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The Portrait Of A Child.
("Oui, ce front, ce sourire.")[Bk. V. xxii., November, 1825.]That brow, that smile, that cheek so fair,Beseem my child, who weeps and plays:A heavenly spirit guards her ways,From whom she stole that mixture rare.Through all her features shining mild,The poet sees an angel there,The father sees a child.And by their flame so pure and bright,We see how lately those sweet eyesHave wandered down from Paradise,And still are lingering in its light.All earthly things are but a shadeThrough which she looks at things above,And sees the holy Mother-maid,Athwart her mother's glance of love.She seems celestial songs to hear,And virgin souls are whispering near.Till by her radiant smile deceived,
Victor-Marie Hugo
Exultate Deo.
Many a flower hath perfume for its dower,And many a bird a song,And harmless lambs milkwhite beside their damsFrolic along, -Perfume and song and whiteness offering praiseIn humble, peaceful ways.Man's high degree hath will and memory,Affection and desire;By loftier ways he mounts of prayer and praise,Fire unto fire,Deep unto deep responsive, height to height,Until he walk in white.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Song
Oh! never will I leave my love,My captive soul would sigh to stray,Tho' seraph-songs its truth to prove,Call it from earth to heaven to away.For heaven has deign'd on earth to sendAs rich a gift as it can give;Alas! that mortal bliss must end,For mortal man must cease to live.Yet transient would my sorrows beShould Delia first her breath resign;Sweet Maid! my soul would follow thee,For never can it part from thine.
Thomas Gent
The Last Farewell
LINES WRITTEN BY THE AUTHOR'S BROTHER, EDWARD BLISS EMERSON, WHILST SAILING OUT OF BOSTON HARBOR, BOUND FOR THE ISLAND OF PORTO RICO, IN 1832Farewell, ye lofty spiresThat cheered the holy light!Farewell, domestic firesThat broke the gloom of night!Too soon those spires are lost,Too fast we leave the bay,Too soon by ocean tostFrom hearth and home away,Far away, far away.Farewell the busy town,The wealthy and the wise,Kind smile and honest frownFrom bright, familiar eyes.All these are fading now;Our brig hastes on her way,Her unremembering prowIs leaping o'er the sea,Far away, far away.Farewell, my mother fond,Too kind, too good to me;Nor pearl nor diamondWould pay my debt to thee.But ev...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Canzone XV.
In quella parte dov' Amor mi sprona.HE FINDS HER IMAGE EVERYWHERE. When Love, fond Love, commands the strain,The coyest muse must sure obey;Love bids my wounded breast complain,And whispers the melodious lay:Yet when such griefs restrain the muse's wing,How shall she dare to soar, or how attempt to sing?Oh! could my heart express its woe,How poor, how wretched should I seem!But as the plaintive accents flow,Soft comfort spreads her golden gleam;And each gay scene, that Nature holds to view,Bids Laura's absent charms to memory bloom anew.Though Fate's severe decrees removeHer gladsome beauties from my sight,Yet, urged by pity, friendly LoveBids fond reflection yield delight;If lavish spring wit...
Francesco Petrarca
The Village Girl And Her High Born Suitor.
"O maiden, peerless, come dwell with me,And bright shall I render thy destiny:Thou shalt leave thy cot by the green hillside,To dwell in a palace home of pride,Where crowding menials, with lowly mien,Shall attend each wish of their lovely queen.""Ah! stranger my cot by the green hillsideHath more charms for me than thy halls of pride;If the roof be lowly, the moss rose thereRich fragrance sheds on the summer air;And the birds and insects, with joyous song,Are more welcome far than a menial throng.""Child, tell me not so! too fair art thou,With thy starry eyes and thy queenlike brow,To dwell in this spot, sequestered and lone,Thy marvelous beauty to all unknown;And that form, which might grace a throne, arrayedIn the lowly garb...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
A Smile And A Sigh
(Macmillan's Magazine, May 1868.)A smile because the nights are short! And every morning brings such pleasureOf sweet love-making, harmless sport: Love, that makes and finds its treasure; Love, treasure without measure.A sigh because the days are long! Long long these days that pass in sighing,A burden saddens every song: While time lags who should be flying, We live who would be dying.
To A Friend.
Within this little book of thine,Are thoughts of many a friendly mind,Express'd in words, on which you'll gazeIn after years, with feelings kind.And while you're scanning o'er each page,These lines I write, perchance you'll see,And tho' they're penn'd by careless hand,You'll know that they are penn'd by me.Perhaps you'll think of school-days then,Of happy school-days, long since past,When you and I, in careless youth,Thought that those days would always last.
Thomas Frederick Young
The First of May - A Memory
The waters make a music low:The river reedsAre trembling to the tunes of long ago,Dead days and deedsBecome alive again, as onI float, and float,Through shadows of the golden summers goneAnd springs remote.Above my head the trees bloom outIn white and redGreat blossoms, that make glad the air about;And old suns shedTheir rays athwart them. Ah, the lightIs bright and fair!No suns that shine upon me now are brightAs those suns were.And, gazing down into the stream,I see a face,As sweet as buds that blossom in a dream,Ere sorrows chaseFair dreams from men, and send in lieuSad thoughts. A wreathOf blue-bells binds the head, a bluer blueThe eyes beneath.This is my li...
