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Immortality.
It is an honorable thought,And makes one lift one's hat,As one encountered gentlefolkUpon a daily street,That we've immortal place,Though pyramids decay,And kingdoms, like the orchard,Flit russetly away.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Requiem
For thee the birds shall never sing again, Nor fresh green leaves come out upon the tree,The brook shall no more murmur the refrain For thee.Thou liest underneath the windswept lea, Thou dreamest not of pleasure or of pain,Thou dreadest no to-morrow that shall be.Deep rest is thine, unbroken by the rain, Ay, or the thunder. Brother, canst thou seeThe tears that night and morning fall in vain For thee?
Robert Fuller Murray
Lines, Addressed to the Young Gentlemen leaving the Academy at Lenox, Massachusetts.
Life is before ye - and while now ye standEager to spring upon the promised land,Fair smiles the way, where yet your feet have trodBut few light steps, upon a flowery sod;Round ye are youth's green bowers, and to your eyesTh' horizon's line joins earth with the bright skies;Daring and triumph, pleasure, fame, and joy,Friendship unwavering, love without alloy,Brave thoughts of noble deeds, and glory won,Like angels, beckon ye to venture on.And if o'er the bright scene some shadows rise,Far off they seem, at hand the sunshine lies;The distant clouds, which of ye pause to fear?Shall not a brightness gild them when more near?Dismay and doubt ye know not, for the powerOf youth is strong within ye at this hour,And the great mortal conflict seems to y...
Frances Anne Kemble
Oh, Ye Dead!
Oh, ye Dead! oh, ye Dead![1] whom we know by the light you giveFrom your cold gleaming eyes, tho' you move like men who live, Why leave you thus your graves, In far off fields and waves,Where the worm and the sea-bird only know your bed, To haunt this spot where all Those eyes that wept your fall,And the hearts that wailed you, like your own, lie dead?It is true, it is true, we are shadows cold and wan;And the fair and the brave whom we loved on earth are gone; But still thus even in death, So sweet the living breathOf the fields and the flowers in our youth we wander'd o'er, That ere, condemned, we go To freeze mid Hecla's snow,We would taste it awhile, and think we live once more!
Thomas Moore
The Statue And The Bust
Theres a palace in Florence, the world knows well,And a statue watches it from the square,And this story of both do our townsmen tell.Ages ago, a lady there,At the farthest window facing the East,Asked, Who rides by with the royal air?The bridesmaids prattle around her ceased;She leaned forth, one on either hand;They saw how the blush of the bride increasedThey felt by its beats her heart expandAs one at each ear and both in a breathWhispered, The Great-Duke Ferdinand.That self-same instant, underneath,The Duke rode past in his idle way,Empty and fine like a swordless sheath.Gay he rode, with a friend as gay,Till he threw his head back, Who is she?A bride the Riccardi brings home today.H...
Robert Browning
To S. M.
If he should lie a-dyingI am not willing you should goInto the earth, where Helen went;She is awake by now, I know.Where Cleopatra's anklets rustYou will not lie with my consent;And Sappho is a roving dust;Cressid could love again; Dido,Rotted in state, is restless still:You leave me much against my will.
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Bright Scenes Must All Depart.
Bright scenes must all depart as they've departed,Unshadowed years will fly as they have flown,And fairer visions leave us silent-hearted,Keen, lashing blasts must blow as they have blown.Old mem'ries must grow dim and fade away,Across the world's wide wastes the sun shall set,Thou shalt press forward on thy toil-trod way,Nor leave me one, just one, one sad regret.Ah, where shall I be then?--forgot--estranged,When years have rolled their glory at thy feet,When friends and kindred all, yea, all have changedAnd others come their chosen one to greet.And yet what prayer from me could now implore,Could crave for all it would, for words have fled?May Heaven preserve thee as thou wast before,And multiply all blessings on thy head.
Lennox Amott
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXXIV.
Levommi il mio pensier in parte ov' era.SOARING IN IMAGINATION TO HEAVEN, HE MEETS LAURA, AND IS HAPPY. Fond fancy raised me to the spot, where straysShe, whom I seek but find on earth no more:There, fairer still and humbler than before,I saw her, in the third heaven's blessèd maze.She took me by the hand, and "Thou shalt trace,If hope not errs," she said, "this happy shore:I, I am she, thy breast with slights who tore,And ere its evening closed my day's brief space.What human heart conceives, my joys exceed;Thee only I expect, and (what remainBelow) the charms, once objects of thy love."Why ceased she? Ah! my captive hand why freed?Such of her soft and hallow'd tones the chain,From that delightful heaven my soul could sca...
Francesco Petrarca
If I Were A Monk, And Thou Wert A Nun
If I were a monk, and thou wert a nun, Pacing it wearily, wearily, Twixt chapel and cell till day were done-- Wearily, wearily-- How would it fare with these hearts of ours That need the sunshine, and smiles, and flowers? To prayer, to prayer, at the matins' call, Morning foul or fair!-- Such prayer as from weary lips might fall-- Words, but hardly prayer-- The chapel's roof, like the law in stone, Caging the lark that up had flown! Thou, in the glory of cloudless noon, The God-revealing, Turning thy face from the boundless boon-- Painfully kneeling; Or, in brown-shadowy solitude, Bending thy head o'er the legend rude!<...
