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Lines on the Death of Edward John Trelawny
Last high star of the years whose thunderStill mens listening remembrance hears,Last light left of our fathers years,Watched with honour and hailed with wonderThee too then have the years borne under,Thou too then hast regained thy peers.Wings that warred with the winds of morning,Storm-winds rocking the red great dawn,Close at last, and a film is drawnOver the eyes of the storm-bird, scorningNow no longer the loud winds warning,Waves that threaten or waves that fawn.Peers were none of thee left us living,Peers of theirs we shall see no more.Eight years over the full fourscoreKnew thee: now shalt thou sleep, forgivingAll griefs past of the wild worlds giving,Moored at last on the stormless shore.Worldwide liber...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
I Am The Only Being Whose Doom
I am the only being whose doomNo tongue would ask no eye would mournI never caused a thought of gloomA smile of joy since I was bornIn secret pleasure, secret tearsThis changeful life has slipped awayAs friendless after eighteen yearsAs lone as on my natal dayThere have been times I cannot hideThere have been times when this was drearWhen my sad soul forgot its prideAnd longed for one to love me hereBut those were in the early glowOf feelings since subdued by careAnd they have died so long agoI hardly now believe they wereFirst melted off the hope of youthThen Fancy's rainbow fast withdrewAnd then experience told me truthIn mortal bosoms never grew'Twas grief enough to think mankindAll...
Emily Bronte
Beyond.
It seemeth such a little way to me Across to that strange country - the Beyond; And yet, not strange, for it has grown to be The home of those of whom I am so fond, They make it seem familiar and most dear, As journeying friends bring distant regions near. So close it lies that when my sight is clear I think I almost see the gleaming strand. I know I feel those who have gone from here Come near enough sometimes to touch my hand. I often think, but for our veiled eyes, We should find Heaven right round about us lies. I cannot make it seem a day to dread, When from this dear earth I shall journey out To that still dearer country of the dead, And join th...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Dedication
I would be a torch unto your hand,A lamp upon your forehead, Labor,In the wild darkness before the DawnThat I shall never see...We shall advance together, my Beloved,Awaiting the mighty ushering...Together we shall make the last grand chargeAnd ride with gorgeous DeathWith all her spangles onAnd cymbals clashing...And you shall rush on exultant as I fall -Scattering a brief fire about your feet...Let it be so...Better - while life is quickAnd every pain immense and joy supreme,And all I have and amFlames upward to the dream...Than like a taper forgotten in the dawn,Burning out the wick.
Lola Ridge
Quia Nominor Leo - Sonnets
I.What part is left thee, lion? Ravenous beast,Which hadst the world for pasture, and for scopeAnd compass of thine homicidal hopeThe kingdom of the spirit of man, the feastOf souls subdued from west to sunless east,From blackening north to bloodred south aslope,All servile; earth for footcloth of the pope,And heaven for chancel-ceiling of the priest;Thou that hadst earth by right of rack and rod,Thou that hadst Rome because thy name was God,And by thy creeds gift heaven wherein to dwell;Heaven laughs with all his light and might aboveThat earth has cast thee out of faith and love;Thy part is but the hollow dream of hell.II.The light of life has faded from thy cause,High priest of heaven and hell and purgato...
On A Fan Of The Author's Design
Come gentle Air! th' AEolian shepherd said,While Procris panted in the secret shade:Come, gentle Air, the fairer Delia cries,While at her feet her swain expiring lies.Lo the glad gales o'er all her beauties stray,Breathe on her lips, and in her bosom play!In Delia's hand this toy is fatal found,Nor could that fabled dart more surely wound:Both gifts destructive to the givers prove;Alike both lovers fall by those they love.Yet guiltless too this bright destroyer lives,At random wounds, nor knows the wound she gives:She views the story with attentive eyes,And pities Procris, while her lover dies.
Alexander Pope
The House Of Sleep
When we have laid aside our last endeavour, And said farewell to one or two that weep,And issued from the house of life for ever, To find a lodging in the house of sleep--With eyes fast shut, in sunless chambers lying, With folded arms unmoved upon the breast,Beyond the noise of sorrow and of crying, Beyond the dread of dreaming, shall we rest?Or shall there come at last desire of waking, To walk again on hillsides that we know,When sunrise through the cold white mist is breaking, Or in the stillness of the after-glow?Shall there be yearning for the sound of voices, The sight of faces, and the touch of hands,The will that works, the spirit that rejoices, The heart that feels, the mind that understands?<...
Robert Fuller Murray
The Victor.
"Thou hast not lived! No aim of earthThy body serves, nor home nor birth;No children's eyes look up to theeTo solace thy mortality.""Thou hast not lived! Forbidden seasShut thee from Beauty's treasuries;Not for those hungry eyes of thineHer marbles gleam, her colors shine.""Thou hast not lived! Hast never broughtTo steadfast form thy hidden thought;Striving to speak, thou still art mute.And fain to bear, hast yet no fruit."So spake the Tempter, at his plot,But thee, my Soul, he counted not!Who mad'st me stand, serene and free.And give him answer dauntlessly:"Yea, shapes of earth are sweet and near.And home and child are very dear;Yet do I live, to be deniedThese things, and still be satisfied."
Margaret Steele Anderson
Taedium Vitae
To stab my youth with desperate knives, to wearThis paltry age's gaudy livery,To let each base hand filch my treasury,To mesh my soul within a woman's hair,And be mere Fortune's lackeyed groom, I swearI love it not! these things are less to meThan the thin foam that frets upon the sea,Less than the thistledown of summer airWhich hath no seed: better to stand aloofFar from these slanderous fools who mock my lifeKnowing me not, better the lowliest roofFit for the meanest hind to sojourn in,Than to go back to that hoarse cave of strifeWhere my white soul first kissed the mouth of sin.