Victor James Daley
The Old Year and the New
How swift they go, Life's many years, With their winds of woe And their storms of tears,And their darkest of nights whose shadowy slopesAre lit with the flashes of starriest hopes,And their sunshiny days in whose calm heavens loomThe clouds of the tempest -- the shadows of the gloom! And ah! we pray With a grief so drear, That the years may stay When their graves are near;Tho' the brows of To-morrows be radiant and bright,With love and with beauty, with life and with light,The dead hearts of Yesterdays, cold on the bier,To the hearts that survive them, are evermore dear. For the hearts so true To each Old Year cleaves; Tho' the hand of the New<...
Abram Joseph Ryan
A Man Young And Old:- Human Dignity
Like the moon her kindness is,If kindness I may callWhat has no comprehension int,But is the same for allAs though my sorrow were a sceneUpon a painted wall.So like a bit of stone I lieUnder a broken tree.I could recover if I shriekedMy hearts agonyTo passing bird, but I am dumbFrom human dignity.
William Butler Yeats
After A Parting
Farewell has long been said; I have forgone thee; I never name thee even.But how shall I learn virtues and yet shun thee? For thou art so near HeavenThat heavenward meditations pause upon thee.Thou dost beset the path to every shrine; My trembling thoughts discernThy goodness in the good for which I pine; And if I turn from but one sin, I turnUnto a smile of thine.How shall I thrust thee apart Since all my growth tends to thee night and day-To thee faith, hope, and art? Swift are the currents setting all one way;They draw my life, my life, out of my heart.
Alice Meynell
The New Love
I thought my heart was death chilled, I thought its fires were cold;But the new love, the new love, It warmeth like the old.I thought its rooms were shadowed With the gloom of endless night;But the new love, the new love, It fills them full of light.I thought the chambers empty, And proclaimed it unto men;But the new love, the new love, It peoples them again.I thought its halls were silent, And hushed the whole day long;But the new love, the new love, It fills them full of song.Then here is to the new love, Let who will sing the old;The new love, the new love, 'Tis more than fame or gold.For it gives us joy for sorrow, And it gives us warmth for cold;
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Perhaps
Perhaps the sky once was shadows, the moon lisped 'mongst April's song. Now, those warm lips ease departing sorrow like pressed flowers emptied from hallowed ground.
Paul Cameron Brown
Song.
Nature's imperfect child, to whomThe world is wrapt in viewless gloom,Can unresisted still impartThe fondest wishes of his heart.And he, to whose impervious earThe sweetest sounds no charms dispense,Can bid his inmost soul appearIn clear, tho' silent, eloquence.But we, my Julia, not so blest,Are doom'd a diff'rent fate to prove, -To feel each joy and hope supprestThat flow from pure, but hidden, love.
John Carr
La Mort D'Amour.
When was it that love died? We were so fond, So very fond, a little while ago. With leaping pulses, and blood all aglow,We dreamed about a sweeter life beyond,When we should dwell together as one heart, And scarce could wait that happy time to come. Now side by side we sit with lips quite dumb,And feel ourselves a thousand miles apart.How was it that love died! I do not know. I only know that all its grace untold Has faded into gray! I miss the goldFrom our dull skies; but did not see it go.Why should love die? We prized it, I am sure; We thought of nothing else when it was ours; We cherished it in smiling, sunlit bowers;It was our all; why could it not endure?Alas, we know not how, or when or why...
Love, Thou Gayest Fancy-Weaver.
Love, thou gayest fancy-weaver, Heart-betrayer, soul-deceiver, Come with all thy clinging kisses; Bringing all thy beaming blisses; It may serve the cynic's parts, If he curse and if he scout thee, But, O, where were gentle hearts, If they had to live without thee! Weave the spells of thy beguiling 'Round and 'round me with thy smiling, Till the ashen cheek is beaming, And the faded eye is gleaming; Millions may endure the fight In the battle vain to end thee, But when taste they thy delight They will serve thee and defend thee. Bring thy little winsome graces And the sweets of glad embraces, Till the pleasures all are dancing Into mazy wh...
Freeman Edwin Miller
Regardant.
As I lay at your feet that afternoon,Little we spoke, - you sat and mused,Humming a sweet old-fashioned tune,And I worshipped you, with a sense confusedOf the good time gone and the bad on the way,While my hungry eyes your face perused,To catch and brand on my soul for ayeThe subtle smile which had grown my doom.Drinking sweet poison hushed I layTill the sunset shimmered athwart the room.I rose to go. You stood so fairAnd dim in the dead day's tender gloom:All at once, or ever I was aware,Flashed from you on me a warm strong waveOf passion and power; in the silence thereI fell on my knees, like a lover, or slave,With my wild hands clasping your slender waist;And my lips, with a sudden frenzy brave,
John Hay