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Autumnal
Pale amber sunlight falls acrossThe reddening October trees,That hardly sway before a breezeAs soft as summer: summer's lossSeems little, dear! on days like these.Let misty autumn be our part!The twilight of the year is sweet:Where shadow and the darkness meetOur love, a twilight of the heartEludes a little time's deceit.Are we not better and at homeIn dreamful Autumn, we who deemNo harvest joy is worth a dream?A little while and night shall come,A little while, then, let us dream.Beyond the pearled horizons lieWinter and night: awaiting theseWe garner this poor hour of ease,Until love turn from us and dieBeneath the drear November trees.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Winter Evening
Behind yellow windows shadows drink hot tea.Yearning people sway on a hardened pondWorkers find a soft woman's corpse.Glowing blue snows cast a howling darkness.On high poles a scarecrow, implored, hangs.Stores flicker dimly through frosted windows,In front of which human bodies move like ghosts.Students carve a frozen girl.How lovely, the crystalline winter evening burning!A platinum moon now streams through a gap in the houses.Next to green lanterns under a bridgeLies a gypsy woman. And plays an instrument.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Ode - 'On A Distant Prospect' Of Making A Fortune.
Now the "rosy morn appearing"Floods with light the dazzled heaven;And the schoolboy groans on hearingThat eternal clock strike seven:-Now the waggoner is drivingTowards the fields his clattering wain;Now the bluebottle, reviving,Buzzes down his native pane.But to me the morn is hateful:Wearily I stretch my legs,Dress, and settle to my platefulOf (perhaps inferior) eggs.Yesterday Miss Crump, by message,Mentioned "rent," which "p'raps I'd pay;"And I have a dismal presageThat she'll call, herself, to-day.Once, I breakfasted off rosewood,Smoked through silver-mounted pipes -Then how my patrician nose wouldTurn up at the thought of "swipes!"Ale, - occasionally claret, -Graced my luncheon then:- and now...
Charles Stuart Calverley
Observation.
Who to the north, or south, doth setHis bed, male children shall beget.
Robert Herrick
Sonnets - VII. - Said Secrecy To Cowardice And Fraud
Said Secrecy to Cowardice and Fraud,Falsehood and Treachery, in close council met,Deep under ground, in Pluto's cabinet,"The frost of England's pride will soon be thawed;"Hooded the open brow that overawed"Our schemes; the faith and honour, never yet"By us with hope encountered, be upset;"For once I burst my bands, and cry, applaud!"Then whispered she, "The Bill is carrying out!"They heard, and, starting up, the Brood of NightClapped hands, and shook with glee their matted locks;All Powers and Places that abhor the lightJoined in the transport, echoed back their shout,Hurrah for, hugging his Ballot-box!
William Wordsworth
Solitude, Or Lucy Gray
Oft I had heard of Lucy Gray:And, when I crossed the wild,I chanced to see at break of dayThe solitary child.No mate, no comrade Lucy knew;She dwelt on a wide moor,The sweetest thing that ever grewBeside a human door!You yet may spy the fawn at play,The hare upon the green;But the sweet face of Lucy GrayWill never more be seen."To-night will be a stormy nightYou to the town must go;And take a lantern, Child, to lightYour mother through the snow.""That, Father! will I gladly do:'Tis scarcely afternoonThe minster-clock has just struck two,And yonder is the moon!"At this the Father raised his hook,And snapped a faggot-band;He plied his work; and Lucy tookThe lantern in her han...
Satires Of Circumstances In Fifteen Glimpses - XV In The Moonlight
"O lonely workman, standing thereIn a dream, why do you stare and stareAt her grave, as no other grave there were?"If your great gaunt eyes so importuneHer soul by the shine of this corpse-cold moon,Maybe you'll raise her phantom soon!""Why, fool, it is what I would rather seeThan all the living folk there be;But alas, there is no such joy for me!""Ah she was one you loved, no doubt,Through good and evil, through rain and drought,And when she passed, all your sun went out?""Nay: she was the woman I did not love,Whom all the others were ranked above,Whom during her life I thought nothing of."
Thomas Hardy
Sonnet CXX.
Ite, caldi sospiri, al freddo core.HE IMPLORES MERCY OR DEATH. Go, my warm sighs, go to that frozen breast,Burst the firm ice, that charity denies;And, if a mortal prayer can reach the skies,Let death or pity give my sorrows rest!Go, softest thoughts! Be all you know express'dOf that unnoticed by her lovely eyes,Though fate and cruelty against me rise,Error at least and hope shall be repress'd.Tell her, though fully you can never tell,That, while her days calm and serenely flow,In darkness and anxiety I dwell;Love guides your flight, my thoughts securely go,Fortune may change, and all may yet be well;If my sun's aspect not deceives my woe.CHARLEMONT. Go, burning sighs, to her cold bosom go,...
Francesco Petrarca
Ballad Of Another Ophelia
OH the green glimmer of apples in the orchard,Lamps in a wash of rain!Oh the wet walk of my brown hen through the stack-yard,Oh tears on the window pane!Nothing now will ripen the bright green apples,Full of disappointment and of rain,Brackish they will taste, of tears, when the yellow dapplesOf autumn tell the withered tale again.All round the yard it is cluck, my brown hen,Cluck, and the rain-wet wings,Cluck, my marigold bird, and againCluck for your yellow darlings.For the grey rat found the gold thirteenHuddled away in the dark,Flutter for a moment, oh the beast is quick and keen,Extinct one yellow-fluffy spark.Once I had a lover bright like running water,Once his face was laughing like the sky;Open like ...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
The Key-Note.
