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Her Temple
Dear, think not that they will forget you:If craftsmanly art should be mineI will build up a temple, and set youTherein as its shrine.They may say: "Why a woman such honour?"Be told, "O, so sweet was her fame,That a man heaped this splendour upon her;None now knows his name."
Thomas Hardy
Six Years Old
To H.W.M.Between the springs of six and seven,Two fresh years' fountains, clearOf all but golden sand for leaven,Child, midway passing here,As earth for love's sake dares bless heaven,So dare I bless you, dear.Between two bright well-heads, that brightenWith every breath that blowsToo loud to lull, too low to frighten,But fain to rock, the rose,Your feet stand fast, your lit smiles lighten,That might rear flowers from snows.You came when winds unleashed were snarlingBehind the frost-bound hours,A snow-bird sturdier than the starling,A storm-bird fledged for showers,That spring might smile to find you, darling,First born of all the flowers.Could love make worthy things of worthless,My song were worth an...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Love's Burial
See him quake and see him tremble, See him gasp for breath.Nay, dear, he does not dissemble, This is really Death.He is weak, and worn, and wasted, Bear him to his bier.All there is of life he's tasted - He has lived a year.He has passed his day of glory, All his blood is cold,He is wrinkled, thin, and hoary, He is very old.Just a leaf's life in the wild wood, Is a love's life, dear.He has reached his second childhood When he's lived a year.Long ago he lost his reason, Lost his trust and faith -Better far in his first season Had he met with death.Let us have no pomp or splendour, No vain pretence here.As we bury, grave, yet tender, Love that's lived a year...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Sonnets LVI - Sweet love, renew thy force; be it not said
Sweet love, renew thy force; be it not saidThy edge should blunter be than appetite,Which but to-day by feeding is allayd,To-morrow sharpened in his former might:So, love, be thou, although to-day thou fillThy hungry eyes, even till they wink with fulness,To-morrow see again, and do not killThe spirit of love, with a perpetual dulness.Let this sad interim like the ocean beWhich parts the shore, where two contracted newCome daily to the banks, that when they seeReturn of love, more blest may be the view;Or call it winter, which being full of care,Makes summers welcome, thrice more wished, more rare.
William Shakespeare
For The Old
These are the things I pray Heaven send us still,To blow the ashes of the years away,Or keep aglow forever 'neath their grayThe fire that warms when Life's old house grows chill:First Faith, that gazed into our youth's bright eyes;Courage, that helped us onward, rain or sun;Then Hope, who captained all our deeds well done;And, last, the dream of Love that never dies.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Lover's Wish.
("Si j'étais la feuille.")[XXII., September, 1828.]Oh! were I the leaf that the wind of the West,His course through the forest uncaring;To sleep on the gale or the wave's placid breastIn a pendulous cradle is bearing.All fresh with the morn's balmy kiss would I haste,As the dewdrops upon me were glancing;When Aurora sets out on the roseate waste,And round her the breezes are dancing.On the pinions of air I would fly, I would rushThro' the glens and the valleys to quiver;Past the mountain ravine, past the grove's dreamy hush,And the murmuring fall of the river.By the darkening hollow and bramble-bush lane,To catch the sweet breath of the roses;Past the land would I speed, where the sand-driven plain
Victor-Marie Hugo
The Long Ago.
O life has its seasons joyous and drear, Its summer sun and its winter snow, But the fairest of all, I tell you, dear, Was the sweet old spring of the long ago - The ever and ever so long ago - When we walked together among the flowers, When the world with beauty was all aglow. O the rain and dew! O the shine and showers Of the sweet old spring of the long ago! The ever and ever so long ago. A hunger for all of the past delight Is stirred by the winds that softly blow. Can you spare me a thought from heaven to-night For the sweet old spring of the long ago? - The ever and ever so long ago.
Jean Blewett
Love's Lantern
(For Aline)Because the road was steep and long And through a dark and lonely land,God set upon my lips a song And put a lantern in my hand.Through miles on weary miles of night That stretch relentless in my wayMy lantern burns serene and white, An unexhausted cup of day.O golden lights and lights like wine, How dim your boasted splendors are.Behold this little lamp of mine; It is more starlike than a star!
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
The Sonnets LXXV - So are you to my thoughts as food to life
So are you to my thoughts as food to life,Or as sweet-seasond showers are to the ground;And for the peace of you I hold such strifeAs twixt a miser and his wealth is found.Now proud as an enjoyer, and anonDoubting the filching age will steal his treasure;Now counting best to be with you alone,Then betterd that the world may see my pleasure:Sometime all full with feasting on your sight,And by and by clean starved for a look;Possessing or pursuing no delight,Save what is had, or must from you be took.Thus do I pine and surfeit day by day,Or gluttoning on all, or all away.
Heart's Encouragement.
