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The End Of The Century.
There are moments when, as missions,God reveals to us strange visions;When, within their separate stations,We may see the Centuries,Like revolving constellationsShaping out Earth's destinies.I have gazed in Time's abysses,Where no smallest thing Earth missesThat was hers once. 'Mid her chattels,There the Past's gigantic ghostSits and dreams of thrones and battlesIn the night of ages lost.Far before her eyes, unholyMist was spread; that darkly, slowlyRolled aside, like some huge curtainHung above the land and sea;And beneath it, wild, uncertain,Rose the wraiths of memory.First I saw colossal spectresOf dead cities: Troy once Hector'sPride; then Babylon and Tyre;Karnac, Carthage, and the grayW...
Madison Julius Cawein
Were I A Skilful Painter.
Were I a skilful painter,My pencil, not my pen,Should try to teach thee hope and fear,And who would blame me then?--Fear of the tide of darknessThat floweth fast behind,And hope to make thee journey onIn the journey of the mind.Were I a skilful painter,What should I paint for thee?--A tiny spring-bud peeping outFrom a withered wintry tree;The warm blue sky of summerO'er jagged ice and snow,And water hurrying gladsome outFrom a cavern down below;The dim light of a beaconUpon a stormy sea,Where a lonely ship to windward beatsFor life and liberty;A watery sun-ray gleamingAthwart a sullen cloudAnd falling on some grassy flowerThe rain had earthward bowed;Morn peeping o'er a mountain,...
George MacDonald
To Mr. and Mrs. A. M. T.
Just when the gentle hand of springCame fringing the trees with bud and leaf,And when the blades the warm suns bringWere given glad promise of golden sheaf;Just when the birds began to singJoy hymns after their winter's grief,I wandered weary to a place;Tired of toil, I sought for rest,Where Nature wore her mildest grace --I went where I was more than guest.Strange, tall trees rose as if they fainWould wear as crowns the clouds of skies;The sad winds swept with low refrainThrough branches breathing softest sighs;And o'er the field and down the laneSweet flowers, the dreams of Paradise,Bloomed up into this world of pain,Where all that's fairest soonest dies;And 'neath the trees a little streamWent winding slowly round and round...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Two Trees
Beloved, gaze in thine own heart,The holy tree is growing there;From joy the holy branches start,And all the trembling flowers they bear.The changing colours of its fruitHave dowered the stars with metry light;The surety of its hidden rootHas planted quiet in the night;The shaking of its leafy headHas given the waves their melody,And made my lips and music wed,Murmuring a wizard song for thee.There the Joves a circle go,The flaming circle of our days,Gyring, spiring to and froIn those great ignorant leafy ways;Remembering all that shaken hairAnd how the winged sandals dart,Thine eyes grow full of tender care:Beloved, gaze in thine own heart.Gaze no more in the bitter glassThe demons, with their subtle guile.L...
William Butler Yeats
To The Clouds.
O painted clouds ! sweet beauties of the sky,How have I view'd your motion and your rest,When like fleet hunters ye have left mine eye,In your thin gauze of woolly-fleecing drest;Or in your threaten'd thunder's grave black vest,Like black deep waters slowly moving by,Awfully striking the spectator's breastWith your Creator's dread sublimity,As admiration mutely views your storms.And I do love to see you idly lie,Painted by heav'n as various as your forms,Pausing upon the eastern mountain high,As morn awakes with spring's wood-harmony;And sweeter still, when in your slumbers soothYou hang the western arch o'er day's proud eye:Still as the even-pool, uncurv'd and smooth,My gazing soul has look'd most placidly;And higher still devoutly wish'...
John Clare
Years Ago.
This day it was--Ah! years ago,Long years ago, when first we met;When first her voice thrill'd through my heart,Aeolian-sweet, thrill'd through my heart; And glances from her soft brown eyes, Like gleamings out of Paradise,Shone on my heart, and made it brightWith fulness of celestial light;This day it seems--this day--and yet, Ah! years ago--long years ago. This day it was--Ah! years ago,Long years ago, when first I knewHow all her beauty fill'd my soul,With mystic glory fill'd my soul; And every word and smile she gave, Like motions of a sunlit wave,Rock'd me with divine emotion,Joyous, o'er Life's smiling ocean;This day it seems--this day--and yet, Ah! years ago--long years ago. ...
