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Song
My silks and fine array,My smiles and languish'd air,By love are driv'n away;And mournful lean DespairBrings me yew to deck my grave;Such end true lovers have.His face is fair as heav'nWhen springing buds unfold;O why to him was't giv'nWhose heart is wintry cold?His breast is love's all-worshipp'd tomb,Where all love's pilgrims come.Bring me an axe and spade,Bring me a winding sheet;When I my grave have madeLet winds and tempests beat:Then down I'll lie as cold as clay.True love doth pass away!
William Blake
Life's Changes.
A fair young girl was to the altar ledBy him she loved, the chosen of her heart;And words of solemn import there were said,And mutual vows were pledged till death should part.But life was young, and death a great way off,At least it seemed so then, on that bright morn;And they no doubt, expected years of bliss,And in their path the rose without a thorn.Cherished from infancy with tenderest care,A precious only daughter was the bride;And when that young protector's arm she took,She for the first time left her parents' side.With all a woman's tender, trustful heart,She gave herself away to him she loved;Why should she not, was he not all her own,A choice by friends and parents too approved?How rapidly with him the days now...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
The Hawthorn Hath A Deathly Smell
The flowers of the fieldHave a sweet smell;Meadowsweet, tansy, thyme,And faint-heart pimpernel;But sweeter even than these,The silver of the mayWreathed is with incense forThe Judgment Day.An apple, a child, dust,When falls the evening rain,Wild briar's spicèd leaves,Breathe memories again;With further memory fraught,The silver of the mayWreathed is with incense forThe Judgment Day.Eyes of all loveliness -Shadow of strange delight,Even as a flower fadesMust thou from sight;But oh, o'er thy grave's mound,Till come the Judgment Day,Wreathed shall with incense beThy sharp-thorned may.
Walter De La Mare
Blinded!
You that still have your sight,Remember me!--I risked my life, I lost my eyes,That you might see.Now in the dark I go,That you have light.Yours, all the joy of day,I have but night.Yours still, the faces dear,The fields, the sky.For me--ah me!--there's noughtBut this black misery!In this unending night,I can but seeWhat once I saw, and fainWould see again.O, midnight of black pain!Come, Comrade Death,Come quick, and set me free,And give me back my eyes again! * * * * *Nay then, Christ's vicar,You who bear our pain,Ours be it now to seeYour dark days lighted,And your way made plain.
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Thoughts Of Phena - At News Of Her Death
Not a line of her writing have I,Not a thread of her hair,No mark of her late time as dame in her dwelling, wherebyI may picture her there;And in vain do I urge my unsightTo conceive my lost prizeAt her close, whom I knew when her dreams were upbrimming with light,And with laughter her eyes.What scenes spread around her last days,Sad, shining, or dim?Did her gifts and compassions enray and enarch her sweet waysWith an aureate nimb?Or did life-light decline from her years,And mischances controlHer full day-star; unease, or regret, or forebodings, or fearsDisennoble her soul?Thus I do but the phantom retainOf the maiden of yoreAs my relic; yet haply the best of her fined in my brainIt maybe the moreThat no line...
Thomas Hardy
Sonnet XXXV.
Good. I have done. My heart weighs. I am sad.The outer day, void statue of lit blue,Is altogether outward, other, gladAt mere being not-I (so my aches construe).I, that have failed in everything, bewailNothing this hour but that I have bewailed,For in the general fate what is't to fail?Why, fate being past for Fate, 'tis but to have failed.Whatever hap-or stop, what matters it,Sith to the mattering our will bringeth nought?With the higher trifling let us world our wit,Conscious that, if we do't, that was the lot The regular stars bound us to, when they stood Godfathers to our birth and to our blood.
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
Great Grief, Great Glory.
The less our sorrows here and suff'rings cease,The more our crowns of glory there increase.
Robert Herrick
The May Queen
You must wake and call me early, call me early, mother dear;To-morrow ill be the happiest time of all the glad New-year;Of all the glad New-year, mother, the maddest merriest day,For Im to be Queen o the May, mother, Im to be Queen o the May.Theres many a black, black eye, they say, but none so bright as mine;Theres Margaret and Mary, theres Kate and Caroline;But none so fair as little Alice in all the land they say,So Im to be Queen o the May, mother, Im to be Queen o the May.I sleep so sound all night, mother, that I shall never wake,If you do not call me loud when the day begins to break;But I must gather knots of flowers, and buds and garlands gay,For Im to be Queen o the May, mother, Im to be Queen o the May.As I came up the vall...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Ghazal, In Lament For The Dead, Of Pir Muhammad
The season of parting has come up with the wind;My girl has hollowed my heart with the hot iron of separation.Keep away, doctor, your roots and your knives are useless.None ever cured the ills of the ill of separation.There is no one near me noble enough to be told;I tear my collar in the "Alas! Alas!" of separation.She was a branch of santal; she closed her eyes and left me.Autumn has come and she has gone, broken to pieces in the wind of separation.I am Pir Muhammad and I am stumbling away to die;She stamped on my eyes with the foot of separation.From the Pus'hto (Afghans, nineteenth century).
Edward Powys Mathers
Gone.
The heavens look down with chilly frown,The sun blinks oot wi' watery e'e,The drift flies fast upon the blast,The naked trees moan shiveringly.The sun is gone, by mists withdrawn,Muffling his head in snow-clouds grey,The earth turns white, against the night,The laden winds drive furiously.The flowers are slain that graced the plain,The earth is locked wi' bitter frost;And my heart cries to stormy skiesAfter the dreary loved and lost.The spring will come, the flowers will bloom,The leaves in beauty clothe the tree,But never more, oh, never more,Will my lost darling come to me.Beyond the skies her happy eyesLook fearlessly in eyes Divine;The bitter smart, the hungry heart,Waiting with empty arms, is mine.
