Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 132 of 1036
Previous
Next
In A Cathedral City
These people have not heard your name;No loungers in this placid placeHave helped to bruit your beauty's fame.The grey Cathedral, towards whose faceBend eyes untold, has met not yours;Your shade has never swept its base,Your form has never darked its doors,Nor have your faultless feet once thrownA pensive pit-pat on its floors.Along the street to maids well knownBlithe lovers hum their tender airs,But in your praise voice not a tone.- Since nought bespeaks you here, or bears,As I, your imprint through and through,Here might I rest, till my heart sharesThe spot's unconsciousness of you!SALISBURY.
Thomas Hardy
A Reformer.
You call me trifler, fainéant, And bid me give my life an aim! You're most unjust, dear. Hear me out, And own your hastiness to blame. I live with but a single thought; My inmost heart and soul are set On one sole task a mighty one To simplify our alphabet. Five vowel sounds we use in speech; They're A, and E, I, O, and U: I mean to cut them down to four. You "wonder what good that will do." Why, this cold earth will bloom again, Eden itself be half re-won, When breaks the dawn of my success And U and I at last are one.
George Augustus Baker, Jr.
Invitation To A Young But Learned Friend To Abandon Archaeology For The Moment, And Play Once More With His Neglected Muse.
In those good days when we were young and wise,You spake to music, you with the thoughtful eyes,And God looked down from heaven, pleased to hearA young man's song arise so firm and clear.Has Fancy died? The Morning Star gone cold?Why are you silent? Have we grown so old?Must I alone keep playing? Will not you,Lord of the Measures, string your lyre anew?Lover of Greece, is this the richest storeYou bring us,--withered leaves and dusty lore,And broken vases widowed of their wine,To brand you pedant while you stand divine?Decorous words beseem the learned lip,But Poets have the nicer scholarship.In English glades they watch the Cyprian glow,And all the Maenad melodies they know.They hear strange voices in a London street,And track the ...
James Elroy Flecker
A Daughter Of Eve.
A fool I was to sleep at noon,And wake when night is chillyBeneath the comfortless cold moon;A fool to pluck my rose too soon,A fool to snap my lily.My garden-plot I have not kept;Faded and all-forsaken,I weep as I have never wept:Oh it was summer when I slept,It's winter now I waken.Talk what you please of future springAnd sun-warmed sweet to-morrow: -Stripped bare of hope and every thing,No more to laugh, no more to sing,I sit alone with sorrow.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Discontent
Light human nature is too lightly tostAnd ruffled without cause, complaining onRestless with rest, until, being overthrown,It learneth to lie quiet. Let a frostOr a small wasp have crept to the inner-mostOf our ripe peach, or let the wilful sunShine westward of our window, straight we runA furlong's sigh as if the world were lost.But what time through the heart and through the brainGod hath transfixed us, we, so moved before,Attain to a calm. Ay, shouldering weights of pain,We anchor in deep waters, safe from shore,And hear submissive o'er the stormy mainGod's chartered judgments walk for evermore.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
I Rose From Dreamless Hours
I rose from dreamless hours and sought the mornThat beat upon my window: from the sillI watched sweet lands, where Autumn light newbornSwayed through the trees and lingered on the hill.If things so lovely are, why labour stillTo dream of something more than this I see?Do I remember tales of Galilee,I who have slain my faith and freed my will?Let me forget dead faith, dead mystery,Dead thoughts of things I cannot comprehend.Enough the light mysterious in the tree,Enough the friendship of my chosen friend.
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXV.
S' io avessi pensato che sì care.HIS POEMS WERE WRITTEN ONLY TO SOOTHE HIS OWN GRIEF: OTHERWISE HE WOULD HAVE LABOURED TO MAKE THEM MORE DESERVING OF THE FAME THEY HAVE ACQUIRED. Had I e'er thought that to the world so dearThe echo of my sighs would be in rhyme,I would have made them in my sorrow's primeRarer in style, in number more appear.Since she is dead my muse who prompted here,First in my thoughts and feelings at all time,All power is lost of tender or sublimeMy rough dark verse to render soft and clear.And certes, my sole study and desireWas but--I knew not how--in those long yearsTo unburthen my sad heart, not fame acquire.I wept, but wish'd no honour in my tears.Fain would I now taste joy; but that high fair,Sile...
Francesco Petrarca
Refuge
Where swallows and wheatfields are,O hamlet brown and still,O river that shineth far,By meadow, pier, and mill:O endless sunsteeped plain,With forests in dim blue shrouds,And little wisps of rain,Falling from far-off clouds:I come from the choking airOf passion, doubt, and strife,With a spirit and mind laid bareTo your healing breadth of life:O fruitful and sacred ground,O sunlight and summer sky,Absorb me and fold me round,For broken and tired am I.
Archibald Lampman
Sonnet VIII.
With many a weary step, at length I gain Thy summit, Lansdown; and the cool breeze plays, Gratefully round my brow, as hence the gazeReturns to dwell upon the journeyed plain. 'Twas a long way and tedious! to the eyeTho fair the extended vale, and fair to viewThe falling leaves of many a faded hue, That eddy in the wild gust moaning by.Even so it fared with Life! in discontentRestless thro' Fortune's mingled scenes I went, Yet wept to think they would return no more!But cease fond heart in such sad thoughts to roam,For surely thou ere long shall reach thy home, And pleasant is the way that lies before.
