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The Moralizer Corrected. A Tale.
A hermit (or if chance you holdThat title now too trite and old),A man, once young, who lived retiredAs hermit could have well desired,His hours of study closed at last,And finishd his concise repast,Stoppled his cruise, replaced his bookWithin its customary nook,And, staff in hand, set forth to shareThe sober cordial of sweet air,Like Isaac, with a mind appliedTo serious thought at evening-tide.Autumnal rains had made it chill,And from the trees, that fringed his hill,Shades slanting at the close of day,Chilld more his else delightful way.Distant a little mile he spiedA western banks still sunny side,And right toward the favourd placeProceeding with his nimblest pace,In hope to bask a little yet,Just reachd ...
William Cowper
My Thoughts To-Night.
I sit by the fire musing, With sad and downcast eye,And my laden breast gives utt'rance To many a weary sigh;Hushed is each worldly feeling, Dimmed is each day-dream bright -O heavy heart, can'st tell me Why I'm so sad to-night?'Tis not that I mourn the freshness Of youth fore'er gone by -Its life with pulse high springing, Its cloudless, radiant eye -Finding bliss in every sunbeam, Delight in every part,Well springs of purest pleasure In its high ardent heart.Nor yet is it for those dear ones Who've passed from earth awayThat I grieve - in spirit kneeling Above their beds of clay;O, no! while my glance upraising To yon calm shining sky,My pale lips, quivering, mur...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Arms And The Man. - The War Horse Draws The Plough.
At last our Fathers saw the Treaty sealed,Victory unhelmed her broad, majestic brow,The Sword became a Sickle in the field, The war horse drew the plough.There is a time when men shape for their LandIts institutions 'mid some tempests' roar,Just as the waves that thunder on the strand Shape out and round the shore.Then comes a day when institutions turnAnd carve the men, or cast them into moulds;One Era trembles while volcanoes burn, Another Age beholdsThe hardened lava changed to hills and leas,With blooming glades and orchards intermixed,Vineyards which look abroad o'er purple seas, And deep foundations fixed.So, when fell Chaos like a baleful FateWhat we had won seemed bent to snatch ...
James Barron Hope
Joy
What were this life without her?Joy, whose young face is sweetWith dreams that flit about her,And rapture wild of feet!With hope, that knows no languor,And love, that knows no sighs,And mirth, like some rich anger,High-sparkling in her eyes.Come! bid adieu to Sorrow;And arm in arm with Joy,We 'll journey towards Tomorrow,And let no Care decoyOur souls from all clean Pleasures,That take from Time's lean handThe hour-glass he treasures,And change to gold its sand.
Madison Julius Cawein
Thanksgiving.
[Nov. 26, 1857, during the great financial depression.]Father, our thanks are due to theeFor many a blessing given,By thy paternal love and care,From the bounty-horn of heaven.We know that still that horn is filledWith blessings for our race,And we calmly look thro' winter's stormTo thy benignant face.Father, we raise our thanks to Thee,Who seldom thanked before;And seldom bent the stubborn kneeThy goodness to adore:But Father, thou hast blessings pouredOn all our wayward daysAnd now thy mercies manifoldHave filled our hearts with praiseThe winter-storm may rack and roar;We do not fear its blast;And we'll bear with faith and fortitudeThe lot that thou hast cast.But Father, Father...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Rich Man, Poor Man
'Rich man, Poor man, Beggar man, Thief, Doctor, Lawyer, Merchant, Chief.'IHighway, stretched along the sun,Highway, thronged till day is done;Where the drifting Face replacesWave on wave on wave of faces,And you count them, one by one: 'Rich man--Poor man--Beggar man--Thief: Doctor--Lawyer--Merchant--Chief.'Is it soothsay?--Is it fun?Young ones, like as wave and wave;Old ones, like as grave and grave;Tide on tide of human facesWith what human undertow!Rich man, poor man, beggar-man, thief!--Tell me of the eddying spaces,Show me where the lost ones go;Like and lost, as leaf and leaf.What's your secret grim refrainBack and forth and back again,Once, and now, and alway...
Josephine Preston Peabody
Autumn-Time.