Where are the songs I used to know,Where are the notes I used to sing?I have forgotten everythingI used to know so long ago;Summer has followed after Spring;Now Autumn is so shrunk and sere,I scarcely think a sadder thingCan be the Winter of my year.Yet Robin sings through Winter's rest,When bushes put their berries on;While they their ruddy jewels don,He sings out of a ruddy breast;The hips and haws and ruddy breastMake one spot warm where snowflakes lieThey break and cheer the unlovely restOf Winter's pause - and why not I?
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Sonnet XV: On The Grasshopper And Cricket
The poetry of earth is never dead:When all the birds are faint with the hot sun,And hide in cooling trees, a voice will runFrom hedge to hedge about the new-mown mead;That is the Grasshopper's, he takes the leadIn summer luxury, he has never doneWith his delights; for when tired out with funHe rests at ease beneath some pleasant weed.The poetry of earth is ceasing never:On a lone winter evening, when the frostHas wrought a silence, from the stove there shrillsThe Cricket's song, in warmth increasing ever,And seems to one in drowsiness half lost,The Grasshopper's among some grassy hills.
John Keats
A Rector's Memory
The, Gods that are wiser than LearningBut kinder than Life have made sureNo mortal may boast in the morningThat even will find him secure.With naught for fresh faith or new trial,With little unsoiled or unsold,Can the shadow go back on the dial,Or a new world be given for the old?But he knows not that time shall awaken,As he knows not what tide shall lay bare,The heart of a man to be taken,Taken and changed unaware.He shall see as he tenders his vowsThe far, guarded City arise,The power of the North 'twixt Her brows,The steel of the North in Her eyes;The sheer hosts of Heaven above,The grey warlock Ocean beside;And shall feel the full centuries moveTo Her purpose and pride.Though a stranger shall he understan...
Rudyard
Advice
To write as your sweet mother doesIs all you wish to do.Play, sing, and smile for others, Rose!Let others write for you.Or mount again your Dartmoor grey,And I will walk beside,Until we reach that quiet bayWhich only hears the tide.Then wave at me your pencil, thenAt distance bid me stand,Before the cavernd cliff, againThe creature of your hand.And bid me then go past the nookTo sketch me less in size;There are but few content to lookSo little in your eyes.Delight us with the gifts you have,And wish for none beyond:To some be gay, to some be grave,To one (blest youth!) be fond.Pleasures there are how close to Pain,And better unpossest!Let poetrys too throbbing veinLie qui...
Walter Savage Landor
Afterword.
The old enthusiasmsAre dead, quite dead, in me;Dead the aspiring spasmsOf art and poesy,That opened magic chasms,Once, of wild mystery,In youth's rich Araby.That opened magic chasms.The longing and the careAre mine; and, helplessly,The heartache and despairFor what can never be.More than my mortal shareOf sad mortality,It seems, God gives to me,More than my mortal share.O world! O time! O fate!Remorseless trinity!Let not your wheel abateIts iron rotary!Turn round! nor make me wait,Bound to it neck and knee,Hope's final agony!Turn round! nor make me wait.
Madison Julius Cawein
At The Royal Academy
These summer landscapes clump, and copse, and croft -Woodland and meadowland here hung aloft,Gay with limp grass and leafery new and soft,Seem caught from the immediate season's yieldI saw last noonday shining over the field,By rapid snatch, while still are uncongealedThe saps that in their live originals climb;Yester's quick greenage here set forth in mimeJust as it stands, now, at our breathing-time.But these young foils so fresh upon each tree,Soft verdures spread in sprouting novelty,Are not this summer's, though they feign to be.Last year their May to Michaelmas term was run,Last autumn browned and buried every one,And no more know they sight of any sun.
Upon Grubs.
Grubs loves his wife and children, while that theyCan live by love, or else grow fat by play;But when they call or cry on Grubs for meat,Instead of bread Grubs gives them stones to eat.He raves, he rends, and while he thus doth tear,His wife and children fast to death for fear.
My Friend
I had a friend who battled for the truthWith stubborn heart and obstinate despair,Till all his beauty left him, and his youth,And there were few to love him anywhere.Then would he wander out among the graves,And think of dead men lying in a row;Or, standing on a cliff observe the waves,And hear the wistful sound of winds below;And yet they told him nothing. So he soughtThe twittering forest at the break of day,Or on fantastic mountains shaped a thoughtAs lofty and impenitent as they.And next he went in wonder through a townSlowly by day and hurriedly by night,And watched men walking up the street and downWith timorous and terrible delight.Weary, he drew man's wisdom from a book,And pondered on the high words spoken...
James Elroy Flecker
Signs And Tokens
Said the red-cloaked croneIn a whispered moan:"The dead man was limpWhen laid in his chest;Yea, limp; and whyBut to signifyThat the grave will crimpEre next year's sunYet another oneOf those in that house -It may be the best -For its endless drowse!"Said the brown-shawled dameTo confirm the same:"And the slothful fliesOn the rotting fruitHave been seen to wearWhile crawling thereCrape scarves, by eyesThat were quick and acute;As did those that had pitchedOn the cows by the pails,And with flaps of their tailsWere far away switched."Said the third in plaid,Each word being weighed:"And trotting doesIn the park, in the lane,And just outsideTh...