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To My Aging Friends
It is no winter night comes down Upon our hearts, dear friends of old; But a May evening, softly brown, Whose wind is rather cold. We are not, like yon sad-eyed West, Phantoms that brood o'er Time's dust-hoard, We are like yon Moon--in mourning drest, But gazing on her lord. Come nearer to the hearth, sweet friends, Draw nigher, closer, hand and chair; Ours is a love that never ends, For God is dearest there! We will not talk about the past, We will not ponder ancient pain; Those are but deep foundations cast For peaks of soaring gain! We, waiting Dead, will warm our bones At our poor smouldering earthly fire; And ta...
George MacDonald
Summer Images
Now swarthy summer, by rude health embrowned,Precedence takes of rosy fingered spring;And laughing joy, with wild flowers pranked and crowned,A wild and giddy thing,And health robust, from every care unbound,Come on the zephyr's wing,And cheer the toiling clown.Happy as holiday-enjoying face,Loud tongued, and "merry as a marriage bell,"Thy lightsome step sheds joy in every place;And where the troubled dwell,Thy witching smiles wean them of half their cares;And from thy sunny spell,They greet joy unawares.Then with thy sultry locks all loose and rude,And mantle laced with gems of garish light,Come as of wont; for I would fain intrude,And in the world's despite,Share the rude mirth that thy own heart beguiles:If hapl...
John Clare
Old Stone Chimney
The rising moon on the peaks was blendingHer silver light with the sunset glow,When a swagman came as the day was endingAlong a path that he seemed to know.But all the fences were gone or going,The hand of ruin was everywhere;The creek unchecked in its course was flowing,For none of the old clay dam was there.Here Time had been with his swiftest changes,And husbandry had westward flown;The cattle tracks in the rugged rangesWere long ago with the scrub oergrown.It must have needed long years to softenThe road, that as hard as rock had been;The mountain path he had trod so oftenLay hidden now with a carpet green.He thought at times from the mountain coursesHe heard the sound of a bullock bell,The distant gallop of stockme...
Henry Lawson
Adventure Of A Poet
As I was walking down the street A week ago,Near Henderson's I chanced to meet A man I know.His name is Alexander Bell, His home, Dundee;I do not know him quite so well As he knows me.He gave my hand a hearty shake, Discussed the weather,And then proposed that we should take A stroll together.Down College Street we took our way, And there we metThe beautiful Miss Mary Gray, That arch coquette,Who stole last spring my heart away And has it yet.That smile with which my bow she greets, Would it were fonder!Or else less fond--since she its sweets On all must squander.Thus, when I meet her in the streets, I sadly ponder,And after her, as she r...
Robert Fuller Murray
The First Quarter
I.JanuaryShaggy with skins of frost-furred gray and drab,Harsh, hoary hair framing a bitter face,He bends above the dead Year's fireplaceNursing the last few embers of its slabTo sullen glow: from pinched lips, cold and crab,The starved flame shrinks; his breath, like a menáce,Shrieks in the flue, fluttering its sooty lace,Piercing the silence like an icy stab.From rheum-gnarled knees he rises, slow with cold,And to the frost-bound window, muttering, goes,With iron knuckles knocking on the pane;And, lo! outside, his minions manifoldAnswer the summons: wolf-like shapes of woes,Hunger and suffering, trooping to his train.II.FebruaryGray-muffled to his eyes in rags of cloud,His whip of winds forever ...
Madison Julius Cawein
To My Old Friend, William Leachman
Fer forty year and better you have been a friend to me,Through days of sore afflictions and dire adversity,You allus had a kind word of counsul to impart,Which was like a healin' 'intment to the sorrow of my hart.When I burried my first womern, William Leachman, it was youHad the only consolation that I could listen to -Fer I knowed you had gone through it and had rallied from the blow,And when you said I'd do the same, I knowed you'd ort to know.But that time I'll long remember; how I wundered here and thare -Through the settin'-room and kitchen, and out in the open air -And the snowflakes whirlin', whirlin', and the fields a frozen glare,And the neghbors' sleds and wagons congergatin' ev'rywhare.I turned my eyes to'rds heaven, but the sun was hid a...
James Whitcomb Riley
To A Poet - (To Edmund Gosse)
Still towards the steep Parnassian wayThe moon-led pilgrims wend,Ah, who of all that start to-dayShall ever reach the end?Year after year a dream-fed bandThat scorn the vales below,And scorn the fatness of the landTo win those heights of snow, -Leave barns and kine and flocks behind,And count their fortune fair,If they a dozen leaves may bindOf laurel in their hair.Like us, dear Poet, once you trodThat sweet moon-smitten way,With mouth of silver sought the godAll night and all the day;Sought singing, till in rosy fireThe white Apollo came,And touched your brow, and wreathed your lyre,And named you by his name;And led you, loving, by the handTo those grave laurelled bowers,Where k...
Richard Le Gallienne
Autumn Winds.
"Oh! Autumn winds, what means this plaintive wailing Around the quiet homestead where we dwell?Whence come ye, say, and what the story mournful That your weird voices ever seek to tell -Whispering or clamoring, beneath the casements, Rising in shriek or dying off in moan,But ever breathing, menace, fear, or anguish In every thrilling and unearthly tone?""We come from far off and from storm-tossed oceans, Where vessels bravely battle with fierce gale, -Mere playthings of our stormy, restless power, We rend them quickly, shuddering mast and sail;And with their, stalwart, gallant crews we hurl them Amid the hungry waves that for them wait,Nor leave one floating spar nor fragile taffrail To tell unto the world their dreary f...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Farewell
(Shortly before departing for the theater of war)for Peter ScherBefore dying I am making my poem.Quiet, comrades, don't disturb me.We are going off to war. Death is our cement.If only my beloved did not shed these tears for me.What am I doing. I go gladly.Mother is crying. One must be made of iron.The sun sinks to the horizon.Soon I shall be tossed into a gentle mass grave.In the sky the fine red of evening is burning.Perhaps in thrirteen days I'll be dead.
