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The Old Clock On The Stairs
L'eternite est une pendule, dont le balancier dit et redit sans cesse ces deux mots seulement dans le silence des tombeaux:"Toujours! jamais! Jamais! toujours!"--JACQUES BRIDAINE.Somewhat back from the village streetStands the old-fashioned country-seat.Across its antique porticoTall poplar-trees their shadows throw;And from its station in the hallAn ancient timepiece says to all,-- "Forever--never! Never--forever!"Half-way up the stairs it stands,And points and beckons with its handsFrom its case of massive oak,Like a monk, who, under his cloak,Crosses himself, and sighs, alas!With sorrowful voice to all who pass,-- "Forever--never! Never--forever!"By day its voice is...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Shut Out.
"The drunkard shall not enter the Kingdom of Heaven."Far, far beyond the skies,The land of promise lies;When Death our souls release,A home of love and peace,Has been prepared for all,Who heed the gracious call,Drunkards that goal ne'er win, -They cannot enter in.Time noiselessly flits by,Eternity draws nigh;Will the fleet joy you gain,Compensate for the pain,That through an endless day,Will wring your soul for aye?Slave to beer, rum, or gin,You cannot enter in.Dash down the flowing bowl,Endanger not thy soul;Ponder those words of dread,That God Himself has said.Hurl the vile tempter down,And win and wear the crown,Drunkard, forsake thy sin,Thou mayst then enter in.
John Hartley
A Prisoner In A Dungeon Deep
A prisoner in a dungeon deepSat musing silently;His head was rested on his hand,His elbow on his knee.Turned he his thoughts to future timesOr are they backward cast?For freedom is he pining nowOr mourning for the past?No, he has lived so long enthralledAlone in dungeon gloomThat he has lost regret and hope,Has ceased to mourn his doom.He pines not for the light of dayNor sighs for freedom now;Such weary thoughts have ceased at lengthTo rack his burning brow.Lost in a maze of wandering thoughtsHe sits unmoving there;That posture and that look proclaimThe stupor of despair.Yet not for ever did that moodOf sullen calm prevail;There was a something in his eyeThat told another ...
Anne Bronte
An Inscription
A conqueror as provident as brave,He robbed the cradle to supply the grave.His reign laid quantities of human dust:He fell upon the just and the unjust.
Ambrose Bierce
Passion And The Skull
An Old ColophonPassion sits on the skullOf Humanity,And this infidel enthronedLaughs shamelessly,And gaily blows round bubblesThat will fly,As if to join with worldsDeep in the sky.Rising on high, the frailLuminous globe,Shatters and bursts its slim soulLike a dream of gold.I hear at each bubble, the skullMoan and contend:'This vicious, ridiculous game,When will it end?What you are blowing awayAgain and again,You murderous fiend, is my bodyMy blood and my brain!'
Charles Baudelaire
Night.
Lo! where the car of Day down slopes of flameOn burnished axle quits the drowsy skies!And as his snorting steeds of glowing brassRush 'neath the earth, a glimmering dust of goldFrom their fierce hoofs o'er heaven's azure meadsRolls to yon star that burns beneath the moon.With solemn tread and holy-stoled, star-bound,The Night steps in, sad votaress, like a nun,To pace lone corridors of th' ebon-archéd sky.How sad! how beautiful! her raven locksPale-filleted with stars that dance their sheenOn her deep, holy eyes, and woo to sleep,Sleep or the easeful slumber of white Death!How calm o'er this great water, in its flowSilent and vast, smoothes yon cold sister sphere,Her lucid chasteness feathering the wax-white foam!As o'er a troubled brow falls c...
Madison Julius Cawein
Silence
There are some qualities some incorporate things,That have a double life, which thus is madeA type of that twin entity which springsFrom matter and light, evinced in solid and shade.There is a twofold Silence sea and shoreBody and soul. One dwells in lonely places,Newly with grass o'ergrown; some solemn graces,Some human memories and tearful lore,Render him terrorless: his name's "No More."He is the corporate Silence: dread him not!No power hath he of evil in himself;But should some urgent fate (untimely lot!)Bring thee to meet his shadow (nameless elf,That haunteth the lone regions where hath trodNo foot of man), commend thyself to God!
Edgar Allan Poe
On Robert Emmet's Grave.
6.No trump tells thy virtues - the grave where they restWith thy dust shall remain unpolluted by fame,Till thy foes, by the world and by fortune caressed,Shall pass like a mist from the light of thy name.7.When the storm-cloud that lowers o'er the day-beam is gone,Unchanged, unextinguished its life-spring will shine;When Erin has ceased with their memory to groan,She will smile through the tears of revival on thine.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto XIX
Before my sight appear'd, with open wings,The beauteous image, in fruition sweetGladdening the thronged spirits. Each did seemA little ruby, whereon so intenseThe sun-beam glow'd that to mine eyes it cameIn clear refraction. And that, which nextBefalls me to portray, voice hath not utter'd,Nor hath ink written, nor in fantasyWas e'er conceiv'd. For I beheld and heardThe beak discourse; and, what intention form'dOf many, singly as of one express,Beginning: "For that I was just and piteous,l am exalted to this height of glory,The which no wish exceeds: and there on earthHave I my memory left, e'en by the badCommended, while they leave its course untrod."Thus is one heat from many embers felt,As in that image many were the loves,...
