Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 130 of 298
Previous
Next
Written After Spending A Day At West Point.
Were they but dreams? Upon the darkening worldEvening comes down, the wings of fire are furled,On which the day soared to the sunny west:The moon sits calmly, like a soul at rest,Looking upon the never-resting earth;All things in heaven wait on the solemn birthOf night, but where has fled the happy dreamThat at this hour, last night, our life did seem?Where are the mountains with their tangled hair,The leafy hollow, and the rocky stair?Where are the shadows of the solemn hills,And the fresh music of the summer rills?Where are the wood-paths, winding, long and steep,And the great, glorious river, broad and deep,And the thick copses, where soft breezes meet,And the wild torrent's snowy, leaping feet,The rustling, rocking boughs, the running st...
Frances Anne Kemble
Feronde
IN Eastern climes, by means considered new;The Mount's old-man, with terrors would pursue;His large domains howe'er were not the cause,Nor heaps of gold, that gave him such applause,But manners strange his subjects to persuade;In ev'ry wish, to serve him they were made.Among his people boldest hearts he chose,And to their view would Paradise discloseIts blissful pleasures: - ev'ry soft delight,Designed to gratify the sense and sight.So plausible this prophet's tale appeared,Each word he dropt was thoroughly revered.Whence this delusion? - DRINK deranged the mind;And, reason drowned, to madness they resigned.Thus void of knowing clearly what they did,They soon were brought to act as they were bid;Conveyed to places, charming to the eye,Enc...
Jean de La Fontaine
Sorrow
Sorrow, on wing through the world for ever,Here and there for awhile would borrowRest, if rest might haply deliverSorrow.One thought lies close in her heart gnawn thoroughWith pain, a weed in a dried-up river,A rust-red share in an empty furrow.Hearts that strain at her chain would severThe link where yesterday frets to-morrow:All things pass in the world, but neverSorrow.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Oldest Drama
"It fell on a day, that he went out to his father to the reapers. And he said unto his father, My head, my head. And he said to a lad, Carry him to his mother. And . . . he sat on her knees till noon, and then died. And she went up, and laid him on the bed. . . . And shut the door upon him and went out." Immortal story that no mother's heart Ev'n yet can read, nor feel the biting pain That rent her soul! Immortal not by art Which makes a long past sorrow sting again Like grief of yesterday: but since it said In simplest word the truth which all may see, Where any mother sobs above her dead And plays anew the silent tragedy.
John McCrae
The Sisters' Shame
We were two daughters of one race;She was the fairest in the face.The wind is blowing in turret and tree.They were together, and she fell;Therefore revenge became me well.O, the earl was fair to see!She died; she went to burning flame;She mixd her ancient blood with shame.The wind is howling in turret and tree.Whole weeks and months, and early and late,To win his love I lay in wait.O, the earl was fair to see!I made a feast; I bade him come;I won his love, I brought him home,The wind is roaring in turret and tree.And after supper on a bed,Upon my lap he laid his head.O, the earl was fair to see!I kissd his eyelids into rest,His ruddy cheeks upon my breast.The wind is raging in turret and tree.I ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The End Of The Episode
Indulge no more may weIn this sweet-bitter pastime:The love-light shines the last timeBetween you, Dear, and me.There shall remain no traceOf what so closely tied us,And blank as ere love eyed usWill be our meeting-place.The flowers and thymy air,Will they now miss our coming?The dumbles thin their hummingTo find we haunt not there?Though fervent was our vow,Though ruddily ran our pleasure,Bliss has fulfilled its measure,And sees its sentence now.Ache deep; but make no moans:Smile out; but stilly suffer:The paths of love are rougherThan thoroughfares of stones.
Thomas Hardy
In October.
Along the waste, a great way off, the pines,Like tall slim priests of storm, stand up and barThe low long strip of dolorous red that linesThe under west, where wet winds moan afar.The cornfields all are brown, and brown the meadowsWith the blown leaves' wind-heapèd traceries,And the brown thistle stems that cast no shadows,And bear no bloom for bees.As slowly earthward leaf by red leaf slips,The sad trees rustle in chill misery,A soft strange inner sound of pain-crazed lips,That move and murmur incoherently;As if all leaves, that yet have breath, were sighing,With pale hushed throats, for death is at the door,So many low soft masses for the dyingSweet leaves that live no more.Here I will sit upon this naked stone,Draw my coat ...
Archibald Lampman
Lines To The Memory Of Mrs. B ----
Ah, stranger! if thy pilgrim footsteps love,By meditation led, to wander here,A suff'ring husband may thy pity move,Who weeps the loss of all his soul holds dear!Cold as this mourning marble is that heart,Which Virtue warm'd with pure and gen'rous heat,Which to each checquer'd scene could joy impart,Nor ceas'd to love until it ceas'd to beat.Yet, gentle spirit! o'er thine early graveShall Consolation, like a seraph, prove,When Sickness clos'd thy faultless life, she gaveAnother angel to the realms above!
John Carr
In Memoriam (David J. Ryan, C.S.A.)
Thou art sleeping, brother, sleeping In thy lonely battle grave;Shadows o'er the past are creeping,Death, the reaper, still is reaping,Years have swept, and years are sweepingMany a memory from my keeping,But I'm waiting still, and weeping For my beautiful and brave.When the battle songs were chanted, And war's stirring tocsin pealed,By those songs thy heart was haunted,And thy spirit, proud, undaunted,Clamored wildly -- wildly panted:"Mother! let my wish be granted;I will ne'er be mocked and tauntedThat I fear to meet our vaunted Foemen on the bloody field."They are thronging, mother! thronging, To a thousand fields of fame;Let me go -- 'tis wrong, and wrongingGod and thee to crush this longin...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Feast of the Assumption. - "A Night Prayer"
Dark! Dark! Dark!The sun is set; the day is dead: Thy Feast has fled;My eyes are wet with tears unshed; I bow my head;Where the star-fringed shadows softly sway I bend my knee,And, like a homesick child, I pray, Mary, to thee. Dark! Dark! Dark!And, all the day -- since white-robed priest In farthest East,In dawn's first ray -- began the Feast, I -- I the least --Thy least, and last, and lowest child, I called on thee!Virgin! didst hear? my words were wild; Didst think of me? Dark! Dark! Dark!Alas! and no! The angels bright, With wings as whiteAs a dream of snow in love and light, Flashe...
Vain is the chiming of forgotten bells That the wind sways above a ruined shrine.Vainer his voice in whom no longer dwells Hunger that craves immortal Bread and Wine.Light songs we breathe that perish with our breath Out of our lips that have not kissed the rod.They shall not live who have not tasted death. They only sing who are struck dumb by God.
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
Cooranbean
Years fifty, and seven to boot, have smitten the children of menSince sound of a voice or a foot came out of the head of that glen.The brand of black devil is there an evil wind moaneth aroundThere is doom, there is death in the air: a curse groweth up from the ground!No noise of the axe or the saw in that hollow unholy is heard,No fall of the hoof or the paw, no whirr of the wing of the bird;But a grey mother down by the sea, as wan as the foam on the strait,Has counted the beads on her knee these forty-nine winters and eight.Whenever an elder is asked a white-headed man of the woodsOf the terrible mystery masked where the dark everlastingly broods,Be sure he will turn to the bay, with his back to the glen in the range,And glide like a phantom away, with a countenanc...
Henry Kendall
Azrael's Count
"Uncovenanted Mercies" - From "Limits and Renewals" [1930]Lo! The Wild Cow of the Desert, her yeanling estrayed from her,Lost in the wind-plaited sand-dunes, athirst in the maze of them.Hot-foot she follows those foot-prints, the thrice-tangled ways of them.Her soul is shut save to one thing, the love-quest consuming herFearless she lows past the camp, our fires affright her not.Ranges she close to the tethered ones, the mares by the lances held.Noses she softly apart the veil in the women's tent.Next, withdrawn under moonlight, a shadow afar off,Fades. Ere men cry, "Hold her fast! darkness recovers her.She the all-crazed and forlorn, when the dogs threaten her,Only a side-tossed horn, as though a fly troubled her,Shows she hath heard, till a lance in the ...
Rudyard
To Postumus
O Postumus, my Postumus, the years are gliding past,And piety will never check the wrinkles coming fast,The ravages of time old age's swift advance has made,And death, which unimpeded comes to bear us to the shade.Old friend, although the tearless Pluto you may strive to please,And seek each year with thrice one hundred bullocks to appease,Who keeps the thrice-huge Geryon and Tityus his slaves,Imprisoned fast forevermore with cold and sombre waves,Yet must that flood so terrible be sailed by mortals all;Whether perchance we may be kings and live in royal hall,Or lowly peasants struggling long with poverty and dearth,Still must we cross who live upon the favors of the earth.And all in vain from bloody war and contest we are free,And from the wav...
Eugene Field
Samuel Butler Et Al.
Let me consider your emergenceFrom the milieu of our youth:We have played all the afternoon, grown hungry.No meal has been prepared, where have you been?Toward sun's decline we see you down the path,And run to meet you, and perhaps you smile,Or take us in your arms. Perhaps againYou look at us, say nothing, are absorbed,Or chide us for our dirty frocks or faces.Of running wild without our mealsYou do not speak.Then in the house, seized with a sudden joy,After removing gloves and hat, you run,As with a winged descending flight, and cry,Half song, half exclamation,Seize one of us,Crush one of us with mad embraces, biteEars of us in a rapture of affection."You shall have supper," then you say.The stove lids rattle, wood's p...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Merchant Ship
The sun oer the waters was throwingIn the freshness of morning its beams;And the breast of the ocean seemed glowingWith glittering silvery streams:A bark in the distance was boundingAway for the land on her lee;And the boatswains shrill whistle resoundingCame over and over the sea.The breezes blew fair and were guidingHer swiftly along on her track,And the billows successively passing,Were lost in the distance aback.The sailors seemed busy preparingFor anchor to drop ere the night;The red rusted cables in fathomsWere hauld from their prisons to light.Each rope and each brace was attendedBy stout-hearted sons of the main,Whose voices, in unison blended,Sang many a merry-toned strain.Forgotten their care and their...
Nothing Will Die
When will the stream be aweary of flowingUnder my eye?When will the wind be aweary of blowingOver the sky?When will the clouds be aweary of fleeting?When will the heart be aweary of beating?And nature die?Never, O, never, nothing will die;The stream flows,The wind blows,The cloud fleets,The heart beats,Nothing will die.Nothing will die;All things will changeThro eternity.Tis the worlds winter;Autumn and summerAre gone long ago;Earth is dry to the centre,But spring, a new comer,A spring rich and strange,Shall make the winds blowRound and round,Thro and thro,Here and there,Till the airAnd the groundShall be filld with life anew.The world wa...
The Murderer's Wine
My wife is dead and I am free!And I can guzzle all I want.When I came home without a centHer crying knifed the heart in me.I am as happy as a king;The air is pure, the sky divine...We had such sky another timeWhen first our love was blossoming!The awful thirst I feel todayWould need, to get it rightly slaked,All of the wine that it would takeTo fill her tomb; - a lot to say:I threw her in a well, and thenI even pitched some heavy stonesOut of the well-curb on her bones.0, I'll forget her, if I can!Naming those vows of tendernessFrom which no power can set us free,To reconcile us, as when weLoved with a drunken happiness,One night, along a road I named,I begged her for a rendezvous.
Charles Baudelaire