Walter R. Cassels
At Midnight
Turn Thou the key upon our thoughts, dear Lord,And let us sleep;Give us our portion of forgetfulness,Silent and deep.Lay Thou Thy quiet hand upon our eyesTo close their sight;Shut out the shining of the moon and starsAnd candle-light.Keep back the phantoms and the visions sad,The shades of grey,The fancies that so haunt the little hoursBefore the day.Quiet the time-worn questions that are allUnanswered yet,Take from the spent and troubled souls of usTheir vain regret;And lead us far into Thy silent land,That we may goLike children out across the field o' dreamsWhere poppies blow.So all Thy saints - and all Thy sinners too -Wilt Thou not keep,Since not alone unto Thy well-beloved<...
Virna Sheard
The Enchanted Hill
From height of noon, remote and still,The sun shines on the empty hill.No mist, no wind, above, below;No living thing strays to and fro.No bird replies to bird on high,Cleaving the skies with echoing cry.Like dreaming water, green and wan,Glassing the snow of mantling swan,Like a clear jewel encharacteredWith secret symbol of line and word,Asheen, unruffled, slumbrous, still,The sunlight streams on the empty hill.But soon as Night's dark shadows rideAcross its shrouded Eastern side,When at her kindling, clear and full,Star beyond star stands visible;Then course pale phantoms, fleet-foot deerLap of its waters icy-clear;Mounts the large moon, and pours her beamsOn bright-fish-flashing, singing streams;Voices re-echo;...
Walter De La Mare
To Imagination.
When weary with the long day's care,And earthly change from pain to pain,And lost, and ready to despair,Thy kind voice calls me back again:Oh, my true friend! I am not lone,While then canst speak with such a tone!So hopeless is the world without;The world within I doubly prize;Thy world, where guile, and hate, and doubt,And cold suspicion never rise;Where thou, and I, and Liberty,Have undisputed sovereignty.What matters it, that all aroundDanger, and guilt, and darkness lie,If but within our bosom's boundWe hold a bright, untroubled sky,Warm with ten thousand mingled raysOf suns that know no winter days?Reason, indeed, may oft complainFor Nature's sad reality,And tell the suffering heart how vain
Emily Bronte
Elysium.
Past the despairing wailAnd the bright banquets of the Elysian valeMelt every care away!Delight, that breathes and moves forever,Glides through sweet fields like some sweet river!Elysian life survey!There, fresh with youth, o'er jocund meads,His merry west-winds blithely leadsThe ever-blooming May!Through gold-woven dreams goes the dance of the hours,In space without bounds swell the soul and its powers,And truth, with no veil, gives her face to the day.And joy to-day and joy to-morrow,But wafts the airy soul aloft;The very name is lost to sorrow,And pain is rapture tuned more exquisitely soft.Here the pilgrim reposes the world-weary limb,And forgets in the shadow, cool-breathing and dim,The load he shall bear never more;
Friedrich Schiller
Devotional Incitements
"Not to the earth confined,Ascend to heaven."Where will they stop, those breathing Powers,The Spirits of the new-born flowers?They wander with the breeze, they windWhere'er the streams a passage find;Up from their native ground they riseIn mute aerial harmonies;From humble violet, modest thyme,Exhaled, the essential odours climb,As if no space below the skyTheir subtle flight could satisfy:Heaven will not tax our thoughts with prideIf like ambition be 'their' guide.Roused by this kindliest of May-showers,The spirit-quickener of the flowers,That with moist virtue softly cleavesThe buds, and freshens the young leaves,The birds pour forth their souls in notesOf rapture from a thousand throatsHere checked b...
