Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 129 of 298
Previous
Next
The Hostage. A Ballad.
The tyrant Dionys to seek,Stern Moerus with his poniard crept;The watchful guard upon him swept;The grim king marked his changeless cheek:"What wouldst thou with thy poniard? Speak!""The city from the tyrant free!""The death-cross shall thy guerdon be.""I am prepared for death, nor pray,"Replied that haughty man, "I to live;Enough, if thou one grace wilt giveFor three brief suns the death delayTo wed my sister leagues away;I boast one friend whose life for mine,If I should fail the cross, is thine."The tyrant mused, and smiled, and saidWith gloomy craft, "So let it be;Three days I will vouchsafe to thee.But mark if, when the time be sped,Thou fail'st thy surety dies instead.His life shall buy thine own release;
Friedrich Schiller
The Dawn
Red of the Dawn!Screams of a babe in the red-hot palms of a Moloch of Tyre,Man with his brotherless dinner on man in the tropical wood,Priests in the name of the Lord passing souls through fire to the fire,Head-hunters and boats of Dahomey that float upon human blood!Red of the Dawn!Godless fury of peoples, and Christless frolic of kings,And the bolt of war dashing down upon cities and blazing farms,For Babylon was a child newborn, and Rome was a babe in arms,And London and Paris and all the rest are as yet but in leading strings.Dawn not Day,While scandal is mouthing a bloodless name at her cannibal feast,And rake-ruined bodies and souls go down in a common wreck,And the Press of a thousand cities is prized for it smells of the beast,
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Too Late.
I looked upon a dead girl's face and heardWhat seemed the voice of Love call unto meOut of her heart; whereon the characteryOf her lost dreams I read there word for word:How on her soul no soul had touched, or stirredHer Life's sad depths to rippling melody,Or made the imaged longing, there, to beThe realization of a hope deferred.So in her life had Love behaved to her.Between the lonely chapters of her yearsAnd her young eyes making no golden blurWith god-bright face and hair; who led me toHer side at last, and bade me, through my tears,With Death's dumb face, too late, to see and know.
Madison Julius Cawein
Of Good In Things Evil. From Proverbial Philosophy
I Heard the man of sin reproaching the goodness of Jehovah,Wherefore, if he be Almighty Love, permitteth he misery and pain?I saw the child of hope vexed in the labyrinth of doubt,Wherefore, O holy One and just, is the horn of thy foul foe so high exalted? And, alas! for this our groaning world, for that grief and guilt are here;Alas! for that Earth is the battle-field, where good must combat with evil:Angels look on and hold their breath, burning to mingle in the conflict,But the troops of the Captain of Salvation may be none but the soldiers of the cross:And that slender band must fight alone, and yet shall triumph gloriously.Enough shall they be for conquest, and the motto of their standard is, Enough.Thou art sad, denizen of earth, for pains and diseases and death,But ...
Martin Farquhar Tupper
A Dead City
The twilight reigns above the fallen noon Within an ancient land, whose after-time Lies like a shadow o'er its ruined prime. Like rising mist the night increases soon Round shattered palaces, ere yet the moon On mute, unsentried walls and turrets climb, And touch with whiteness of sepulchral rime The desert where a city's bones are strewn. She comes at last; unburied, thick, they show In all the hoary nakedness of stone. From out a shadow like the lips of Death Issues a wind, that through the stillness blown, Cries like a prophet's ghost with wailing breath The weirds of finished and forgotten woe.