Robert Southey
On Fortune.
This is my comfort when she's most unkind:She can but spoil me of my means, not mind.
Robert Herrick
Fragment: 'The Rude Wind Is Singing'.
The rude wind is singingThe dirge of the music dead;The cold worms are clingingWhere kisses were lately fed.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Marmion: Introduction To Canto V.
When dark December glooms the day,And takes our autumn joys away;When short and scant the sunbeam throws,Upon the weary waste of snows,A cold and profitless regard,Like patron on a needy bard,When silvan occupation's done,And o'er the chimney rests the gun,And hang, in idle trophy, near,The game-pouch, fishing-rod, and spear;When wiry terrier, rough and grim,And greyhound, with his length of limb,And pointer, now employed no more,Cumber our parlour's narrow floor;When in his stall the impatient steedIs long condemned to rest and feed;When from our snow-encircled home,Scarce cares the hardiest step to roam,Since path is none, save that to bringThe needful water from the spring;When wrinkled news-page, thrice conned o'er,<...
Walter Scott
The Statue And The Bust
Theres a palace in Florence, the world knows well,And a statue watches it from the square,And this story of both do our townsmen tell.Ages ago, a lady there,At the farthest window facing the East,Asked, Who rides by with the royal air?The bridesmaids prattle around her ceased;She leaned forth, one on either hand;They saw how the blush of the bride increasedThey felt by its beats her heart expandAs one at each ear and both in a breathWhispered, The Great-Duke Ferdinand.That self-same instant, underneath,The Duke rode past in his idle way,Empty and fine like a swordless sheath.Gay he rode, with a friend as gay,Till he threw his head back, Who is she?A bride the Riccardi brings home today.H...
Robert Browning
Sonnet CXLIII.
Per mezzo i boschi inospiti e selvaggi.EVER THINKING ON HER, HE PASSES FEARLESS AND SAFE THROUGH THE FOREST OF ARDENNES. Through woods inhospitable, wild, I rove,Where armèd travellers bend their fearful way;Nor danger dread, save from that sun of love,Bright sun! which darts a soul-enflaming ray.Of her I sing, all-thoughtless as I stray,Whose sweet idea strong as heaven's shall prove:And oft methinks these pines, these beeches, moveLike nymphs; 'mid which fond fancy sees her playI seem to hear her, when the whispering galeSteals through some thick-wove branch, when sings a bird,When purls the stream along yon verdant vale.How grateful might this darksome wood appear,Where horror reigns, where scarce a sound is heard;But, ...
Summer Tints.
How sweet I've wander'd bosom-deep in grain,When Summer's mellowing pencil sweeps his shadeOf ripening tinges o'er the checquer'd plain:Light tawny oat-lands with a yellow blade;And bearded corn, like armies on parade;Beans lightly scorch'd, that still preserve their green;And nodding lands of wheat in bleachy brown;And streaking banks, where many a maid and clownContrast a sweetness to the rural scene,--Forming the little haycocks up and down:While o'er the face of nature softly sweptThe ling'ring wind, mixing the brown and greenSo sweet, that shepherds from their bowers have crept,And stood delighted musing o'er the scene.
John Clare
His Country
[He travels southward, and looks around;]I journeyed from my native spotAcross the south sea shine,And found that people in hall and cotLaboured and suffered each his lotEven as I did mine.[and cannot discern the boundary]Thus noting them in meads and martsIt did not seem to meThat my dear country with its hearts,Minds, yearnings, worse and better partsHad ended with the sea.[of his native country;]I further and further went anon,As such I still surveyed,And further yet - yea, on and on,And all the men I looked uponHad heart-strings fellow-made.[or where his duties to his fellow-creatures end;]I traced the whole terrestrial round,Homing the other side;Then said I, "What is there to boundMy d...
To ----
I cannot write old verses here, Dead things a thousand years away,When all the life of the young year Is in the summer day.The roses make the world so sweet, The bees, the birds have such a tune,There's such a light and such a heat And such a joy this June,One must expand one's heart with praise, And make the memory secureOf sunshine and the woodland days And summer twilights pure.Oh listen rather! Nature's song Comes from the waters, beating tides,Green-margined rivers, and the throng Of streams on mountain-sides.So fair those water-spirits are, Such happy strength their music fills,Our joy shall be to wander far And find them on the hills.
George MacDonald
Palais Royale
The night cold as nuggets, dark as acorn,against your chest; snow fallinglike abandoned echoes releasing energyinto the spyglass, umbrella moon.A solitary figure trapping hapless sparrowsnot in a net but with his footprintsdoubling as dungeons against the sun -here & there rusting eavestroughs ballooninginto avenging shadows their harpsichord voicesspun on dreams Dick Whittington once used to buy a cat.And once Tom Thumb Upstaged Peter Pan by appearingunder a petunia but this is not likely to happen soon.The dawn, forlorn & grey, is a court muffin's handkerchiefwaved at a sailor far out at sea.
Paul Cameron Brown