William Wordsworth
The Jealous Gods
'Oh life is wonderful,' she said,'And all my world is bright;Can Paradise show fairer skies,Or more effulgent light?'(Speak lower, lower, mortal heart,The jealous gods may hear.)She turned for answer; but his gazeCut past her like a lance,And shone like flame on one who cameWith radiant glance for glance.(You spoke too loud, O mortal heart,The jealous gods were near.)They walked through green and sunlit ways;And yet the earth seemed black,For there were three, where two should be;So runs the world, alack.(The listening gods, the jealous gods,They want no Edens here.)
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Watcher
From out a windy cleft there comes a gazeOf eyes unearthly, which go to and froUpon the people's tumult, for belowThe nations smite each other: no amazeTroubles their liquid rolling, or affraysTheir deep-set contemplation; steadily glowThose ever holier eyeballs, for they growLiker unto the eyes of one that prays.And if those clasped hands tremble, comes a powerAs of the might of worlds, and they are holdenBlessing above us in the sunrise golden;And they will be uplifted till that hourOf terrible rolling which shall rise and shakeThis conscious nightmare from us, and we wake.
Sandalphon
Have you read in the Talmud of old,In the Legends the Rabbins have told Of the limitless realms of the air,--Have you read it,--the marvellous storyOf Sandalphon, the Angel of Glory, Sandalphon, the Angel of Prayer?How, erect, at the outermost gatesOf the City Celestial he waits, With his feet on the ladder of light,That, crowded with angels unnumbered,By Jacob was seen, as he slumbered Alone in the desert at night?The Angels of Wind and of FireChant only one hymn, and expire With the song's irresistible stress;Expire in their rapture and wonder,As harp-strings are broken asunder By music they throb to express.But serene in the rapturous throng,Unmoved by the rush of the song, With ...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Winds Of Angus
The grey road whereupon we trod became as holy ground:The eve was all one voice that breathed its message with no sound:And burning multitudes pour through my heart, too bright, too blind,Too swift and hurried in their flight to leave their tale behind.Twin gates unto that living world, dark honey-coloured eyesThe lifting of whose lashes flushed the face with paradise--Beloved, there I saw within their ardent rays unfoldThe likeness of enraptured birds that flew from deeps of goldTo deeps of gold within my breast to rest or there to beTransfigured in the light, or find a death to life in me.So love, a burning multitude, a seraph wind which blowsFrom out the deep of being to the deep of being goes:And sun and moon and starry fires and earth and air and seaAre cre...
George William Russell
My Soul And I
Stand still, my soul, in the silent darkI would question thee,Alone in the shadow drear and starkWith God and me!What, my soul, was thy errand here?Was it mirth or ease,Or heaping up dust from year to year?"Nay, none of these!"Speak, soul, aright in His holy sightWhose eye looks stillAnd steadily on thee through the night"To do His will!"What hast thou done, O soul of mine,That thou tremblest so?Hast thou wrought His task, and kept the lineHe bade thee go?Aha! thou tremblest! well I seeThou 'rt craven grown.Is it so hard with God and meTo stand alone?Summon thy sunshine bravery back,O wretched sprite!Let me hear thy voice through this deep and blackAbysmal night.
John Greenleaf Whittier
Noon.
No ripple stirs the water,No song-bird wakes the grove,Calm noon-tide sways his sceptre,And hushes even love.On earth the sun-god bendingPoureth his wondrous store;The soft-tongued tide, advancing,Laps the unconscious shore.The long, low isle of marsh-landStretches in weary waste,By sloping sand-banks guarded,By winding weeds embraced.Comes clearly from the openThe plash of distant oars, -Over the rocky headlandThe snow-white sea-gull soars.I see as if through dream-clouds,I hear from far away.The scorched air breathes its opiate,The drowsy fancies stay;I have no hopes or longings,I scarce can feel your kiss, -For thought, and joy and worship,Another hour than this!
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Nel Mezzo Del Cammin
Whisper it not that late in years Sorrow shall fade and the world be brighter, Life be freed of tremor and tears, Heads be wiser and hearts be lighter. Ah! but the dream that all endears, The dream we sell for your pottage of truth-- Give us again the passion of youth, Sorrow shall fade and the world be brighter.
Henry John Newbolt