Like music heard in mellow chime,The charm of her transforming time Upon my senses stealsAs softly as from sunny walls,In day's decline, their shadow falls Across the sleeping fields.A fair, illumined bookIs nature's page whereon I look While "autumn turns the leaves;"And many a thought of her designsBetween those rare, resplendent lines My fancy interweaves.I dream of aborigines,Who must have copied from the trees The fashions of the day:Those gorgeous topknots for the head,Of yellow tufts and feathers red, With beads and sinews gay.I wonder if the saints beholdSuch pageantry of colors bold Beyond the radiant sky;And if the tints of ParadiseAre heightened by the strange...
Hattie Howard
The Cry Of A Lost Soul
In that black forest, where, when day is done,With a snakes stillness glides the AmazonDarkly from sunset to the rising sun,A cry, as of the pained heart of the wood,The long, despairing moan of solitudeAnd darkness and the absence of all good,Startles the traveller, with a sound so drear,So full of hopeless agony and fear,His heart stands still and listens like his ear.The guide, as if he heard a dead-bell toll,Starts, drops his oar against the gunwales thole,Crosses himself, and whispers, A lost soul!No, Señor, not a bird. I know it well,It is the pained soul of some infidelOr cursed heretic that cries from hell.Poor fool! with hope still mocking his despair,He wanders, shrieking on the midnight airFo...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Dorcas
If I might guess, then guess I would That, mid the gathered folk, This gentle Dorcas one day stood, And heard when Jesus spoke. She saw the woven seamless coat-- Half envious, for his sake: "Oh, happy hands," she said, "that wrought The honoured thing to make!" Her eyes with longing tears grow dim: She never can come nigh To work one service poor for him For whom she glad would die! But, hark, he speaks! Oh, precious word! And she has heard indeed! "When did we see thee naked, Lord, And clothed thee in thy need?" "The King shall answer, Inasmuch As to my brethren ye Did it--even to the least of such-- Ye...
George MacDonald
Aspiring Miss De Laine
Certain facts which serve to explainThe physical charms of Miss Addie De Laine,Who, as the common reports obtain,Surpassed in complexion the lily and rose;With a very sweet mouth and a retrousse nose;A figure like Hebes, or that which revolvesIn a milliners window, and partially solvesThat question which mentor and moralist pains,If grace may exist minus feeling or brains.Of course the young lady had beaux by the score,All that she wanted, what girl could ask more?Lovers that sighed and lovers that swore,Lovers that danced and lovers that played,Men of profession, of leisure, and trade;But one, who was destined to take the high partOf holding that mythical treasure, her heart,This lover, the wonder and envy of town,Was a practicin...
Bret Harte
The Creed To Be
Our thoughts are molding unmade spheres, And, like a blessing or a curse,They thunder down the formless years, And ring throughout the universe.We build our futures, by the shape Of our desires, and not by acts.There is no pathway of escape; No priest-made creeds can alter facts.Salvation is not begged or bought; Too long this selfish hope sufficed;Too long man reeked with lawless thought, And leaned upon a tortured Christ.Like shriveled leaves, these worn out creeds Are dropping from Religion's tree;The world begins to know its needs, And souls are crying to be free.Free from the load of fear and grief, Man fashioned in an ignorant age;Free from the ache of unbelief He fle...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Dominion.
When found the rose delight in her fair hue?Color is nothing to this world; 'tis IThat see it. Farther, I have found, my soul,That trees are nothing to their fellow trees;It is but I that love their stateliness,And I that, comforting my heart, do sitAt noon beneath their shadow. I will stepOn the ledges of this world, for it is mine;But the other world ye wot of, shall go too;I will carry it in my bosom. O my world,That was not built with clay! Consider it(This outer world we tread on) as a harp, -A gracious instrument on whose fair stringsWe learn those airs we shall be set to playWhen mortal hours are ended. Let the wings,Man, of thy spirit move on it as wind,And draw forth melody. Why shouldst thou yetLie grovelling? More is w...