Clark Ashton Smith
Autumn and Winter
I.Three months bade wane and wax the wintering moonBetween two dates of death, while men were fainYet of the living light that all too soonThree months bade wane.Cold autumn, wan with wrath of wind and rain,Saw pass a soul sweet as the sovereign tuneThat death smote silent when he smote again.First went my friend, in life's mid light of noon,Who loved the lord of music: then the strainWhence earth was kindled like as heaven in JuneThree months bade wane.II.A herald soul before its master's flyingTouched by some few moons first the darkling goalWhere shades rose up to greet the shade, espyingA herald soul;Shades of dead lords of music, who controlMen living by the might of men undying,With...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Dead Man's Run
He rode adown the autumn wood,A man dark-eyed and brown;A mountain girl before him stoodClad in a homespun gown.'To ride this road is death for you!My father waits you there;My father and my brother, too,You know the oath they swear.'He holds her by one berry-brown wrist,And by one berry-brown hand;And he hath laughed at her and kissedHer cheek the sun hath tanned.'The feud is to the death, sweetheart;But forward will I ride.''And if you ride to death, sweetheart,My place is at your side.'Low hath he laughed again and kissedAnd helped her with his hand;And they have ridd'n into the mistThat belts the autumn land.And they had passed by Devil's Den,And come to Dead Man's Run,When i...
The Three Enemies
THE FLESH'Sweet, thou art pale.' 'More pale to see,Christ hung upon the cruel treeAnd bore His Father's wrath for me.''Sweet, thou art sad.' 'Beneath a rodMore heavy, Christ for my sake trodThe winepress of the wrath of God.''Sweet, thou art weary.' 'Not so Christ:Whose mighty love of me sufficedFor Strength, Salvation, Eucharist.''Sweet, thou art footsore.' 'If I bleed,His feet have bled; yea in my needHis Heart once bled for mine indeed.'THE WORLD'Sweet, thou art young.' 'So He was youngWho for my sake in silence hungUpon the Cross with Passion wrung.''Look, thou art fair.' 'He was more fairThan men, Who deigned for me to wearA vi...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Her Portrait Immortal
Must I believe this beauty wholly gone That in her picture here so deathless seems,And must I henceforth speak of her as one Tells of some face of legend or of dreams,Still here and there remembered - scarce believed,Or held the fancy of a heart bereaved.So beautiful she - was; ah! "was," say I, Yet doubt her dead - I did not see her die.Only by others borne across the seaCame the incredible wild blasphemyThey called her death - as though it could be trueOf such an immortality as you!True of these eyes that from her picture gaze, Serene, star-steadfast, as the heaven's own eyes;Of that deep bosom, white as hawthorn sprays, Where my world-weary head forever lies;True of these quiet hands, so marble-cool,Still on ...
Richard Le Gallienne
Faithless
The words you said grow faint;The lamp you lit burns dim;Yet, still be near your faithless friendTo urge and counsel him.Still with returning feetTo where life's shadows brood,With steadfast eyes made clear in deathHaunt his vague solitude.So he, beguiled with earth,Yet with its vain things vexed,Keep even to his own heart unknownYour memory unperplexed.
Walter De La Mare
In Sight Of The Town Of Cockermouth
A point of life between my Parent's dust,And yours, my buried Little-ones! am I;And to those graves looking habituallyIn kindred quiet I repose my trust.Death to the innocent is more than just,And, to the sinner, mercifully bent;So may I hope, if truly I repentAnd meekly bear the ills which bear I must:And You, my Offspring! that do still remain,Yet may outstrip me in the appointed race,If e'er, through fault of mine, in mutual painWe breathed together for a moment's space,The wrong, by love provoked, let love arraign,And only love keep in your hearts a place.
William Wordsworth
Lament XIV
Where are those gates through which so long agoOrpheus descended to the realms belowTo seek his lost one? Little daughter, IWould find that path and pass that ford wherebyThe grim-faced boatman ferries pallid shadesAnd drives them forth to joyless cypress glades.But do thou not desert me, lovely lute!Be thou the furtherance of my mournful suitBefore dread Pluto, till he shall give earTo our complaints and render up my dear.To his dim dwelling all men must repair,And so must she, her father's joy and heir;But let him grant the fruit now scarce in flowerTo fill and ripen till the harvest hour!Yet if that god doth bear a heart withinSo hard that one in grief can nothing win,What can I but renounce this upper airAnd lose my soul, but also los...
