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Hymn.
Make us, O God! in whom we breathe, and move,Worthy to love Thee, and to win thy love!Thy word informs us how thy love is won,By grateful trust in thy beloved Son!Through every season may such trust encrease!We know it duty, and we feel it peace.
William Hayley
Longing
I am not sorry for my soulThat it must go unsatisfied,For it can live a thousand times,Eternity is deep and wide.I am not sorry for my soul,But oh, my body that must goBack to a little drift of dustWithout the joy it longed to know.
Sara Teasdale
To A Friend, Unsuccessful In Love; Ode III
Indeed, my Phaedra, if to findThat wealth can female wishes gainHad e'er disturb'd your thoughtful mind,Or cost one serious moment's pain,I should have said that all the rules,You learn'd of moralists and schools,Were very useless, very vain.Yet I perhaps mistake the case,Say, though with this heroic air,Like one that holds a nobler chace,You try the tender loss to bear,Does not your heart renounce your tongue?Seems not my censure strangely wrongTo count it such a slight affair?When Hesper gilds the shaded sky,Oft as you seek the well-known grove,Methinks I see you cast your eyeBack to the morning scenes of love:Each pleasing word you heard her say,Her gentle look, her graceful way,Again your struggling fancy move....
Mark Akenside
Ode To Peace.
Come, peace of mind, delightful guest!Return, and make thy downy nestOnce more in this sad heart:Nor riches I nor power pursue,Nor hold forbidden joys in view;We therefore need not part.Where wilt thou dwell, if not with me,From avarice and ambition free,And pleasures fatal wiles?For whom, alas! dost thou prepareThe sweets that I was wont to share,The banquet of thy smiles?The great, the gay, shall they partakeThe heaven that thou alone canst make?And wilt thou quit the streamThat murmurs through the dewy mead,The grove and the sequesterd shed,To be a guest with them?For thee I panted, thee I prized,For thee I gladly sacrificedWhateer I loved before;And shall I see thee start ...
William Cowper
Sonnet.
There was a beautiful spirit in her air, As of a fay at revel. Hidden springs,Too delicate for knowledge, should be there, Moving her gently like invisible wings;And then her lip out-blushing the red fruit That bursts with ripeness in the Autumn time,And the arch eye you would not swear was mute, And the clear cheek, as of a purer clime,And the low tone, soft as a pleasant flute Sent over water with the vesper chime;And then her forehead with its loose, dark curl, And the bewildering smile that made her mouth Like a torn rose-leaf moistened of the South -She has an angel's gifts - the radiant girl!
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Ode To A Lady Whose Lover Was Killed By A Ball, Which At The Same Time Shivered A Portrait Next His Heart.
Motto.On peut trouver des femmes qui n'ont jamais eu de galanterie, mais il est rare d'en trouver qui n'en aient jamais eu qu'une. - [Réflexions ... du Duc de la Rochefoucauld, No. lxxiii.]1.Lady! in whose heroic portAnd Beauty, Victor even of Time,And haughty lineaments, appearMuch that is awful, more that's dear -Wherever human hearts resortThere must have been for thee a Court,And Thou by acclamation Queen,Where never Sovereign yet had been.That eye so soft, and yet severe,Perchance might look on Love as Crime;And yet - regarding thee more near -The traces of an unshed tearCompressed back to the heart,And mellowed Sadness in thine air,Which shows that Love hath once been there,To those who w...
George Gordon Byron
Comfort To A Youth That Had Lost His Love
What needs complaints,When she a placeHas with the raceOf saints?In endless mirth,She thinks not onWhat's said or doneIn earth:She sees no tears,Or any toneOf thy deep groanShe hears;Nor does she mind,Or think on't now,That ever thouWast kind:But changed above,She likes not there,As she did here,Thy love.Forbear, therefore,And lull asleepThy woes, and weepNo more.
Robert Herrick
The Trees
INow, in the thousandth year,When April's near,Now comes it that the great ones of the earthTake all their mirthAway with them, far off, to orchard-places,--Nor they nor Solomon arrayed like these,--To sun themselves at ease;To breathe of wind-swept spaces;To see some miracle of leafy graces;--To catch the out-flowing rapture of the trees.Considering the lilies. --Yes. And whenShall they consider Men? (O showering May-clad tree, Bear yet awhile with me.)IIFor now at last, they have beheld the trees.Lo, even these!--The men of sounding laughter and low fears;The women of light laughter, and no tears;The great ones o...
Josephine Preston Peabody
Old Age
The young see heaven - but to the old who wait The final call, the hills of youth arise More beautiful than shores of Paradise.Beside a glowing and voracious grate A dozing couple dream of yesterday;The islands of a vanished past appear,Bringing forgotten names and faces near; While lost in mist, the present fades away.The fragrant winds of tender memories blow Across the gardens of the "Used-to-be!" They smile into each other's eyes, and seeThe bride and bridegroom of the long ago. And tremulous lips, pressed close to faded cheek Love's silent tale of deathless passion speak.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Exquisite Laura! with thy pouting lip, And the arch smile that makes me constant so -Tempting me still like a dull bee to sip The flower I should have left so long ago -Beautiful Laura! who art just so fair That I can think thee lovely when alone,And still art not so wonderfully rare That I could never find a prettier one -Spirited Laura! laughing, weeping, crying In the same breath, and gravest with the gay -So wild, that Cupid ever shoots thee flying, And knows his archery is thrown away -Inconstant as I am, I cannot yetBreak thy sweet fetter, exquisite coquette!
