Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 135 of 189
Previous
Next
Age And Death.
Come closer, kind, white, long-familiar friend, Embrace me, fold me to thy broad, soft breast.Life has grown strange and cold, but thou dost bend Mild eyes of blessing wooing to my rest.So often hast thou come, and from my sideSo many hast thou lured, I only bideThy beck, to follow glad thy steps divine. Thy world is peopled for me; this world's bare. Through all these years my couch thou didst prepare.Thou art supreme Love - kiss me - I am thine!
Emma Lazarus
Days And Days
The days that clothed white limbs with heat,And rocked the red rose on their breast,Have passed with amber-sandaled feetInto the ruby-gated west.These were the days that filled the heartWith overflowing riches ofLife, in whose soul no dream shall startBut hath its origin in love.Now come the days gray-huddled inThe haze; whose foggy footsteps drip;Who pin beneath a gypsy chinThe frosty marigold and hip.The days, whose forms fall shadowyAthwart the heart: whose misty breathShapes saddest sweets of memoryOut of the bitterness of death.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Indian To His Love
The island dreams under the dawnAnd great boughs drop tranquillity;The peahens dance on a smooth lawn,A parrot sways upon a tree,Raging at his own image in the enamelled sea.Here we will moor our lonely shipAnd wander ever with woven hands,Murmuring softly lip to lip,Along the grass, along the sands,Murmuring how far away are the unquiet lands:How we alone of mortals areHid under quiet boughs apart,While our love grows an Indian star,A meteor of the burning heart,One with the tide that gleams, the wings that gleamand dart,The heavy boughs, the burnished doveThat moans and sighs a hundred days:How when we die our shades will rove,When eve has hushed the feathered ways,With vapoury footsole by the water's drowsy blaze.
William Butler Yeats
And Love Has Changed To Kindliness
When love has changed to kindliness,Oh, love, our hungry lips, that pressSo tight that Time's an old god's dreamNodding in heaven, and whisper stuffSeven million years were not enoughTo think on after, make it seemLess than the breath of children playing,A blasphemy scarce worth the saying,A sorry jest, "When love has grownTo kindliness, to kindliness!" . . .And yet, the best that either's knownWill change, and wither, and be less,At last, than comfort, or its ownRemembrance. And when some caressTendered in habit (once a flameAll heaven sang out to) wakes the shameUnworded, in the steady eyesWe'll have, that day, what shall we do?Being so noble, kill the twoWho've reached their second-best? Being wise,Break cleanly off, ...
Rupert Brooke
Beatrice Cenci.
O beautiful woman, too well we knowThe terrible weight of thy woman's woe,So great that the world, in its careless way,Remembered thy beauty for more than a day.In the name of the truth from thy brow is tornThe crown of redemption thou long hast worn,And into the valley of sin thou art hurledTo be trampled anew by the feet of the world.The beautiful picture is thine no moreThat hangs in the palace on Italy's shore;The tear-stained eyes where the shadow lies,Like a darksome cloud in the summer skies,Will tell thy story to men no more,For all untrue is the tale of yore;And the far-famed picture that hangs on the wallIs a painter's fancy--that is all.Italia's shore is a land of lightWhere the sunlight of day drowns the shadows of...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Confluents
As rivers seek the sea,Much more deep than they,So my soul seeks theeFar away:As running rivers moanOn their course aloneSo I moanLeft alone.As the delicate roseTo the sun's sweet strengthDoth herself unclose,Breadth and length:So spreads my heart to theeUnveiled utterly,I to theeUtterly.As morning dew exhalesSunwards pure and free,So my spirit failsAfter thee:As dew leaves not a traceOn the green earth's face;I, no traceOn thy face.Its goal the river knows,Dewdrops find a way,Sunlight cheers the roseIn her day:Shall I, lone sorrow past,Find thee at the last?Sorrow past,Thee at last?
Christina Georgina Rossetti
White Pansies
Day and night pass over, rounding,Star and cloud and sun,Things of drift and shadow, emptyOf my dearest one.Soft as slumber was my baby,Beaming bright and sweet;Daintier than bloom or jewelWere his hands and feet.He was mine, mine all, mine only,Mine and his the debt;Earth and Life and Time are changers;I shall not forget.Pansies for my dear one - heartsease -Set them gently so;For his stainless lips and forehead,Pansies white as snow.Would that in the flower-grown littleGrave they dug so deep,I might rest beside him, dreamless,Smile no more, nor weep.
Archibald Lampman
Memoria In Æterna.
Sweet Memory! thou faculty divine--Triumphant o'er the cruel hand of Time!On thy tablets we may traceThe lines his fingers ne'er efface,And take with us till latest dayThe images that light our way,And picture thus in a shadowy formThe loved and lost he's from us torn--Their lids by Death so early sealed--Life's crimson tide by him congealed--The tyrant has not all concealed--They in thy mirror still revealed!Before the morning sunbeams kissedThe face of Nature--veiled in mist--And heralded with golden rayThe opening of the perfect day--Ere yet the sable shades of nightAt dawn's approach had winged their flight--We've listed to the whispering breezeThat's wafted o'er the trembling trees,And seemed to hear the voice...
George W. Doneghy
Answered.