Alfred Lichtenstein
O I Won'T Lead A Homely Life
To an old air"O I won't lead a homely lifeAs father's Jack and mother's Jill,But I will be a fiddler's wife,With music mine at will!Just a little tune,Another one soon,As I merrily fling my fill!"And she became a fiddler's Dear,And merry all day she strove to be;And he played and played afar and near,But never at home played heAny little tuneOr late or soon;And sunk and sad was she!
Thomas Hardy
A Song Of The Snow
I.Roaring winds that rocked the crow,High in his eyrie,All night long, and to and froSwung the cedar and drove the snowOut of the North, have ceased to blow,And dawn breaks fiery.Sing, Ho, a song of the winter dawn,When the air is still and the clouds are gone,And the snow lies deep on hill and lawn,And the old clock ticks, 'Tis time! 't is time!And the household rises with many a yawnSing, Ho, a song of the winter dawn!Sing Ho!II.Deep in the East a ruddy glowBroadens and brightens,Glints through the icicles, row on row,Flames on the panes of the farmhouse low,And over the miles of drifted snowSilently whitens.Sing, Ho, a song of the winter sky,When the last star closes its icy eye,And...
The Wraith
Ah me, it is cold and chillAnd the fire sobs low in the grate,While the wind rides by on the hill,And the logs crack sharp with hate.And she, she is cold and sadAs ever the sinful are,But deep in my heart I am gladFor my wound and the coming scar.Oh, ever the wind rides byAnd ever the raindrops grieve;But a voice like a woman's sighSays, "Do you believe, believe?"Ah, you were warm and sweet,Sweet as the May days be;Down did I fall at your feet,Why did you hearken to me?Oh, the logs they crack and whine,And the water drops from the eaves;But it is not rain but brineWhere my dead darling grieves.And a wraith sits by my side,A spectre grim and dark;Are you gazing here open-eyed
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Cornflower.
The day she came we were planting corn, The west eighty-acre field, - These prairie farms are great for size, And they're sometimes great for yield. "The new school-ma'am is up to the house," The chore-boy called out to me; I went in wishing anyone else Had been put in chief trustee. I was to question that girl, you see, Of the things she ought to know; As for these same things, I knew right well I'd forgot them long ago. I hadn't kept track of women's ways, 'Bout all I knew of the sex Was that they were mighty hard to please, And easy enough to vex. My sister Mary, who ruled my house - And me - with an iron hand, Was all the woman I knew real well -
Jean Blewett
The Crowns
Cherry and pear are white,Their snows lie sprinkled on the land like lightOn darkness shed.Far off and nearThe orchards toss their crowns of delight,And the sun casts downAnother shining crown.The wind tears and throws downPetal by petal the crownOf cherry and pear till the earth is white,And all the brightness is shedIn the orchards far off and near,That tossed by the road and under the green hill;And the wind is fled.Far, far off the windHas shaken downA brightness that was as the brightness of cherry or pearWhen the orchards shine in the sun.--Oh there is no more fairnessSince this rareness,The radiant blossom of English earth--is dead!
John Frederick Freeman
Monody On Henry Headley
To every gentle Muse in vain allied,In youth's full early morning HEADLEY died!Too long had sickness left her pining trace,With slow, still touch, on each decaying grace:Untimely sorrow marked his thoughtful mien!Despair upon his languid smile was seen!Yet Resignation, musing on the grave,(When now no hope could cheer, no pity save),And Virtue, that scarce felt its fate severe,And pale Affection, dropping soft a tearFor friends beloved, from whom she soon must part,Breathed a sad solace on his aching heart.Nor ceased he yet to stray, where, winding wild,The Muse's path his drooping steps beguiled,Intent to rescue some neglected rhyme,Lone-blooming, from the mournful waste of time;And cull each scattered sweet, that seemed to smileLike flo...
William Lisle Bowles
Upon Himself.
Thou'rt hence removing (like a shepherd's tent),And walk thou must the way that others went:Fall thou must first, then rise to life with these,Mark'd in thy book for faithful witnesses.
Robert Herrick
The Progress Of Art.
Oh happy time! - Art's early days!When o'er each deed, with sweet self-praise,Narcissus-like I hung!When great Rembrandt but little seemed,And such Old Masters all were deemedAs nothing to the young!Some scratchy strokes - abrupt and few,So easily and swift I drew,Sufficed for my design;My sketchy, superficial handDrew solids at a dash - and spannedA surface with a line.Not long my eye was thus content,But grew more critical - my bentEssayed a higher walk;I copied leaden eyes in lead -Rheumatic hands in white and red,And gouty feet - in chalk.Anon my studious art for daysKept making faces - happy phrase,For faces such as mine!Accomplished in the details then,I left the minor parts of men,
Thomas Hood
A Thunder Storm.
The day was hot and the day was dumb,Save for cricket's chirr or the bee's low hum,Not a bird was seen or a butterfly,And ever till noon was over, the sunGlared down with a yellow and terrible eye;Glared down in the woods, where the breathless boughsHung heavy and faint in a languid drowse,And the ferns were curling with thirst and heat;Glared down on the fields where the sleepy cowsStood munching the grasses, dry and sweet.Then a single cloud rose up in the west,With a base of gray and a white, white crest;It rose and it spread a mighty wing.And swooped at the sun, though he did his bestAnd struggled and fought like a wounded thing.And the woods awoke, and the sleepers heard,Each heavily hanging leaflet stirredWith a li...
Susan Coolidge