Dante Alighieri
The Right Honourable Edmund Burke
Why mourns the ingenuous Moralist, whose mindScience has stored, and Piety refined,That fading Chivalry displays no moreHer pomp and stately tournaments of yore!Lo! when Philosophy and Truth advance,Scared at their frown, she drops her glittering lance;Round her reft castles the pale ivy crawls,And sunk and silent are her bannered halls!As when far off the golden evening sails,And slowly sink the fancy-painted vales,With rich pavilions spread in long array;So rolls the enchanter's radiant realm away;So on the sight the parting glories fade,The gorgeous vision sets in endless shade.But shall the musing mind for this lament,Or mourn the wizard's Gothic fabric rent!Shall he, with Fancy's poor and pensive child,Gaze on his shadowy vales, and ...
William Lisle Bowles
The Inheritance
Since you did departOut of my reach, my darling,Into the hidden,I see each shadow startWith recognition, and IAm wonder-ridden.I am dazed with the farewell,But I scarcely feel your loss.You left me a giftOf tongues, so the shadows tellMe things, and silences tossMe their drift.You sent me a cloven fireOut of death, and it burns in the draughtOf the breathing hosts,Kindles the darkening pyreFor the sorrowful, till strange brands waftLike candid ghosts.Form after form, in the streetsWaves like a ghost along,Kindled to me;The star above the house-top greetsMe every eve with a longSong fierily.All day long, the townGlimmers with subtle ghostsGoing up and downI...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Rhymes And Rhythms - VII
There's a regretSo grinding, so immitigably sad,Remorse thereby feels tolerant, even glad. . . .Do you not know it yet?For deeds undoneRankle, and snarl, and hunger for their dueTill there seems naught so despicable as youIn all the grin o' the sun.Like an old shoeThe sea spurns and the land abhors, you lieAbout the beach of Time, till by-and-byDeath, that derides you too,Death, as he goesHis ragman's round, espies you, where you stray,With half-an-eye, and kicks you out of his way;And then--and then, who knowsBut the kind GraveTurns on you, and you feel the convict Worm,In that black bridewell working out his term,Hanker and grope and crave?'Poor fool that might,That might, yet would ...
William Ernest Henley
At Eleusis
Men of Eleusis, ye that with long stavesSit in the market-houses, and speak wordsMade sweet with wisdom as the rare wine isThickened with honey; and ye sons of theseWho in the glad thick streets go up and downFor pastime or grave traffic or mere chance;And all fair women having rings of goldOn hands or hair; and chiefest over theseI name you, daughters of this man the king,Who dipping deep smooth pitchers of pure brassUnder the bubbled wells, till each round lipStooped with loose gurgle of waters incoming,Found me an old sick woman, lamed and lean,Beside a growth of builded olive-boughsWhence multiplied thick song of thick-plumed throatsAlso wet tears filled up my hollow handsBy reason of my crying into themAnd pitied me; for as cold wate...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The New Locksley Hall. "Forty Years After."
Comrade, yet a little further I would go before the nightCloses round and chills in darkness all the glorious sunset light -Yet a little, by the cliff there, till the stately home I seeOf the man who once was with us, comrade once with you and me!Nay, but leave me, pass alone there; stay awhile and gaze againOn the various-jewelled waters and the dreamy southern main,For the evening breeze is sighing in the quiet of the hillsMoving down in cliff and terrace to the singing sweet sea-rills,While the river, silent-stealing, thro' the copse and thro' the leaWinds her waveless way eternal to the welcome of the sea.Yes, within that green-clad homestead, gardened grounds and velvet easeOf a home where culture reigneth and the chambers whisper peace,Is the man, the seer and s...
Francis William Lauderdale Adams
Neap-Tide
Far off is the sea, and the land is afar:The low banks reach at the sky,Seen hence, and are heavenward high;Though light for the leap of a boy they are,And the far sea late was nigh.The fair wild fields and the circling downs,The bright sweet marshes and meadsAll glorious with flowerlike weeds,The great grey churches, the sea-washed towns,Recede as a dream recedes.The world draws back, and the world's light wanes,As a dream dies down and is dead;And the clouds and the gleams overheadChange, and change; and the sea remains,A shadow of dreamlike dread.Wild, and woful, and pale, and grey,A shadow of sleepless fear,A corpse with the night for bier,The fairest thing that beholds the dayLies haggard and hopeless here.And the w...
Copernicus
The neighbours gossiped idly at the door.Copernicus lay dying overhead.His little throng of friends, with startled eyes,Whispered together, in that dark house of dreams,From which by one dim crevice in the wallHe used to watch the stars. "His book has comeFrom Nuremberg at last; but who would dareTo let him see it now?"-- "They have altered it!Though Rome approved in full, this preface, look,Declares that his discoveries are a dream!"--"He has asked a thousand times if it has come;Could we tear out those pages?"-- "He'd suspect."--"What shall be done, then?"-- "Hold it back awhile.That was the priest's voice in the room above.He may forget it. Those last sacraments
Alfred Noyes
On A Suicide.
Earth'd up here lies an imp o' hell, Planted by Satan's dibble, Poor silly wretch, he's damn'd himsel' To save the Lord the trouble.
Robert Burns
Song From The Wandering Jew.
See yon opening flowerSpreads its fragrance to the blast;It fades within an hour,Its decay is pale - is fast.Paler is yon maiden;Faster is her heart's decay;Deep with sorrow laden,She sinks in death away.