acheronte tyrannus,Eumenidum pater, aethereo vagus exul Olympo,Forte per immensum terrarum erraverat orbem,Dinumerans sceleris socios, vernasque fideles,Participes regni post funera moesta futuros;Hic tempestates medio ciet aere diras,Illic unanimes odium struit inter amicos,Armat & invictas in mutua viscera gentes;Regnaque olivifera vertit florentia pace,Et quoscunque videt purae virtutis amantes,Hos cupit adjicere imperio, fraudumque magisterTentat inac...
John Milton
Nancy Walsh
It is not on her gown She fears to tread; It is her hair Which tumbles down And strays About her ways That she must care. And she lives nigh this place: The dead would rise If they could see her face; The dead would rise Only to hear her sing: But death is blind, and gives not ear nor eye To anything. We would leave behind Both wife and child, And house and home; And wander blind, And wander thus, And ever roam, If she would come to us In Erris. Softly she said to me, Be patient till the night comes, And I will go with thee.
James Stephens