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The People
What have I earned for all that work, I said,For all that I have done at my own charge?The daily spite of this unmannerly town,Where who has served the most is most defamed,The reputation of his lifetime lostBetween the night and morning. I might have lived,And you know well how great the longing has been,Where every day my footfall should have litIn the green shadow of Ferrara wall;Or climbed among the images of the pastThe unperturbed and courtly imagesEvening and morning, the steep street of UrbinoTo where the duchess and her people talkedThe stately midnight through until they stoodIn their great window looking at the dawn;I might have had no friend that could not mixCourtesy and passion into one like thoseThat saw the wicks grow...
William Butler Yeats
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XLIII.
Quel rosignuol che sì soave piagne.THE SONG OF THE NIGHTINGALE REMINDS HIM OF HIS UNHAPPY LOT. Yon nightingale, whose bursts of thrilling tone,Pour'd in soft sorrow from her tuneful throat,Haply her mate or infant brood bemoan,Filling the fields and skies with pity's note;Here lingering till the long long night is gone,Awakes the memory of my cruel lot--But I my wretched self must wail alone:Fool, who secure from death an angel thought!O easy duped, who thus on hope relies!Who would have deem'd the darkness, which appears,From orbs more brilliant than the sun should rise?Now know I, made by sad experience wise,That Fate would teach me by a life of tears,On wings how fleeting fast all earthly rapture flies!WRANG...
Francesco Petrarca
To H. C.
SIX YEARS OLDO thou! whose fancies from afar are brought;Who of thy words dost make a mock apparel,And fittest to unutterable thoughtThe breeze-like motion and the self-born carol;Thou faery voyager! that dost floatIn such clear water, that thy boatMay rather seemTo brood on air than on an earthly stream;Suspended in a stream as clear as sky,Where earth and heaven do make one imagery;O blessed vision! happy child!Thou art so exquisitely wild,I think of thee with many fearsFor what may be thy lot in future years.I thought of times when Pain might be thy guest,Lord of thy house and hospitality;And Grief, uneasy lover! never restBut when she sate within the touch of thee.O too industrious folly!O vain and causeless me...
William Wordsworth
Retrospect.
'T was just this time last year I died.I know I heard the corn,When I was carried by the farms, --It had the tassels on.I thought how yellow it would lookWhen Richard went to mill;And then I wanted to get out,But something held my will.I thought just how red apples wedgedThe stubble's joints between;And carts went stooping round the fieldsTo take the pumpkins in.I wondered which would miss me least,And when Thanksgiving came,If father'd multiply the platesTo make an even sum.And if my stocking hung too high,Would it blur the Christmas glee,That not a Santa Claus could reachThe altitude of me?But this sort grieved myself, and soI thought how it would beWhen just this time, some pe...
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
A Country Life: To His Brother Mr Thomas Herrick
Thrice, and above, blest, my soul's half, art thou,In thy both last and better vow;Could'st leave the city, for exchange, to seeThe country's sweet simplicity;And it to know and practise, with intentTo grow the sooner innocent;By studying to know virtue, and to aimMore at her nature than her name;The last is but the least; the first doth tellWays less to live, than to live well:And both are known to thee, who now canst liveLed by thy conscience, to giveJustice to soon-pleased nature, and to showWisdom and she together go,And keep one centre; This with that conspiresTo teach man to confine desires,And know that riches have their proper stintIn the contented mind, not mint;And canst instruct that those who have the itchOf cravin...
Robert Herrick
Poems From "A Shropshire Lad" - XXXVII
As through the wild green hills of WyreThe train ran, changing sky and shire,And far behind, a fading crest,Low in the forsaken westSank the high-reared head of Clee,My hand lay empty on my knee.Aching on my knee it lay:That morning half a shire awaySo many an honest fellow's fistHad well-nigh wrung it from the wrist.Hand, said I, since now we partFrom fields and men we know by heart,From strangers' faces, strangers' lands,-Hand, you have held true fellows' hands.Be clean then; rot before you doA thing they'd not believe of you.You and I must keep from shameIn London streets the Shropshire name;On banks of Thames they must not saySevern breeds worse men than they;And friends abroad must bear in mindFriends at home ...
Alfred Edward Housman
Anticipation.[1]
"Coming events cast their shadow before."I had a vision in the summer light -Sorrow was in it, and my inward sightAched with sad images. The touch of tearsGushed down my cheeks: - the figured woes of yearsCasting their shadows across sunny hours.Oh, there was nothing sorrowful in flowersWooing the glances of an April sun,Or apple blossoms opening one by oneTheir crimson bosoms - or the twittered wordsAnd warbled sentences of merry birds; -Or the small glitter and the humming wingsOf golden flies and many colored things -Oh, these were nothing sad - nor to see Her,Sitting beneath the comfortable stirOf early leaves - casting the playful graceOf moving shadows in so fair a face -Nor in her brow serene - nor in the love
Thomas Hood
Dawn
Still as the holy of holies breathes the vastWithin its crystal depths the stars grow dim;Fire on the altar of the hills at last Burns on the shadowy rim.Moments that holds all moments; white uponThe verge it trembles; then like mists of flowersBreak from the fairy fountain of the dawn The hues of many hours.Thrown downward from that high companionshipOf dreaming inmost heart with inmost heart,Into the common daily ways I slip, My fire from theirs apart.
George William Russell
No Songs In Winter
The sky is gray as gray may be,There is no bird upon the bough,There is no leaf on vine or tree.In the Neponset marshes nowWillow-stems, rosy in the wind,Shiver with hidden sense of snow.So too 'tis winter in my mind,No light-winged fancy comes and stays:A season churlish and unkind.Slow creep the hours, slow creep the days,The black ink crusts upon the pen--Just wait till bluebirds, wrens, and jaysAnd golden orioles come again!