Nor time nor all his minionsOf sorrow or of pain,Shall dash with vulture pinionsThe cup she fills againWithin the dream-dominionsOf life where she doth reign.Clothed on with bright desireAnd hope that makes her strong,With limbs of frost and fire,She sits above all wrong,Her heart, a living lyre,Her love, its only song.And in the waking pausesOf weariness and care,And when the dark hour draws hisBlack weapon of despair,Above effects and causesWe hear its music there.The longings life hath near itOf love we yearn to see;The dreams it doth inheritOf immortality;Are callings of her spiritTo something yet to be.
Heartsease
There is a flower I wish to wear,But not until first worn by you,Heartsease of all earths flowers most rare;Bring it; and bring enough for two.
Walter Savage Landor
Calm After Storm.
The storm hath passed; I hear the birds rejoice; the hen, Returned into the road again, Her cheerful notes repeats. The sky serene Is, in the west, upon the mountain seen: The country smiles; bright runs the silver stream. Each heart is cheered; on every side revive The sounds, the labors of the busy hive. The workman gazes at the watery sky, As standing at the door he sings, His work in hand; the little wife goes forth, And in her pail the gathered rain-drops brings; The vendor of his wares, from lane to lane, Begins his daily cry again. The sun returns, and with his smile illumes The villas on the neighboring hills; Through open terraces and balconies, The genial light pervades the ...
Giacomo Leopardi
Happen Thine.
Then its O! for a wife, sich a wife as aw know!Who's thowts an desires are pure as the snow,Who nivver thinks virtue a reason for praise,An who shudders when tell'd ov this world's wicked ways.Shoo isn't a gossip, shoo keeps to her hooam,Shoo's a welcome for friends if they happen to come;Shoo's tidy an cleean, let yo call when yo may,Shoo's nivver upset or put aght ov her way.At morn when her husband sets off to his wark,Shoo starts him off whistlin, as gay as a lark;An at neet if he's weary he hurries straight back,An if worried forgets all his cares in a crack.If onny naybor is sick or distressed,Shoe sends what shoo can an allus her best;An if onny young fowk chonce to fall i' disgrace,They fly straight to her and they tell her ...
John Hartley
Revealment
A Sense of sadness in the golden air,A pensiveness, that has no part in care,As if the Season, by some woodland pool,Braiding the early blossoms in her hair,Seeing her loveliness reflected there,Had sighed to find herself so beautiful.A breathlessness, a feeling as of fear,Holy and dim as of a mystery near,As if the World about us listening went,With lifted finger, and hand-hollowed ear,Hearkening a music that we cannot hear,Haunting the quickening earth and firmament.A prescience of the soul that has no name,Expectancy that is both wild and tame,As if the Earth, from out its azure ringOf heavens, looked to see, as white as flame,As Perseus once to chained Andromeda came,The swift, divine revealment of the Spring.
The Criminal's Betrothed.
As on a waveless sea, a vessel strikesUpon a treacherous rock;Waking the sailors from their happy dreamsBy the swift, terrible shock.Dreaming of shaded village streets, and home,Forgetting the cruel seaTill the shock came - so woke I, yet I know'Twas Love, I loved, not he.'Tis not the star the wave so wildly clasps,Only its form reflected in the stream;'Tis not a broken heart I mourn,Only a broken dream.I should have died when he was brought so low,Had it been him I loved,Died clinging to him, as to the blasted oakThe ivy clings unmoved.'Twas Love that looked on me with strange, sweet eyesBurning with marvellous flame;Love was the idol that I worshipped, thoughI gave to it his name.I gave to...
Marietta Holley
To Helen In A Huff
Nay, lady, one frown is enoughIn a life as soon over as this,And though minutes seem long in a huff,Theyre minutes tis pity to miss!The smiles you imprison so lightlyAre reckond, like days in eclipse;And though you may smile again brightly,Youve lost so much light from your lips!Pray, lady, smile!The cup that is longest untastedMay be with our bliss running oer,And, love when we will, we have wastedAn age in not loving before!Perchance Cupids forging a fetterTo tie us together some day,And, just for the chance, we had betterBe laying up love, I should say!Nay, lady, smile!
Nathaniel Parker Willis
To A Friend.
The youthful joys of vanish'd years,The joys e'en now we share,Have something of a sacred bliss,Which time can not impair.For when the years of youth have gone,Its joys and hopes have flown,The mem'ry clings with fond embrace -Those joys are still our own.Then, as I write these words for you, -This earnest wish I pen:That you may think but pleasant thoughts -When life's liv'd o'er again.May nought of sorrow, or of woe,Invade to wound or pain,And may the joys that we have shar'dBe bright in mem'ry's train.
Thomas Frederick Young
Song.
Think on that look whose melting ray For one sweet moment mixt with mine,And for that moment seemed to say, "I dare not, or I would be thine!"Think on thy every smile and glance, On all thou hast to charm and move;And then forgive my bosom's trance, Nor tell me it is sin to love.Oh, not to love thee were the sin; For sure, if Fate's decrees be done,Thou, thou art destined still to win, As I am destined to be won!
Thomas Moore