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By And By
God will not let His bright gifts dieIf I may not sing my songs just now I shall sing them by and byA young man with a Poet's soul, And a Poet's kindling eye -Dark, dreamy, full of unvoiced thought - And forehead calm and high,Toiled wearily at his heavy task Till his soul grew sick with pain,And the pent up fires that burned within Seemed withering heart and brain"Work, work, work!" he murmured low, Glancing up at the golden west -Work, with the sunset heavens aglow By the hands of angels dressed,Work for this perishing, human clay, While the soul, like a prisoned bird,Flutters its helpless wings always By passionate longings stirred"I hear in the wandering...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Mountain Pictures
I. Franconia from the PemigewassetOnce more, O Mountains of the North, unveilYour brows, and lay your cloudy mantles byAnd once more, ere the eyes that seek ye fail,Uplift against the blue walls of the skyYour mighty shapes, and let the sunshine weaveIts golden net-work in your belting woods,Smile down in rainbows from your falling floods,And on your kingly brows at morn and eveSet crowns of fire! So shall my soul receiveHaply the secret of your calm and strength,Your unforgotten beauty interfuseMy common life, your glorious shapes and huesAnd sun-dropped splendors at my bidding come,Loom vast through dreams, and stretch in billowy lengthFrom the sea-level of my lowland home!They rise before me! Last nights thunder-gustRoared...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Birth Of Elenor Murray
What are the mortal facts With which we deal? The man is thirty years, Most vital, in a richness physical, Of musical heart and feeling; and the woman Is twenty-eight, a cradle warm and rich For life to grow in. And the time is this: This Henry Murray has a mood of peace, A splendor as of June, has for the time Quelled anarchy within him, come to law, Sees life a thing of beauty, happiness, And fortune glow before him. And the mother, Sunning her feathers in his genial light, Takes longing and has hope. For body's season The blood of youth leaps in them like a fountain, And splashes musically in the crystal pool Of quiet days and hours. They rise refreshed, Feel all the sun'...
Edgar Lee Masters
Autumn Etchings
I.MorningHer rain-kissed face is fresh as rain,Is cool and fresh as a rain-wet leaf;She glimmers at my window-pane,And all my griefBecomes a feeble rushlight, seen no moreWhen the gold of her gown sweeps in my door.II.ForenoonGreat blurs of woodland waved with wind;Gray paths, down which October came,That now November's blasts have thinnedAnd flecked with fiercer flame,Are her delight. She loves to lieRegarding with a gray-blue eyeThe far-off hills that hold the sky:And I I lie and gaze with herBeyond the autumn woods and waysInto the hope of coming days,The spring that nothing shall deter,That puts my soul in unisonWith what's to do and what is done.III.N...
Madison Julius Cawein
Extracts From The Book Of Tarshish, Or "Necklace Of Pearls." (Translations From The Hebrew Poets Of Medaeval Spain.)
I.The shadow of the houses leave behind,In the cool boscage of the grove reclined,The wine of friendship from love's goblet drink,And entertain with cheerful speech the mind.Drink, friend! behold, the dreary winter's gone,The mantle of old age has time withdrawn.The sunbeam glitters in the morning dew,O'er hill and vale youth's bloom is surging on.Cup-bearer! quench with snow the goblet's fire,Even as the wise man cools and stills his ire.Look, when the jar is drained, upon the brimThe light foam melteth with the heart's desire.Cup-bearer! bring anear the silver bowl,And with the glowing gold fulfil the whole,Unto the weak new vigor it imparts,And without lance subdues the hero's soul.
Emma Lazarus
Listen
We borrow, In our sorrow,From the sun of some to-morrowHalf the light that gilds to-day; And the splendor Flashes tenderO'er hope's footsteps to defend herFrom the fears that haunt the way. We never Here can severAny now from the foreverInterclasping near and far! For each minute Holds within itAll the hours of the infinite,As one sky holds every star.
Abram Joseph Ryan
Promise
In countless upward-striving wavesThe moon-drawn tide-wave strives;In thousand far-transplanted graftsThe parent fruit survives;So, in the new-born millions,The perfect Adam lives.Not less are summer mornings dearTo every child they wake,And each with novel life his sphereFills for his proper sake.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Faithless Lover
IO Life, dear Life, in this fair houseLong since did I, it seems to me,In some mysterious doleful wayFall out of love with thee.For, Life, thou art become a ghost,A memory of days gone by,A poor forsaken thing betweenA heartache and a sigh.And now, with shadows from the hillsThronging the twilight, wraith on wraith,Unlock the door and let me goTo thy dark rival Death!IIO Heart, dear Heart, in this fair houseWhy hast thou wearied and grown tired,Between a morning and a night,Of all thy soul desired?Fond one, who cannot understandEven these shadows on the floor,Yet must be dreaming of dark lovesAnd joys beyond my door!But I am beautiful past allThe timid tum...
Bliss Carman
The Secret.
Some things that fly there be, --Birds, hours, the bumble-bee:Of these no elegy.Some things that stay there be, --Grief, hills, eternity:Nor this behooveth me.There are, that resting, rise.Can I expound the skies?How still the riddle lies!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Sonnet: When I Have Fears That I May Cease To Be
When I have fears that I may cease to beBefore my pen has glean'd my teeming brain,Before high piled books, in charactry,Hold like rich garners the full-ripen'd grain;When I behold, upon the night's starr'd face,Huge cloudy symbols of a high romance,And think that I may never live to traceTheir shadows, with the magic hand of chance;And when I feel, fair creature of an hour,That I shall never look upon thee more,Never have relish in the faery powerOf unreflecting love; then on the shoreOf the wide world I stand alone, and thinkTill Love and Fame to nothingness do sink.
