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With A Copy Of "In Memoriam."
TO E.M. II.Dear friend, you love the poet's song, And here is one for your regard. You know the "melancholy bard,"Whose grief is wise as well as strong;Already something understand For whom he mourns and what he sings, And how he wakes with golden stringsThe echoes of "the silent land;"How, restless, faint, and worn with grief, Yet loving all and hoping all, He gazes where the shadows fall,And finds in darkness some relief;And how he sends his cries across, His cries for him that comes no more, Till one might think that silent shoreFull of the burden of his loss;And how there comes sublimer cheer-- Not darkness solacing sad eyes, Not the wild joy of mournf...
George MacDonald
Alms
My heart is what it was before, A house where people come and go; But it is winter with your love, The sashes are beset with snow. I light the lamp and lay the cloth, I blow the coals to blaze again; But it is winter with your love, The frost is thick upon the pane. I know a winter when it comes: The leaves are listless on the boughs; I watched your love a little while, And brought my plants into the house. I water them and turn them south, I snap the dead brown from the stem; But it is winter with your love,-- I only tend and water them. There was a time I stood and watc...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Nithsdale's Welcome Hame.
I. The noble Maxwells and their powers Are coming o'er the border, And they'll gae bigg Terreagle's towers, An' set them a' in order. And they declare Terreagles fair, For their abode they chuse it; There's no a heart in a' the land, But's lighter at the news o't.II. Tho' stars in skies may disappear, And angry tempests gather; The happy hour may soon be near That brings us pleasant weather: The weary night o' care and grief May hae a joyful morrow; So dawning day has brought relief Fareweel our night o' sorrow!
Robert Burns
Rephan
Suggested by a very early recollection of a prose story by the noble woman and imaginative writer, Jane Taylor, of Norwich, (more correctly, of Ongar].- R. B.How I lived, ere my human life beganIn this world of yours, like you, made man,When my home was the Star of my God Rephan?Come then around me, close about,World-weary earth-born ones! Darkest doubtOr deepest despondency keeps you out?Nowise! Before a word I speak,Let my circle embrace your worn, your weak,Brow-furrowed old age, youths hollow cheek.Diseased in the body, sick in soul,Pinched poverty, satiate wealth, your wholeArray of despairs! Have I read the roll?All here? Attend, perpend! O StarOf my God Rephan, what wonders areIn thy brilliance...
Robert Browning
Saturday On The Farm.
'Tis Saturday morn and all is bright By nature's own endowing;The sun is fiercely giving light, And only me-- Plowing.Across the river I hear the sound Of a boatman slowly rowing;I have no time to fool around, Especially when I'm-- Hoeing.And when the dinner hour has come, And thoughts of work are fleeting,I only hear the insects hum, Because I'm busy-- Eating.At night when all things are at rest, Safe in Old Morpheus' keeping,No troubles do my mind infest, For I am soundly-- Sleeping.
Edwin C. Ranck
Walking To The Mail
John. Im glad I walkd. How fresh the meadows lookAbove the river, and, but a month ago,The whole hill-side was redder than a fox.Is yon plantation where this byway joinsThe turnpike? James. Yes. John. And when does this come by? James. The mail? At one oclock. John. What is it now? James. A quarter to. John. Whose house is that I see?No, not the County Members with the vane:Up higher with the yew-tree by it, and halfA score of gables. James. That? Sir Edward Heads:But hes abroad: the place is to be sold. John. Oh, his. He was not broken. James. No, sir, he,Vexd with a morbid devil in his bloodThat veild the world with jaundic...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Fountain
A ConversationWe talked with open heart, and tongueAffectionate and true,A pair of friends, though I was young,And Matthew seventy-two.We lay beneath a spreading oak,Beside a mossy seat;And from the turf a fountain brokeAnd gurgled at our feet.`Now, Matthew!' said I, `let us matchThis water's pleasant tuneWith some old border-song, or catchThat suits a summer's noon;`Or of the church-clock and the chimesSing here beneath the shadeThat half-mad thing of witty rhymesWhich you last April made!'In silence Matthew lay, and eyedThe spring beneath the tree;And thus the dear old man replied,The grey-haired man of glee:`No check, no stay, this streamlet fears,How merrily it goes!
William Wordsworth
Song.
I sing the yellow leaf, That rustling strews The wintry path, where grief Delights to muse,Spring's early violet, that sweetly opes Its fragrant leaves to the young morning's kiss,Type of our youth's fond dreams, and cherished hopes, Will soon be this: A sere and yellow leaf, That rustling strews The wintry path, where grief Delights to muse.The summer's rose, in whose rich hues we read Pleasure's gay bloom, and love's enchanting bliss,And glory's laurel, waving o'er the dead, Will soon be this: A sere and yellow leaf, That rustling strews The wintry path, where grief Delights to muse.
Frances Anne Kemble
The Soul Of A Poet
I have written, long years I have written,For the sake of my people and right,I was true when the iron had bittenDeep into my soul in the night;I wrote not for praise nor for money,I craved but the soul and the pen,And I felt not the sting in the honeyOf writing the kindness of men.You read and you saw without seeing,My work seemed a trifle apart,While the truth of things thrilled through my being,And the wrong of things murdered my heart!Cast out, and despised and neglected,And weak, and in fear, and in debt,My songs, mutilated! rejected!Shall ring through the Commonwealth yet!And you to the pure and the guileless,And the peace of your comfort and pride,You have mocked at my bodily vileness,You have tempted and ca...
Henry Lawson
My Heart Was Ance.
Tune - "To the weavers gin ye go."I. My heart was ance as blythe and free As simmer days were lang, But a bonnie, westlin weaver lad Has gart me change my sang. To the weavers gin ye go, fair maids, To the weavers gin ye go; I rede you right gang ne'er at night, To the weavers gin ye go.II. My mither sent me to the town, To warp a plaiden wab; But the weary, weary warpin o't Has gart me sigh and sab.III. A bonnie westlin weaver lad, Sat working at his loom; He took my heart as wi' a net, In every knot and thrum.IV. I sat beside my warpin-whee...
Morning
The Muses' friend (grey-eyed Aurora) yetHeld all the meadows in a cooling sweat,The milk-white gossamers not upwards snow'd,Nor was the sharp and useful-steering goadLaid on the strong-neck'd ox; no gentle budThe sun had dried; the cattle chew'd the cudLow levell'd on the grass; no fly's quick stingEnforc'd the stonehorse in a furious ringTo tear the passive earth, nor lash his tailAbout his buttocks broad; the slimy snailMight on the wainscot, by his many mazes,Winding meanders and self-knitting traces,Be follow'd where he stuck, his glittering slimeNot yet wip'd off. It was so early time,The careful smith had in his sooty forgeKindled no coal; nor did his hammers urgeHis neighbours' patience: owls abroad did fly,And day as then might pl...
William Browne
The Widower's Lament.
Age yellows my leaf with a daily decline,And nature turns sick with decay;Short is the thread on life's spool that is mine,And few are my wishes to stay:The bud, that has seen but the sun of an hour,When storms overtake it may sigh;But fruit, that has weather'd life's sunshine and shower,Drops easy and gladly to die.The prop of my age, and the balm of my pain,With the length of life's years has declin'd;And, like the last sheep of the flock on the plain,She leaves me uneasy behind:I think of the days when our hearts they were one,And she of my youth was the pride;I look for the prop of my age, but it's gone,And I long to drop down by her side.
John Clare
Poems From "A Shropshire Lad" - II
Loveliest of trees, the cherry nowIs hung with bloom along the bough,And stands about the woodland rideWearing white for Eastertide.Now, of my threescore years and ten,Twenty will not come again,And take from seventy springs a score,It only leaves me fifty more.And since to look at things in bloomFifty springs are little room,About the woodlands I will goTo see the cherry hung with snow.
Alfred Edward Housman
The Corn-Song
Heap high the farmers wintry hoard!Heap high the golden corn!No richer gift has Autumn pouredFrom out her lavish horn!Let other lands, exulting, gleanThe apple from the pine,The orange from its glossy green,The cluster from the vine;We better love the hardy giftOur rugged vales bestow,To cheer us when the storm shall driftOur harvest-fields with snow.Through vales of grass and meads of flowersOur ploughs their furrows made,While on the hills the sun and showersOf changeful April played.We dropped the seed oer hill and plainBeneath the sun of May,And frightened from our sprouting grainThe robber crows away.All through the long, bright days of JuneIts leaves grew green and fair,A...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Hired Man And Floretty
The Hired Man's supper, which he sat before,In near reach of the wood-box, the stove-doorAnd one leaf of the kitchen-table, wasSomewhat belated, and in lifted pauseHis dextrous knife was balancing a bitOf fried mush near the port awaiting it.At the glad children's advent - gladder stillTo find him there - "Jest tickled fit to killTo see ye all!" he said, with unctious cheer. -"I'm tryin'-like to he'p Floretty hereTo git things cleared away and give ye roomAccordin' to yer stren'th. But I p'sumeIt's a pore boarder, as the poet says,That quarrels with his victuals, so I guessI'll take another wedge o' that-air cake,Florett', that you're a-learnin' how to bake."He winked and feigned to swallow painfully. -"Jest 'for...
James Whitcomb Riley
Rhymes And Rhythms - XIX
O Time and Change, they range and rangeFrom sunshine round to thunder!They glance and go as the great winds blow,And the best of our dreams drive under:For Time and Change estrange, estrange,And, now they have looked and seen us,O we that were dear we are all-too nearWith the thick of the world between us.O Death and Time, they chime and chimeLike bells at sunset falling!They end the song, they right the wrong,They set the old echoes calling:For Death and Time bring on the primeOf God's own chosen weather,And we lie in the peace of the Great ReleaseAs once in the grass together.
William Ernest Henley
To A Gipsy Child By The Sea-Shore
Douglas, Isle of ManWho taught this pleading to unpractisd eyes?Who hid such import in an infants gloom?Who lent thee, child, this meditative guise?What clouds thy forehead, and fore-dates thy doom?Lo! sails that gleam a moment and are gone;The swinging waters, and the clusterd pier.Not idly Earth and Ocean labour on,Nor idly do these sea-birds hover near.But thou, whom superfluity of joyWafts not from thine own thoughts, nor longings vain,Nor weariness, the full-fed souls annoy;Remaining in thy hunger and thy pain:Thou, drugging pain by patience; half averseFrom thine own mothers breast, that knows not thee;With eyes that sought thine eyes thou didst converse,And that soul-searching vision fell on me.<...
Matthew Arnold
The Dissemblers
"It was not you I came to please,Only myself," flipped she;"I like this spot of phantasies,And thought you far from me."But O, he was the secret spellThat led her to the lea!"It was not she who shaped my ways,Or works, or thoughts," he said."I scarcely marked her living days,Or missed her much when dead."But O, his joyance knew its knellWhen daisies hid her head!
Thomas Hardy