Jean Ingelow
The Stars' Accusal
How can the makers of unrighteous wars Stand the accusal of the watchful stars?To stand--A dust-speck, facing the infinitudesOf Thine unfathomable dome, a night like this,--To stand full-face to Thy High Majesties,Thy myriad worlds in solemn watchfulness,--Watching, watching, watching all below,And man in all his wilfulness for woe!--Dear Lord, one wonders that Thou bearest stillWith man on whom Thou didst such grace bestow,And with his wilful faculty for woe!Those sleepless sentinels! They may be worldsAll peopled like our own. But, as I stand,They are to me the myriad eyes of God,--Watching, watching, watching all below,And man in all his wilfulness for woe.And then--to thinkWhat those same piercing eyes l...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Ezekiel
"They hear Thee not, O God! nor see;Beneath Thy rod they mock at Thee;The princes of our ancient lineLie drunken with Assyrian wine;The priests around Thy altar speakThe false words which their hearers seek;And hymns which Chaldea's wanton maidsHave sung in Dura's idol-shadesAre with the Levites' chant ascending,With Zion's holiest anthems blending!On Israel's bleeding bosom set,The heathen heel is crushing yet;The towers upon our holy hillEcho Chaldean footsteps still.Our wasted shrines, who weeps for them?Who mourneth for Jerusalem?Who turneth from his gains away?Whose knee with mine is bowed to pray?Who, leaving feast and purpling cup,Takes Zion's lamentation up?A sad and thoughtful youth, I wentWith...
At Michaelmas.
About the time of Michael's feastAnd all his angels,There comes a word to man and beastBy dark evangels.Then hearing what the wild things sayTo one another,Those creatures first born of our grayMysterious Mother,The greatness of the world's unrestSteals through our pulses;Our own life takes a meaning guessedFrom the torn dulse's.The draft and set of deep sea-tidesSwirling and flowing,Bears every filmy flake that rides,Grandly unknowing.The sunlight listens; thin and fineThe crickets whistle;And floating midges fill the shineLike a seeding thistle.The hawkbit flies his golden flagFrom rocky pasture,Bidding his legions never lagThrough morning's vasture.Soon we sh...
Bliss Carman
Sonnet CXXX.
Amor, che vedi ogni pensiero aperto.HE CARES NOT FOR SUFFERINGS, SO THAT HE DISPLEASE NOT LAURA. Love, thou who seest each secret thought display'd,And the sad steps I take, with thee sole guide;This throbbing breast, to thee thrown open wide,To others' prying barr'd, thine eyes pervade.Thou know'st what efforts, following thee, I made,While still from height to height thy pinions glide;Nor deign'st one pitying look to turn asideOn him who, fainting, treads a trackless glade.I mark from far the mildly-beaming rayTo which thou goad'st me through the devious maze;Alas! I want thy wings, to speed my way--Henceforth, a distant homager, I'll gaze,Content by silent longings to decay,So that my sighs for her in her no anger raise...
Francesco Petrarca
Pegasus
The ancients made no end of fussAbout a horse named Pegasus,A famous flyer of his time,Who often soared to heights sublime,When backed by some poetic chapFor the Parnassus Handicap.Alas for fame! The other dayI saw an ancient "one-hoss shay"Stop at the Mont de Piété,And, lo! alighting from the same,A bard, whom I forbear to name.Noting the poor beast's rusty hide(The horse, I mean), methought I spiedWhat once were wings. Incredulous,I cried, "Can this be Pegasus!"
Oliver Herford
Father Of Universal Man
Father of Universal Man,Where'er in this wide world he roam,Not known to thee by kith or clan,Nor height, nor breadth of mental dome,Nor babbling tongue, nor sounding creed,But by his woe and common need.The pushing Anglo-Saxon race,The Celts with wealth of heart and mind,The Esquimaux of leaden face,The Arabs whom no chain can bind,With hardy Boers and all the rest,Are with one common Father blest.And all are brothers, though at timesOur flashing swords obscure the sun.We ring aloud our Christmas chimes,But louder sounds the booming gun,And brother is by brother slain,And kindred ties are rent in twain.Yet Thou art true whate'er betide;Thy heart o'er human woe doth melt;For men of every race Christ die...
Joseph Horatio Chant