John Keats
To Jim
I gaze upon my son once more,With eyes and heart that tire,As solemnly he stands beforeThe screen drawn round the fire;With hands behind clasped hand in hand,Now loosely and now fast,Just as his fathers used to standFor generations past.A fair and slight and childish form,And big brown thoughtful eyes,God help him! for a life of stormAnd stress before him lies:A wanderer and a gipsy wild,Ive learnt the world and know,For I was such another child,Ah, many years ago!But in those dreamy eyes of himThere is no hint of doubt,I wish that you could tell me, Jim,The things you dream about.Dream on, my son, that all is trueAnd things not what they seem,Twill be a bitter day for youWhen wakened from...
Henry Lawson
Counting Sheep
Half-awake I walkedA dimly-seen sweet hawthorn laneUntil sleep came;I lingered at a gate and talkedA little with a lonely lamb.He told me of the great still night,Of calm starlight,And of the lady moon, who'd stoopFor a kiss sometimes;Of grass as soft as sleep, of rhymesThe tired flowers sang:The ageless April talesOf how, when sheep grew old,As their faith told,They went without a pangTo far green fields, where fallPerpetual streams that callTo deathless nightingales. And then I saw, hard by,A shepherd lad with shining eyes,And round him gathered one by oneCountless sheep, snow-white;More and more they crowdedWith tender cries,Till all the field was fullOf voices and of coming sheep.
William Kerr
Guess, Guess.
I love a maid, a mystic maid, Whose form no eyes but mine can see;She comes in light, she comes in shade, And beautiful in both is she.Her shape in dreams I oft behold, And oft she whispers in my earSuch words as when to others told, Awake the sigh, or wring the tear;Then guess, guess, who she,The lady of my love, may be.I find the lustre of her brow, Come o'er me in my darkest ways;And feel as if her voice, even now, Were echoing far off my lays.There is no scene of joy or woe But she doth gild with influence bright;And shed o'er all so rich a glow As makes even tears seem full of light:Then guess, guess, who she,The lady of my love, may be.
Thomas Moore
Serenade
So sweet the hour, so calm the time,I feel it more than half a crime,When Nature sleeps and stars are mute,To mar the silence ev'n with lute.At rest on ocean's brilliant dyesAn image of Elysium lies:Seven Pleiades entranced in Heaven,Form in the deep another seven:Endymion nodding from aboveSees in the sea a second love.Within the valleys dim and brown,And on the spectral mountain's crown,The wearied light is dying down,And earth, and stars, and sea, and skyAre redolent of sleep, as IAm redolent of thee and thineEnthralling love, my Adeline.But list, O list, so soft and lowThy lover's voice tonight shall flow,That, scarce awake, thy soul shall deemMy words the music of a dream.Thus, while no single sound too rude
Edgar Allan Poe
The Interpreters
IDays dawn on us that make amends for manySometimes,When heaven and earth seem sweeter even than anyMan's rhymes.Light had not all been quenched in France, or quelledIn Greece,Had Homer sung not, or had Hugo heldHis peace.Had Sappho's self not left her word thus longFor token,The sea round Lesbos yet in waves of songHad spoken.IIAnd yet these days of subtler air and finerDelight,When lovelier looks the darkness, and divinerThe light -The gift they give of all these golden hours,Whose urnPours forth reverberate rays or shadowing showersIn turn -Clouds, beams, and winds that make the live day's trackSeem living -What were they did no spirit give them backThanksgiving?III
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Among The Timothy.
Long hours ago, while yet the morn was blithe,Nor sharp athirst had drunk the beaded dew,A reaper came, and swung his cradled scytheAround this stump, and, shearing slowly, drewFar round among the clover, ripe for hay,A circle clean and grey;And here among the scented swathes that gleam,Mixed with dead daisies, it is sweet to lieAnd watch the grass and the few-clouded sky,Nor think but only dream.For when the noon was turning, and the heatFell down most heavily on field and wood,I too came hither, borne on restless feet,Seeking some comfort for an aching mood.Ah, I was weary of the drifting hours,The echoing city towers,The blind grey streets, the jingle of the throng,Weary of hope that like a shape of stoneSat near at hand wi...
Archibald Lampman
The Pleasures of Imagination - The First Book - The Argument
THE ARGUMENT.The subject proposed. Dedication. The ideas of the supreme being, the exemplars of all things. The variety of constitution in the minds of men; with its final cause. The general character of a fine imagination. All the immediate pleasures of the human imagination proceed either from greatness or beauty in external objects. The pleasure from greatness; with its final cause. The natural connection of beauty with truth and good. The different orders of beauty in different objects. The infinite and all-comprehending form of beauty, which belongs to the divine mind. The partial and artificial forms of beauty, which belong to inferior intellectual beings. The origin and general conduct of beauty in man. The subordination of local beauties to the beauty of the universe. Conclusion.
Mark Akenside
Blank Misgivings Of A Creature Moving About In Worlds Not Realised.
IHere am I yet, another twelvemonth spent,One-third departed of the mortal span,Carrying on the child into the man,Nothing into reality. Sails rent,And rudder broken, reason impotentAffections all unfixed; so forth I fareOn the mid seas unheedingly, so dareTo do and to be done by, well content.So was it from the first, so is it yet;Yea, the first kiss that by these lips was setOn any human lips, methinks was sinSin, cowardice, and falsehood; for the willInto a deed een then advanced, whereinGod, unidentified, was thought-of still.IIThough to the vilest things beneath the moonFor poor Ease sake I give away my heart,And for the moments sympathy let partMy sight and sense of truth, Thy precious boon,My ...
Arthur Hugh Clough