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
Liberty - Sequel To - The Gold And Silver Fishes
Those breathing Tokens of your kind regard,(Suspect not, Anna, that their fate is hard;Not soon does aught to which mild fancies clingIn lonely spots, become a slighted thing;)Those silent Inmates now no longer share,Nor do they need, our hospitable care,Removed in kindness from their glassy CellTo the fresh waters of a living WellAn elfin pool so sheltered that its restNo winds disturb; the mirror of whose breastIs smooth as clear, save where with dimples smallA fly may settle, or a blossom fall.'There' swims, of blazing sun and beating showerFearless (but how obscured!) the golden Power,That from his bauble prison used to castGleams by the richest jewel unsurpast;And near him, darkling like a sullen Gnome,The silver Tenant of the crysta...
In War Time.
Into the west the day goes down, Smiling and fading into the night,Is it a cross, or is it a crown I have worn through all these hours of light!Bending over my milk-white curds, In my dairy under the beech,Still the thought of my heart took words, And murmured itself in musical speech.And all my pans of golden cream, Set in a silver shining row,Swam in my eyes like the shimmer and sheen Of arms and banners, and martial show.The bee in his gold laced uniform, Drilled the ranks of clover blooms,And carried my very heart by storm, Mocking the roll of the distant drums.But something choked my singing down, Deeper than any song expressed.--Is it a cross, or is it a crownOn my brow ...
Kate Seymour Maclean
A Serenade
Ah! County Guy, the hour is nighThe sun has left the lea,The orange-flower perfumes the bower,The breeze is on the sea.The lark, his lay who trilld all day,Sits hushd his partner nigh;Breeze, bird, and flower confess the hour,But where is County Guy?The village maid steals through the shadeHer shepherds suit to hear;To Beauty shy, by lattice high,Sings high-born Cavalier.The star of Love, all stars above,Now reigns oer earth and sky,And high and low the influence know,But where is County Guy?
Walter Scott
At Home.
The night was wide, and furnished scantWith but a single star,That often as a cloud it metBlew out itself for fear.The wind pursued the little bush,And drove away the leavesNovember left; then clambered upAnd fretted in the eaves.No squirrel went abroad;A dog's belated feetLike intermittent plush were heardAdown the empty street.To feel if blinds be fast,And closer to the fireHer little rocking-chair to draw,And shiver for the poor,The housewife's gentle task."How pleasanter," said sheUnto the sofa opposite,"The sleet than May -- no thee!"
The Danish Boy, A Fragment
IBetween two sister moorland rillsThere is a spot that seems to lieSacred to flowerets of the hills,And sacred to the sky.And in this smooth and open dellThere is a tempest-stricken tree;A corner-stone by lightning cut,The last stone of a lonely hut;And in this dell you seeA thing no storm can e'er destroy,The shadow of a Danish Boy.IIIn clouds above, the lark is heard,But drops not here to earth for rest;Within this lonesome nook the birdDid never build her nest.No beast, no bird hath here his home;Bees, wafted on the breezy air,Pass high above those fragrant bellsTo other flowers:to other dellsTheir burthens do they bear;The Danish Boy walks here alone:The lovely dell is all his own....
Myself
There is a garden, greyWith mists of autumntide;Under the giant boughs,Stretched green on every side,Along the lonely paths,A little child like me,With face, with hands, like mine,Plays ever silently;On, on, quite silently,When I am there alone,Turns not his head; lifts not his eyes;Heeds not as he plays on.After the birds are flownFrom singing in the trees,When all is grey, all silent,Voices, and winds, and bees;And I am there alone:Forlornly, silently,Plays in the evening gardenMyself with me.
Walter De La Mare
In A Eweleaze Near Weatherbury
The years have gathered graylySince I danced upon this leazeWith one who kindled gailyLove's fitful ecstasies!But despite the term as teacher,I remain what I was thenIn each essential featureOf the fantasies of men.Yet I note the little chiselOf never-napping Time,Defacing ghast and grizzelThe blazon of my prime.When at night he thinks me sleeping,I feel him boring slyWithin my bones, and heapingQuaintest pains for by-and-by.Still, I'd go the world with Beauty,I would laugh with her and sing,I would shun divinest dutyTo resume her worshipping.But she'd scorn my brave endeavour,She would not balm the breezeBy murmuring "Thine for ever!"As she did upon this leaze.1890.
Thomas Hardy
The Winds
In these green fields, in this green spring,In this green world of burning sweetThat drives its sour from everythingAnd burns the Arctic with new heat,That seems so slow and flies so fleetOn half-seen wing;In this green world the birds are allWith motion mad, are wild with song;The grass leaps like a sudden wallFlung up against a foe that longStrode round and wrought his frosty wrong.The bright winds call,The bright winds answer; the clouds riseWhite from the grave, shaking their head,Strewing the grave-clothes through the skies,In languid drifting shadow shedUpon the fields where, slowly spread,Each shadow dies.In every wood is green and gold,The unbridged river runs all greenWith queenly swan-clouds f...
John Frederick Freeman
Spring Quiet
Gone were but the Winter, Come were but the Spring,I would go to a covert Where the birds sing;Where in the whitethorn Singeth a thrush,And a robin sings In the holly-bush.Full of fresh scents Are the budding boughsArching high over A cool green house:Full of sweet scents, And whispering airWhich sayeth softly: 'We spread no snare;'Here dwell in safety, Here dwell alone,With a clear stream And a mossy stone.'Here the sun shineth Most shadily;Here is heard an echo Of the far sea, Though far off it be.'
Christina Georgina Rossetti