Nora Pembroke
The Mary Gloster
I've paid for your sickest fancies; I've humoured your crackedest whim,Dick, it's your daddy, dying; you've got to listen to him!Good for a fortnight, am I? The doctor told you? He lied.I shall go under by morning, and, Put that nurse outside.'Never seen death yet, Dickie? Well, now is your time to learn,And you'll wish you held my record before it comes to your turn.Not counting the Line and the Foundry, the yards and the village, too,I've made myself and a million; but I'm damned if I made you.Master at two-and-twenty, and married at twenty-three,Ten thousand men on the pay-roll, and forty freighters at sea!Fifty years between 'em, and every year of it fight,And now I'm Sir Anthony Gloster, dying, a baronite:For I lunched with his Royal 'Ighness, what was it the pap...
Rudyard
The Dead Church
Wild wild wind, wilt thou never cease thy sighing? Dark dark night, wilt thou never wear away?Cold cold church, in thy death sleep lying, The Lent is past, thy Passion here, but not thine Easter-day.Peace, faint heart, though the night be dark and sighing; Rest, fair corpse, where thy Lord himself hath lain.Weep, dear Lord, above thy bride low lying; Thy tears shall wake her frozen limbs to life and health again.Eversley, 1848.
Charles Kingsley
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto IX
Now the fair consort of Tithonus old,Arisen from her mate's beloved arms,Look'd palely o'er the eastern cliff: her brow,Lucent with jewels, glitter'd, set in signOf that chill animal, who with his trainSmites fearful nations: and where then we were,Two steps of her ascent the night had past,And now the third was closing up its wing,When I, who had so much of Adam with me,Sank down upon the grass, o'ercome with sleep,There where all five were seated. In that hour,When near the dawn the swallow her sad lay,Rememb'ring haply ancient grief, renews,And with our minds more wand'rers from the flesh,And less by thought restrain'd are, as 't were, fullOf holy divination in their dreams,Then in a vision did I seem to viewA golden-feather'd eagle in...
Dante Alighieri
Death And Dr. Hornbook. - A True Story.
Some books are lies frae end to end, And some great lies were never penn'd: Ev'n ministers, they ha'e been kenn'd, In holy rapture, A rousing whid, at times, to vend, And nail't wi' Scripture. But this that I am gaun to tell, Which lately on a night befel, Is just as true's the Deil's in h--ll Or Dublin-city; That e'er he nearer comes oursel 'S a muckle pity. The Clachan yill had made me canty, I was na fou, but just had plenty; I stacher'd whyles, but yet took tent ay To free the ditches; An' hillocks, stanes, and bushes, kenn'd ay Frae ghaists an' witches. The rising moon began to glow'r The distant Cumnock hills out-owre: To count her ho...
Robert Burns
The Convent
Elenor Murray stole away from Nice Before her furlough ended, tense to see Something of Italy, and planned to go To Genoa, explore the ancient town Of Christopher Columbus, if she might Elude the regulation, as she did, In leaving Nice for Italy. But for her Always the dream, and always the defeat Of what she dreamed. She found herself in Florence And saw the city. But the weariness Of labor and her illness came again At intervals, and on such days she lay And heard the hours toll, wished for death and wept, Being alone and sorrowful. On a morning She rose and looked for galleries, came at last Into the Via Gino Capponi And saw a little church and entered in,
Edgar Lee Masters
Sonnet CCXIV.
In dubbio di mio stato, or piango, or canto.TO HIS LONGING TO SEE HER AGAIN IS NOW ADDED THE FEAR OF SEEING HER NO MORE. Uncertain of my state, I weep and sing,I hope and tremble, and with rhymes and sighsI ease my load, while Love his utmost triesHow worse my sore afflicted heart to sting.Will her sweet seraph face again e'er bringTheir former light to these despairing eyes.(What to expect, alas! or how advise)Or must eternal grief my bosom wring?For heaven, which justly it deserves to win,It cares not what on earth may be their fate,Whose sun it was, where centred their sole gaze.Such terror, so perpetual warfare in,Changed from my former self, I live of lateAs one who midway doubts, and fears and strays.MACG...
Francesco Petrarca
Femmes Damnées
Like pensive cattle, lying on the sands,they turn their eyes towards the seas far hills,and, feet searching each others, touching hands,know sweet languor and the bitterest thrills.Some, where the stream babbles, deep in the woods,their hearts enamoured of long intimacies,go spelling out the loves of their own girlhoods,and carving the green bark of young trees.Others, like Sisters, walk, gravely and slow,among the rocks, full of apparitions,where Saint Anthony saw, like lava flows,the bared crimson breasts of his temptations.There are those, in the melting candles glimmer,who in mute hollows of caves still pagan,call on you to relieve their groaning fever,O Bacchus, to soothe the remorse of the ancients!<...
Charles Baudelaire
Sonnet CCXI.
Qual paura ho, quando mi torna a mente.MELANCHOLY RECOLLECTIONS AND PRESAGES. O Laura! when my tortured mindThe sad remembrance bearsOf that ill-omen'd day,When, victim to a thousand doubts and fears,I left my soul behind,That soul that could not from its partner stray;In nightly visions to my longing eyesThy form oft seems to rise,As ever thou wert seen,Fair like the rose, 'midst paling flowers the queen,But loosely in the wind,Unbraided wave the ringlets of thy hair,That late with studious care,I saw with pearls and flowery garlands twined:On thy wan lip, no cheerful smile appears;Thy beauteous face a tender sadness wears;Placid in pain thou seem'st, serene in grief,As conscious of thy fate, and h...