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
The Real
The leaf is faded, and decayed the flower,The birds have ceased to sing in wayside bower,The babbling brook is silenced by the cold,And hill and vale the frost and snow enfold.The life we see seems hasting to the tombNor sun, nor star, relieves the dismal gloom;The good man suffers with the base and vile,And honesty and truth give place to guile.Things are not always as they seem to be;The outer surface only man may see.The summer sleeps beneath the quilt of snow,Behind the clouds is hid the solar glow,The babbling brook will burst its icy bands,And birds will sing, and trees will clap their hands.The fallen leaf has left a bud behind,And flowers will bloom of brightest hue and kind;For when we look beneath the outward crustWi...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Lines In Memory Of Edmund Morris
Dear Morris - here is your letter -Can my answer reach you now?Fate has left me your debtor,You will remember how;For I went away to Nantucket,And you to the Isle of Orleans,And when I was dawdling and dreamingOver the ways and meansOf answering, the power was denied me,Fate frowned and took her stand;I have your unanswered letterHere in my hand.This - in your famous scribble,It was ever a cryptic fist,Cuneiform or ChaldaicMeanings held in a mist.Dear Morris, (now I'm inditingAnd poring over your script)I gather from the writing,The coin that you had flipt,Turned tails; and so you compel meTo meet you at Touchwood Hills:Or, mayhap, you are trying to tell meThe sum of a painter's ills:Is that...
Duncan Campbell Scott
On The Death Of A Lady.
Thy home seemed not of earth - so blest But there has fall'n a shaft of fateThe dove is stricken; and the nest She warmed and cheered is desolate.But fairest not for thee, we mourn: Blest from thy birth, thou still art soThe tear must dew thine early urn For him whom thou hast taught to knowThe zest of joys - complete, as knows Thy vital flame, the pang that tostAnd changed thee past, where now it glows Knowing, yet feeling all is lost.There is a flower of tender white And, on its spotless bosom, playThe moon's soft beams, one lovely night; But when appears the morning ray'Tis shut and withered - even now Around your lime I see it wave; [FN#27]'Tis pure, and fresh, and fair, as thou...
Maria Gowen Brooks
An Inscription
Precious the box that Mary brakeOf spikenard for her Master's sake,But ah! it held nought half so dearAs the sweet dust that whitens here.The greater wonder who shall say:To make so white a soul of clay,From clay to win a face so fair,Those strange great eyes, that sunlit hairA-ripple o'er her witty brain, -Or turn all back to dust again.Who knows - but, in some happy hour,The God whose strange alchemic powerWrought her of dust, again may turnTo woman this immortal urn.
Richard Le Gallienne
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto XIV
"Say who is he around our mountain winds,Or ever death has prun'd his wing for flight,That opes his eyes and covers them at will?""I know not who he is, but know thus muchHe comes not singly. Do thou ask of him,For thou art nearer to him, and take heedAccost him gently, so that he may speak."Thus on the right two Spirits bending eachToward the other, talk'd of me, then bothAddressing me, their faces backward lean'd,And thus the one began: "O soul, who yetPent in the body, tendest towards the sky!For charity, we pray thee' comfort us,Recounting whence thou com'st, and who thou art:For thou dost make us at the favour shown theeMarvel, as at a thing that ne'er hath been.""There stretches through the midst of Tuscany,"I stra...
Dante Alighieri
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 Peace Maker
It has a point of neither sexBut comes in guise of both,And, doubly dangerous complex,It is a thing to loathe,A lady with her sweet, sad smile,A gentleman on oath.Strip off the mother-veil, and fur!And signs of quiet taste.The dead childs locket take from her(The dead mans gift in haste)And wash from every evil lineThe layers of filling paste!From saddened eyes the hells own glare!From sweet mouth blasphemy!Wrench out the gold-filled false teeth thereThat twice mock honesty,And leave the evil face awryFor married folk to see.For foolish girl wives in despair,For mens and childrens sakes,Let loose the glossed and padded hairTo writhe like scorching snakes!And strip the barren bod...
Henry Lawson
Farewell To Arcady
With sombre mien, the Evening grayComes nagging at the heels of Day,And driven faster and still fasterBefore the dusky-mantled Master,The light fades from her fearful eyes,She hastens, stumbles, falls, and dies.Beside me Amaryllis weeps;The swelling tears obscure the deepsOf her dark eyes, as, mistily,The rushing rain conceals the sea.Here, lay my tuneless reed away,--I have no heart to tempt a lay.I scent the perfume of the roseWhich by my crystal fountain grows.In this sad time, are roses blowing?And thou, my fountain, art thou flowing,While I who watched thy waters springAm all too sad to smile or sing?Nay, give me back my pipe again,It yet shall breathe this single strain:Farewell to Arcady!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Revisitation
As I lay awake at night-timeIn an ancient country barrack known to ancient cannoneers,And recalled the hopes that heralded each seeming brave and bright timeOf my primal purple years,Much it haunted me that, nigh there,I had borne my bitterest loss - when One who went, came not again;In a joyless hour of discord, in a joyless-hued July there -A July just such as then.And as thus I brooded longer,With my faint eyes on the feeble square of wan-lit window frame,A quick conviction sprung within me, grew, and grew yet stronger,That the month-night was the same,Too, as that which saw her leave meOn the rugged ridge of Waterstone, the peewits plaining round;And a lapsing twenty years had ruled that - as it were to grieve me -I should near ...
Thomas Hardy