Do you remember how that night drew on?That night of sorrow, when the stars looked wanAs eyes that gaze reproachful in a dream,Loved eyes, long lost, and sadder than the grave?How through the heaven stole the moon's gray gleam,Like a nun's ghost down a cathedral nave?Do you remember how that night drew on?Do you remember the hard words then said?Said to the living, now denied the dead,That left me dead, long, long before I died,In heart and spirit? me, your words had slain,Telling how love to my poor life had lied,Armed with the dagger of a pale disdain.Do you remember the hard words then said?Do you remember, now this night draws downThe threatening heavens, that the lightnings crownWith wrecks of thunder? when no moon doth give
A Sunset Fantasy
Spellbound by a sweet fantasyAt evenglow I standBeside an opaline strange seaThat rings a sunset land.The rich lights fade out one by one,And, like a peonyDrowning in wine, the crimson sunSinks down in that strange sea.His wake across the ocean-floorIn a long glory lies,Like a gold wave-way to the shoreOf some sea paradise.My dream flies after him, and IAm in another land;The sun sets in another sky,And we sit hand in hand.Gray eyes look into mine; such eyesI think the angels are,Soft as the soft light in the skiesWhen shines the morning star,And tremulous as morn, when thinGold lights begin to glow,Revealing the bright soul withinAs dawn the sun below.So, hand...
Victor James Daley
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXIV.
Spinse amor e dolor ove ir non debbe.REFLECTING THAT LAURA IS IN HEAVEN, HE REPENTS HIS EXCESSIVE GRIEF, AND IS CONSOLED. Sorrow and Love encouraged my poor tongue,Discreet in sadness, where it should not go,To speak of her for whom I burn'd and sung,What, even were it true, 'twere wrong to show.That blessèd saint my miserable stateMight surely soothe, and ease my spirit's strife,Since she in heaven is now domesticateWith Him who ever ruled her heart in life.Wherefore I am contented and consoled,Nor would again in life her form behold;Nay, I prefer to die, and live alone.Fairer than ever to my mental eye,I see her soaring with the angels high,Before our Lord, her maker and my own.MACGREGOR. ...
Francesco Petrarca
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
Since There Is No Escape
Since there is no escape, since at the endMy body will be utterly destroyed,This hand I love as I have loved a friend,This body I tended, wept with and enjoyed;Since there is no escape even for meWho love life with a love too sharp to bear:The scent of orchards in the rain, the seaAnd hours alone too still and sure for prayer,Since darkness waits for me, then all the moreLet me go down as waves sweep to the shoreIn pride; and let me sing with my last breath;In these few hours of light I lift my head;Life is my lover, I shall leave the deadIf there is any way to baffle death.
Sara Teasdale
Only A Simple Rhyme.
Only a simple rhyme of love and sorrow, Where "blisses" rhymed with "kisses," "heart," with "dart:" Yet, reading it, new strength I seemed to borrow, To live on bravely and to do my part. A little rhyme about a heart that's bleeding - Of lonely hours and sorrow's unrelief: I smiled at first; but there came with the reading A sense of sweet companionship in grief. The selfishness of my own woe forsaking, I thought about the singer of that song. Some other breast felt this same weary aching; Another found the summer days too long. The few sad lines, my sorrow so expressing, I read, and on the singer, all unknown, I breathed a fervent though a silent blessing,
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Ghazal Of Sayyid Kamal
I am burning, I am crumbled into powder,I stand to the lips in a tossing sea of tears.Like a stone falling in Hamun lake I vanish;I return no more, I am counted among the dead.I am consumed like yellow straw on red flames;You have drawn a poisoned sword along my throat to-day.People have come to see me from far towns,Great and small, arriving with bare heads,For I have become one of the great historical lovers.In the desire of your red lipsMy heart has become a red kiln, like a terrace of roses.It is because she does not trouble about the bee on the roseThat my heart is taken."I have blackened my eyes to kill you, Sayyid Kamal.I kill you with my eyelids; I am Natarsa, the Panjabie, the pitiless."From the ...
Edward Powys Mathers
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LVII.
L' ultimo, lasso! de' miei giorni allegri.HE REVERTS TO THEIR LAST MEETING. The last, alas! of my bright days and glad--Few have been mine in this brief life below--Had come; I felt my heart as tepid snow,Presage, perchance, of days both dark and sad.As one in nerves, and pulse, and spirits bad,Who of some frequent fever waits the blow,E'en so I felt--for how could I foreknowSuch near end of the half-joys I have had?Her beauteous eyes, in heaven now bright and bless'dWith the pure light whence health and life descends,(Wretched and beggar'd leaving me behind,)With chaste and soul-lit beams our grief address'd:"Tarry ye here in peace, beloved friends,Though here no more, we yet shall there be join'd."MACGREGOR.<...
My November Guest
My Sorrow, when she's here with me,Thinks these dark days of autumn rainAre beautiful as days can be;She loves the bare, the withered tree;She walks the sodden pasture lane.Her pleasure will not let me stay.She talks and I am fain to list:She's glad the birds are gone away,She's glad her simple worsted gradyIs silver now with clinging mist.The desolate, deserted trees,The faded earth, the heavy sky,The beauties she so wryly sees,She thinks I have no eye for these,And vexes me for reason why.Not yesterday I learned to knowThe love of bare November daysBefore the coming of the snow,But it were vain to tell he so,And they are better for her praise.
Robert Lee Frost