Jan Kochanowski
Byzantium
The unpurged images of day recede;The Emperor's drunken soldiery are abed;Night resonance recedes, night walkers' songAfter great cathedral gong;A starlit or a moonlit dome disdainsAll that man is,All mere complexities,The fury and the mire of human veins.Before me floats an image, man or shade,Shade more than man, more image than a shade;For Hades' bobbin bound in mummy-clothMay unwind the winding path;A mouth that has no moisture and no breathBreathless mouths may summon;I hail the superhuman;I call it death-in-life and life-in-death.Miracle, bird or golden handiwork,More miracle than bird or handiwork,Planted on the star-lit golden bough,Can like the cocks of Hades crow,Or, by the moon embittered, scorn aloudIn ...
William Butler Yeats
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXVII.
Soleano i miei pensier soavemente.HE COMFORTS HIMSELF WITH THE HOPE THAT SHE HEARS HIM. My thoughts in fair alliance and arrayHold converse on the theme which most endears:Pity approaches and repents delay:E'en now she speaks of us, or hopes, or fears.Since the last day, the terrible hour when FateThis present life of her fair being reft,From heaven she sees, and hears, and feels our state:No other hope than this to me is left.O fairest miracle! most fortunate mind!O unexampled beauty, stately, rare!Whence lent too late, too soon, alas! rejoin'd.Hers is the crown and palm of good deeds there,Who to the world so eminent and clearMade her great virtue and my passion here.MACGREGOR. My thought...
Francesco Petrarca
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XVIII
There is a place within the depths of hellCall'd Malebolge, all of rock dark-stain'dWith hue ferruginous, e'en as the steepThat round it circling winds. Right in the midstOf that abominable region, yawnsA spacious gulf profound, whereof the frameDue time shall tell. The circle, that remains,Throughout its round, between the gulf and baseOf the high craggy banks, successive formsTen trenches, in its hollow bottom sunk.As where to guard the walls, full many a fossBegirds some stately castle, sure defenceAffording to the space within, so hereWere model'd these; and as like fortressesE'en from their threshold to the brink without,Are flank'd with bridges; from the rock's low baseThus flinty paths advanc'd, that 'cross the molesAnd dikes...
Dante Alighieri
Lament
How she would have lovedA party to-day! -Bright-hatted and gloved,With table and trayAnd chairs on the lawnHer smiles would have shoneWith welcomings . . . ButShe is shut, she is shut From friendship's spell In the jailing shell Of her tiny cell.Or she would have reignedAt a dinner to-nightWith ardours unfeigned,And a generous delight;All in her abodeShe'd have freely bestowedOn her guests . . . But alas,She is shut under grass Where no cups flow, Powerless to know That it might be so.And she would have soughtWith a child's eager glanceThe shy snowdrops broughtBy the new year's advance,And peered in the rimeOf Candlemas-timeFor crocuses . . . c...
Thomas Hardy
Bellona
Thou art moulded in marble impassive,False goddess, fair statue of strife,Yet standest on pedestal massive,A symbol and token of life.Thou art still, not with stillness of languor,And calm, not with calm boding rest;For thine is all wrath and all angerThat throbs far and near in the breastOf man, by thy presence possessd.With the brow of a fallen archangel,The lips of a beautiful fiend,And locks that are snake-like to strangle,And eyes from whose depths may be gleandThe presence of passions, that trembleUnbidden, yet shine as they mayThrough features too proud to dissemble,Too cold and too calm to betrayTheir secrets to creatures of clay.Thy breath stirreth faction and party,Men rise, and no voice can avail...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The Night Of Death.
Twas a night of dreadful horror, - Death was sweeping through the land;And the wings of dark destruction Were outstretched from strand to strandStrong men's hearts grew faint with terror, As the tempest and the wavesWrecked their homes and swept them downward, Suddenly to yawning graves.'Mid the wastes of ruined households, And the tempest's wild alarms,Stood a terror-stricken mother With a child within her arms.Other children huddled 'round her, Each one nestling in her heart;Swift in thought and swift in action, She at least from one must part.Then she said unto her daughter, "Strive to save one child from death.""Which one?" said the anxious daughter, As she stood with b...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper