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Preludium To America
The shadowy Daughter of Urthona stood before red Orc,When fourteen suns had faintly journey'd o'er his dark abode:His food she brought in iron baskets, his drink in cups of iron:Crown'd with a helmet and dark hair the nameless female stood;A quiver with its burning stores, a bow like that of night,When pestilence is shot from heaven: no other arms she need!Invulnerable though naked, save where clouds roll round her loinsTheir awful folds in the dark air: silent she stood as night;For never from her iron tongue could voice or sound arise,But dumb till that dread day when Orc assay'd his fierce embrace.'Dark Virgin,' said the hairy youth, 'thy father stern, abhorr'd,Rivets my tenfold chains while still on high my spirit soars;Sometimes an Eagle screaming in the sky, som...
William Blake
How Good Are The Poor.
("Il est nuit. La cabane est pauvre.")[Bk. LII. iii.]'Tis night - within the close stout cabin door,The room is wrapped in shade save where there fallSome twilight rays that creep along the floor,And show the fisher's nets upon the wall.In the dim corner, from the oaken chest,A few white dishes glimmer; through the shadeStands a tall bed with dusky curtains dressed,And a rough mattress at its side is laid.Five children on the long low mattress lie -A nest of little souls, it heaves with dreams;In the high chimney the last embers die,And redden the dark room with crimson gleams.The mother kneels and thinks, and pale with fear,She prays alone, hearing the billows shout:While to wild winds, to rocks, to midnigh...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Horace II, 3.
Be tranquil, Dellius, I pray;For though you pine your life awayWith dull complaining breath,Or speed with song and wine each day--Still, still your doom is death.Where the white poplar and the pineIn glorious arching shade combineAnd the brook singing goes,Bid them bring store of nard and wineAnd garlands of the rose.Let's live while chance and youth obtain--Soon shall you quit this fair domainKissed by the Tiber's gold,And all your earthly pride and gainSome heedless heir shall hold.One ghostly boat shall some time bearFrom scenes of mirthfulness or careEach fated human soul!--Shall waft and leave his burden whereThe waves of Lethe roll.So come, I pri' thee, Dellius, mine--Let's sing our...
Eugene Field
Fragment: 'I Faint, I Perish With My Love!'.
I faint, I perish with my love! I growFrail as a cloud whose [splendours] paleUnder the evening's ever-changing glow:I die like mist upon the gale,And like a wave under the calm I fail.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
An Allegory.
1.A portal as of shadowy adamantStands yawning on the highway of the lifeWhich we all tread, a cavern huge and gaunt;Around it rages an unceasing strifeOf shadows, like the restless clouds that hauntThe gap of some cleft mountain, lifted highInto the whirlwinds of the upper sky.2.And many pass it by with careless tread,Not knowing that a shadowy ...Tracks every traveller even to where the deadWait peacefully for their companion new;But others, by more curious humour led,Pause to examine; - these are very few,And they learn little there, except to knowThat shadows follow them where'er they go.
The Hope of the Resurrection
Though I have watched so many mourners weep O'er the real dead, in dull earth laid asleep - Those dead seemed but the shadows of my days That passed and left me in the sun's bright rays. Now though you go on smiling in the sun Our love is slain, and love and you were one. You are the first, you I have known so long, Whose death was deadly, a tremendous wrong. Therefore I seek the faith that sets it right Amid the lilies and the candle-light. I think on Heaven, for in that air so clear We two may meet, confused and parted here. Ah, when man's dearest dies, 'tis then he goes To that old balm that heals the centuries' woes. Then Christ's wild cry in all the streets is rife: - "I am the Resurrection and th...
Vachel Lindsay
Address To Kilchurn Castle, Upon Loch Awe
Child of loud-throated War! the mountain StreamRoars in thy hearing; but thy hour of restIs come, and thou art silent in thy age;Save when the wind sweeps by and sounds are caughtAmbiguous, neither wholly thine nor theirs.Oh! there is life that breathes not; Powers there areThat touch each other to the quick in modesWhich the gross world no sense hath to perceive,No soul to dream of. What art Thou, from careCast offabandoned by thy rugged Sire,Nor by soft Peace adopted; though, in placeAnd in dimension, such that thou might'st seemBut a mere footstool to yon sovereign Lord,Huge Cruachan, (a thing that meaner hillsMight crush, nor know that it had suffered harmYet he, not loth, in favour of thy claimsTo reverence, suspends his own; submitting
William Wordsworth
Rose Leaves When The Rose Is Dead
See how the rose leaves fallThe rose leaves fall and fade:And by the wall, in dusk funereal,How leaf on leaf is laid,Withered and soiled and frayed.How red the rose leaves fallAnd in the ancient trees,That stretch their twisted arms about the hall,Burdened with mysteries,How sadly sighs the breeze.How soft the rose leaves fallThe rose leaves drift and lie:And over them dull slugs and beetles crawl,And, palely glimmering by,The glow-worm trails its eye.How thick the rose leaves fallAnd strew the garden way,For snails to slime and spotted toads to sprawl,And, plodding past each day,Coarse feet to tread in clay.How fast they fall and fallWhere Beauty, carved in stone,With broken hands vei...
Madison Julius Cawein
Microcosm
The memory of what we've lostIs with us more than what we've won;Perhaps because we count the costBy what we could, yet have not done.'Twixt act and purpose fate hath drawnInvisible threads we can not break,And puppet-like these move us onThe stage of life, and break or make.Less than the dust from which we're wrought,We come and go, and still are hurledFrom change to change, from naught to naught,Heirs of oblivion and the world.
On The Death Of A Young Lady, [1] Cousin To The Author, And Very Dear To Him.
George Gordon Byron
Les Casquets
From the depths of the waters that lighten and darkenWith change everlasting of life and of death,Where hardly by noon if the lulled ear hearkenIt hears the seas as a tired childs breath,Where hardly by night if an eye dare scan itThe storm lets shipwreck be seen or heard,As the reefs to the waves and the foam to the graniteRespond one merciless word,Sheer seen and far, in the seas live heaven,A seamews flight from the wild sweet land,White-plumed with foam if the wind wake, sevenBlack helms as of warriors that stir not stand.From the depths that abide and the waves that environSeven rocks rear heads that the midnight masks,And the strokes of the swords of the storm are as ironOn the steel of the wave-worn casques.Be nights dark word as th...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Honeymoon Time At An Inn
At the shiver of morning, a little before the false dawn,The moon was at the window-square,Deedily brooding in deformed decay -The curve hewn off her cheek as by an adze;At the shiver of morning a little before the false dawnSo the moon looked in there.Her speechless eyeing reached across the chamber,Where lay two souls opprest,One a white lady sighing, "Why am I sad!"To him who sighed back, "Sad, my Love, am I!"And speechlessly the old moon conned the chamber,And these two reft of rest.While their large-pupilled vision swept the scene there,Nought seeming imminent,Something fell sheer, and crashed, and from the floorLay glittering at the pair with a shattered gaze,While their large-pupilled vision swept the scene there,And th...
Thomas Hardy
Laudamus
The Lord shall slay or the Lord shall save!He is righteous whether He save or slay,Brother, give thanks for the gifts He gave,Though the gifts He gave He hath taken away.Shall we strive for that which is nothing? Nay.Shall we hate each other for that which fled?She is but a marvel of modelled clay,And the smooth, clear white, and the soft, pure red,That we coveted, shall endure no day.Was it wise or well that I hated youFor the fruit that hung too high on the tree?For the blossom out of our reach that grew,Was it well or wise that you hated me?My hate has flown, and your hate shall flee.Let us veil our faces like children chid,Can that violet orb we swore by seeThrough that violet-veind, transparent lid?Now the Lord forbid that thi...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XXIII
In silence and in solitude we went,One first, the other following his steps,As minor friars journeying on their road.The present fray had turn'd my thoughts to museUpon old Aesop's fable, where he toldWhat fate unto the mouse and frog befell.For language hath not sounds more like in sense,Than are these chances, if the originAnd end of each be heedfully compar'd.And as one thought bursts from another forth,So afterward from that another sprang,Which added doubly to my former fear.For thus I reason'd: "These through us have beenSo foil'd, with loss and mock'ry so complete,As needs must sting them sore. If anger thenBe to their evil will conjoin'd, more fellThey shall pursue us, than the savage houndSnatches the leveret, panting 'twix...
Dante Alighieri
Acle At The Grave Of Nero.
It is a circumstance connected with the history of Nero, that every spring and summer, for many years after his death, fresh and beautiful flowers were nightly scattered upon his grave by some unknown hand.Tradition relates that it was done by a young maiden of Corinth, named Acle, whom Nero had brought to Rome from her native city, whither he had gone in the disguise of an artist, to contend in the Nemean, Isthinian, and Floral games, celebrated there; and whence he returned conqueror in the Palaestra, the chariot race, and the song; bearing with him, like Jason of old, a second Medea, divine in form and feature as the first, and who like her had left father, friends, and country, to follow a stranger.Even the worse than savage barbarity of this sanguinary tyrant, had not cut him off from all human affection; and ...
George W. Sands
Lines To The Memory Of My Dear Brother, W.T.P. Carr, Esq.
- manibus date lilia plenis:Purpureos spargam flores.Aeneid, lib. vi.Tho' no funereal grandeur swell my song,Nor genius, eagle-plum'd, the strain prolong, -Tho' Grief and Nature here alone combineTo weep, my William! o'er a fate like thine, -Yet thy fond pray'r, still ling'ring on my ear,Shall force its way thro' many a gushing tear:The Muse, that saw thy op'ning beauties spread,That lov'd thee living, shall lament thee dead!Ye graceful Virtues! while the note I breathe,Of sweetest flow'rs entwine a fun'ral wreath, -Of virgin flow'rs, and place them round his tomb,To bud, like him, and perish in their bloom!Ah! when these eyes saw thee serenely waitThe last long separating stroke of Fate, -When round thy bed a kin...
John Carr
Joy In Death.
If tolling bell I ask the cause.'A soul has gone to God,'I'm answered in a lonesome tone;Is heaven then so sad?That bells should joyful ring to tellA soul had gone to heaven,Would seem to me the proper wayA good news should be given.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
The Hymn
It was the winter wild,While the heaven-born ChildAll meanly wrapt in the rude manger lies;Nature in awe to HimHad doffed her gaudy trim,With her great Master so to sympathize:It was no season then for herTo wanton with the sun, her lusty paramour.Only with speeches fairShe woos the gentle airTo hide her guilty front with innocent snow,And on her naked shame,Pollute with sinful blame,The saintly veil of maiden white to throw,Confounded that her Maker's eyesShould look so near upon her foul deformities.But He, her fears to cease,Sent down the meek-eyed Peace;She, crowned with olive green, came softly slidingDown through the turning sphere,His ready harbinger,With turtle wing the amorous clouds dividing;<...
John Milton