To Helen.
I saw thee once--once only--years ago:I must not say how many--but not many.It was a July midnight; and from outA full-orbed moon, that, like thine own soul, soaring,Sought a precipitate pathway up through heaven,There fell a silvery-silken veil of light,With quietude, and sultriness and slumber,Upon the upturn'd faces of a thousandRoses that grew in an enchanted garden,Where no wind dared to stir, unless on tiptoe--Fell on the upturn'd faces of these rosesThat gave out, in return for the love-light,Their odorous souls in an ecstatic death--Fell on the upturn'd faces of these rosesThat smiled and died in this parterre, enchantedBy thee, and by the poetry of thy presence.Clad all in white, upon a violet bankI saw thee h...
Edgar Allan Poe
Flowers.
Spake full well, in language quaint and olden, One who dwelleth by the castled Rhine,When he called the flowers, so blue and golden, Stars, that in earth's firmament do shine.Stars they are, wherein we read our history, As astrologers and seers of eld;Yet not wrapped about with awful mystery, Like the burning stars, which they beheld.Wondrous truths, and manifold as wondrous, God hath written in those stars above;But not less in the bright flowerets under us Stands the revelation of his love.Bright and glorious is that revelation, Written all over this great world of ours;Making evident our own creation, In these stars of earth, these golden flowers.And the Poet, faithful and far-seeing, ...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Poet To His Wife.
("À toi, toujours à toi.")[XXXIX., 1823]To thee, all time to thee,My lyre a voice shall be!Above all earthly fashion, Above mere mundane rage,Your mind made it my passion To write for noblest stage.Whoe'er you be, send blessings to her - sheWas sister of my soul immortal, free!My pride, my hope, my shelter, my resource,When green hoped not to gray to run its course;She was enthronèd Virtue under heaven's dome,My idol in the shrine of curtained home.
Victor-Marie Hugo
Lovers At The Lake Side.
I.'And you brought him home.' 'I did, ay Ronald, it rested with me.''Love!' 'Yes.' 'I would fain you were not so calm.' 'I cannot weep. No.''What is he like, your poor father?' 'He is - like - this fallen treeProne at our feet, by the still lake taking on rose from the glow,II.Now scarlet, O look! overcoming the blue both lake and sky,While the waterfalls waver like smoke, then leap in and are not.And shining snow-points of high sierras cast down, there they lie.''O Laura - I cannot bear it. Laura! as if I forgot.'III.'No, you remember, and I remember that evening - like thisWhen we come forth from the gloomy Canyon, lo, a sinking sun.And, Ronald, you gave to me your troth ring, I gave my troth kiss.''Give me anoth...
Jean Ingelow
Christmas Fancies
When Christmas bells are swinging above the fields of snow,We hear sweet voices ringing from lands of long ago. And etched on vacant places, Are half forgotten facesOf friends we used to cherish, and loves we used to know -When Christmas bells are swinging above the fields of snow.Uprising from the ocean of the present surging near,We see, with strange emotion that is not free from fear, That continent Elysian Long vanished from our vision,Youth's lovely lost Atlantis, so mourned for and so dear,Uprising from the ocean of the present surging near.When gloomy gray Decembers are roused to Christmas mirth,The dullest life remembers there once was joy on earth, And draws from youth's recesses Some mem...
A Grace Before Meat.
O thou in whom we live and move, Who mad'st the sea and shore, Thy goodness constantly we prove, And grateful would adore. And if it please thee, Power above, Still grant us with such store, The friend we trust, the fair we love, And we desire no more.
Robert Burns
Sonnet To ----.
Ay, thou art for the grave; thy glances shineToo brightly to shine long; another SpringShall deck her for men's eyes, but not for thine,Sealed in a sleep which knows no wakening.The fields for thee have no medicinal leaf,And the vexed ore no mineral of power;And they who love thee wait in anxious griefTill the slow plague shall bring the fatal hour.Glide softly to thy rest then; Death should comeGently, to one of gentle mould like thee,As light winds wandering through groves of bloomDetach the delicate blossom from the tree.Close thy sweet eyes, calmly, and without pain;And we will trust in God to see thee yet again.
William Cullen Bryant
Sonnet XLIV.
Rapt CONTEMPLATION, bring thy waking dreams To this umbrageous vale at noon-tide hour, While full of thee seems every bending flower, Whose petals tremble o'er the shadow'd streams!Give thou HONORA's image, when her beams, Youth, beauty, kindness, shone; - what time she wore That smile, of gentle, yet resistless power To sooth each painful Passion's wild extremes.Here shall no empty, vain Intruder chase, With idle converse, thy enchantment warm, That brings, in all its interest, all its grace,The dear, persuasive, visionary Form. Can real Life a rival blessing boast When thou canst thus restore HONORA early lost?
Anna Seward