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Cupid
Beauties, have ye seen this toy,Called love, a little boyAlmost naked, wanton, blind,Cruel now, and then as kind?If he be amongst ye, say!He is Venus' runaway.He hath of marks about him plenty;Ye shall know him among twenty;All his body is a fire,And his breath a flame entire,That, being shot like lightning in,Wounds the heart, but not the skin.He doth bear a golden bow,And a quiver, hanging low,Full of arrows, that outbraveDian's shafts, where, if he haveAny head more sharp than other,With that first he strikes his mother.Trust him not: his words, though sweet,Seldom with his heart do meet;All his practice is deceit,Every gift is but a bait;Not a kiss but poison bears,And most treason...
Ben Jonson
To --------
I will not mourn thee, lovely one,Though thou art torn away.'Tis said that if the morning sunArise with dazzling rayAnd shed a bright and burning beamAthwart the glittering main,'Ere noon shall fade that laughing gleamEngulfed in clouds and rain.And if thy life as transient proved,It hath been full as bright,For thou wert hopeful and beloved;Thy spirit knew no blight.If few and short the joys of lifeThat thou on earth couldst know,Little thou knew'st of sin and strifeNor much of pain and woe.If vain thy earthly hopes did prove,Thou canst not mourn their flight;Thy brightest hopes were fixed aboveAnd they shall know no blight.And yet I cannot check my sighs,Thou wert so young and fair,<...
Anne Bronte
Sound, Sweet Song.
SOUND, sweet song, from some far land,Sighing softly close at hand,Now of joy, and now of woe!Stars are wont to glimmer so.Sooner thus will good unfold;Children young and children oldGladly hear thy numbers flow.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Ballade Of Forgotten Loves
Some poets sing of sweethearts dead, Some sing of true loves far away;Some sing of those that others wed, And some of idols turned to clay. I sing a pensive roundelayTo sweethearts of a doubtful lot, The passions vanished in a day,The little loves that I've forgot.For, as the happy years have sped, And golden dreams have changed to gray,How oft the flame of love was fed By glance, or smile, from Maud or May, When wayward Cupid was at play;Mere fancies, formed of who knows what, But still my debt I ne'er can pay,The little loves that I've forgot.O joyous hours forever fled! O sudden hopes that would not stay!Held only by the slender thread Of memory that's all astray. Their ver...
Arthur Grissom
A Man's Last Love
Like the tenth wave, that offers to the shoreAccumulated opulence and force,So does my heart, which thought it loved of yore, Carry increasing passion down the courseOf time to proffer thee. Oh! not the faint First ripple of the sea should be its pride,But the great climax of its unrestraint, Which culminates in one commanding tide.The lesser billows of each crude emotion Break on life's strand, recede, and then uniteWith love's large sea; and to some late devotion Unrecognised, they bring their lost delight.So all the vanished fancies of my pastLive yet in this one passion, grand and vast.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Winter Dream
Oh wind-swept towers,Oh endlessly blossoming trees,White clouds and lucid eyes,And pools in the rocks whose unplumbed blue is pregnantWith who knows what of subtletyAnd magical curves and limbs--White Anadyomene and her shallow breastsMother-of-pearled with light.And oh the April, April of straight soft hair,Falling smooth as the mountain water and brown;The April of little leaves unblinded,Of rosy nipples and innocenceAnd the blue languor of weary eyelids.Across a huge gulf I fling my voiceAnd my desires together:Across a huge gulf ... on the other bankCrouches April with her hair as smooth and straight and brownAs falling waters.Oh brave curve upwards and outwards.Oh despair of the downward tilting--Despair...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
To Rotha Q......
Rotha, my Spiritual Child! this head was greyWhen at the sacred font for thee I stood;Pledged till thou reach the verge of womanhood,And shalt become thy own sufficient stay:Too late, I feel, sweet Orphan! was the dayFor stedfast hope the contract to fulfil;Yet shall my blessing hover o'er thee still,Embodied in the music of this Lay,Breathed forth beside the peaceful mountain StreamWhose murmur soothed thy languid Mother's earAfter her throes, this Stream of name more dearSince thou dost bear it, a memorial themeFor others; for thy future self, a spellTo summon fancies out of Time's dark cell.
William Wordsworth
To ------.
Come, JENNY, let me sip the dewThat on those coral lips doth play,One kiss would every care subdue,And bid my weary soul be gay.For surely thou wert form'd by loveTo bless the suff'rer's parting sigh;In pity then my griefs remove,And on that bosom let me die!
Thomas Gent
A Midsummer Holiday:- VII. In The Water
The sea is awake, and the sound of the song of the joy of her waking is rolledFrom afar to the star that recedes, from anear to the wastes of the wild wide shore.Her call is a trumpet compelling us homeward: if dawn in her east be acold,From the sea shall we crave not her grace to rekindle the life that it kindled before,Her breath to requicken, her bosom to rock us, her kisses to bless as of yore?For the wind, with his wings half open, at pause in the sky, neither fettered nor free,Leans waveward and flutters the ripple to laughter and fain would the twain of us beWhere lightly the wave yearns forward from under the curve of the deep dawns dome,And, full of the morning and fired with the pride of the glory thereof and the glee,Strike out from the shore as the heart in us bids and bes...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Dream
I dreamed that I was touching her eyelids, and I awokeTo find her sleepy temples of rose jade For one heart-beat....Though the moonlight beats upon the sea, There is no boat.Lyric of Korea.
Edward Powys Mathers
Sonnet CIX.
Amor che nel pensier mio vive e regna.THE COURAGE AND TIMIDITY OF LOVE. The long Love that in my thought I harbour,And in my heart doth keep his residence,Into my face pressèth with bold pretence,And there campèth displaying his bannèr.She that me learns to love and to suffèr,And wills that my trust, and lust's negligenceBe rein'd by reason, shame, and reverence,With his hardiness takes displeasure.Wherewith Love to the heart's forest he fleeth,Leaving his enterprise with pain and cry,And there him hideth, and not appearèth.What may I do, when my master fearèth,But in the field with him to live and die?For good is the life, ending faithfully.WYATT. Love, that liveth and reigneth in my thoug...
Francesco Petrarca
The Rue-Anemone
Under an oak-tree in a woodland, whereThe dreaming Spring had dropped it from her hair,I found a flower, through which I seemed to gazeBeyond the world and see what no man dareBehold and live the myths of bygone daysDiana and Endymion, and the bareSlim beauty of the boy whom Echo wooed;And Hyacinthus whom Apollo dewedWith love and death: and Daphne, ever fair;And that reed-slender girl whom Pan pursued.I stood and gazed and through it seemed to seeThe Dryad dancing by the forest tree,Her hair wild blown: the Faun with listening ear,Deep in the boscage, kneeling on one knee,Watching the wandered Oread draw near,Her wild heart beating like a honey-beeWithin a rose. All, all the myths of old,All, all the bright shapes of the Age of Gol...
Madison Julius Cawein
To Sincerity
O sweet sincerity! -Where modern methods beWhat scope for thine and thee?Life may be sad past saying,Its greens for ever graying,Its faiths to dust decaying;And youth may have foreknown it,And riper seasons shown it,But custom cries: "Disown it:"Say ye rejoice, though grieving,Believe, while unbelieving,Behold, without perceiving!"- Yet, would men look at true things,And unilluded view things,And count to bear undue things,The real might mend the seeming,Facts better their foredeeming,And Life its disesteeming.February 1899.
Thomas Hardy
To Isabel
Arise, my Isabel, arise!The sun shoots forth his early ray,The hue of love is in the skies,The birds are singing, come away!O come, my Isabella, come,With inky tendrils hanging low;Thy cheeks like roses just in bloom,That in the healthy Summer glow.That eye it turns the world awayFrom wanton sport and recklessness;That eye beams with a cheerful ray,And smiles propitiously to bless.O come, my Isabella, dear!O come, and fill these longing arms!Come, let me see thy beauty here,And bend in worship o'er thy charms.O come, my Isabella, love!My dearest Isabella, come!Thy heart's affection, let me prove,And kiss thy beauty in its bloom.My Isabella, young and fair,Thou darling of my home and heart,Come, lo...
John Clare
Womanhood
I.The summer takes its hueFrom something opulent as fair in her,And the bright heav'n is brighter than it was;Brighter and lovelier,Arching its beautiful blue,Serene and soft, as her sweet gaze, o'er us.II.The springtime takes its moodsFrom something in her made of smiles and tears,And flowery earth is flowerier than before,And happier, it appears,Adding new multitudesTo flowers, like thoughts, that haunt us ever more.III.Summer and spring are wedIn her her nature; and the glamour ofTheir loveliness, their bounty, as it were,Of life, and joy, and love,Her being seems to shed,The magic aura of the heart of her.
The Reconciliation I
HEWhen you were mine, in auld lang syne,And when none else your charms might ogle,I'll not deny, fair nymph, that IWas happier than a heathen mogul.SHEBefore she came, that rival flame(Had ever mater saucier filia?),In those good times, bepraised in rhymes,I was more famed than Mother Ilia.HEChloe of Thrace! With what a graceDoes she at song or harp employ her!I'd gladly die, if only ICould live forever to enjoy her!SHEMy Sybaris so noble isThat, by the gods, I love him madly!That I might save him from the grave,I'd give my life, and give it gladly!HEWhat if ma belle from favor fell,And I made up my mind to shake her;Would Lydia then co...
Eugene Field
Farfaraway
What sight so lured him thro the fields he knewAs where earths green stole into heavens own hue,Farfaraway?What sound was dearest in his native dells?The mellow lin-lan-lone of evening bellsFarfaraway.What vague world-whisper, mystic pain or joy,Thro those three words would haunt him when a boy,Farfaraway?A whisper from his dawn of life? a breathFrom some fair dawn beyond the doors of deathFarfaraway?Far, far, how far? from oer the gates of Birth,The faint horizons, all the bounds of earth,Farfaraway?What charm in words, a charm no words could give?O dying words, can Music make you liveFarfaraway?
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Infant M---- M----
Unquiet Childhood here by special graceForgets her nature, opening like a flowerThat neither feeds nor wastes its vital powerIn painful struggles. Months each other chase,And nought untunes that Infant's voice; no traceOf fretful temper sullies her pure cheek;Prompt, lively, self-sufficing, yet so meekThat one enrapt with gazing on her face(Which even the placid innocence of deathCould scarcely make more placid, heaven more bright)Might learn to picture, for the eye of faith,The Virgin, as she shone with kindred light;A nursling couched upon her mother's knee,Beneath some shady palm of Galilee.