George MacDonald
Sonnets on Separation I.
The time shall be, old Wisdom says, when you Shall grow awrinkled and I, indifferent, Shall no more follow the light steps I knew Or trace you, finding out the way you went, By swinging branches and the displaced flowers Among the thickets. I no more shall stand, With careful pencil through the adoring hours Scratching your grace on paper. My still hand No more shall tremble at the touch of yours And I'll write no more songs and you'll not sing. But this is all a lie, for love endures And we shall closer kiss, remembering How budding trees turned barren in the sun Through this long week, whereof one day's now done.
Edward Shanks
Elegiac Musings - In The Grounds Of Coleorton Hall, The Seat Of The Late Sir G. H. Beaumont, Bart.
With copious eulogy in prose or rhymeGraven on the tomb we struggle against Time,Alas, how feebly! but our feelings riseAnd still we struggle when a good man dies:Such offering Beaumont dreaded and forbade,A spirit meek in self-abasement clad.Yet 'here' at least, though few have numbered daysThat shunned so modestly the light of praiseHis graceful manners, and the temperate rayOf that arch fancy which would round him play,Brightening a converse never known to swerveFrom courtesy and delicate reserve;That sense, the bland philosophy of life,Which checked discussion ere it warmed to strifeThose rare accomplishments, and varied powers,Might have their record among sylvan bowers.Oh, fled for ever! vanished like a blastThat shook the leaves in...
William Wordsworth
Farewell.
Fare thee well, we've no wish to detain thee,For the loved ones are bidding thee come,And, we know, a bright welcome awaits theeIn the smiles and the sunshine of home,Thou art safe on the crest of the billow,And safe in the depths of the sea;For the God we have worshipped togetherIs Almighty, and careth for thee.And when, in the home of thy fathers,Thy fervent petition shall riseFor the loved who are circling around thee,The joy and delight of thine eyes,Oh, then, for the weak and the faltering,Should a prayer, as sweet incense, ascendTo the God we have worshipped together,Remember thy far-distant friend.We miss the calm light of thy spirit,We miss thy encouraging smile;But we bless the unslumbering Shepherd...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
Initiation Ode.
Air--Belmont.Hark! unto thee a voice doth speak, A voice of heavenly breath,And this, the solemn charge it gives, Be faithful unto death.Faithful as stars in heaven's blue skies, Though dark clouds roll between,Or rocks that show their signal lights In tempest's wildest scene.Faithful 'till death, which finally Shall close thy mortal strife,When thy reward shall surely be The crown of endless life.
Harriet Annie Wilkins
Easter Morning
I have a life that did not become,that turned aside and stopped,astonished:I hold it in me like a pregnancy oras on my lap a childnot to grow old but dwell onit is to his grave I mostfrequently return and returnto ask what is wrong, what waswrong, to see it all bythe light of a different necessitybut the grave will not healand the child,stirring, must share my gravewith me, an old man havinggotten by on what was leftwhen I go back to my home country in thesefresh far-away days, its convenient to visiteverybody, aunts and uncles, those who used to say,look how hes shooting up, and thetrinket aunts who always had a littlesomething in their pocketbooks, cinnamon barkor a penny or nickel, and uncles w...
A. R. Ammons
Preface To Diarmid's Story
Best beloved of ancient storiesAre our Diarmid's woes to me.Like a mist, by breezes broken,So this tale of olden gloriesFloats in fragments, as a tokenOf the song of Ireland's sea.Through long centuries repeatedLived the legend told in Erse,But a change comes swift or slowlyFades the language, and defeatedFlies the faith, once counted holy,Old-world ways, and oral verse.Not from men of note or learningMay we gather now these tales,Heard beneath the cotter's rafter,Or where smithy sparks are burning,Or at sea, when hushed the laughterOf the breeze on hull and sails.Then with Ossian's rhythmic MeasureComes upon the fancy's sight,One with golden locks; resplendent,Great and strong with eyes of azure,...
John Campbell
Sonnets - On The Death Of The Duke Of Wellington. (4)
1.The Land stood still to listen all that day,And 'mid the hush of many a wrangling tongue,Forth from the cannon's mouth the signal rung,That from the earth a man had pass'd away--A mighty Man, that over many a fieldRoll'd back the tide of Battle on the foe,--Thus far, no further, shall thy billows go.Who Freedom's falchion did right nobly wield,Like potter's vessel smiting Tyrants down,And from Earth's strongest snatching Victory's crown;Upon the anvil of each Battle-plain,Still beating swords to ploughshares. All is past,--The glory, and the labour, and the pain--The Conqueror is conquer'd here at last.2.Yet other men have wrought, and fought, and won,Cutting with crimson sword Fame's Gordian knot,And, dyin...
Walter R. Cassels
As Vanquished Erin.
As vanquished Erin wept beside The Boyne's ill-fated river,She saw where Discord, in the tide, Had dropt his loaded quiver."Lie hid," she cried, "ye venomed darts, "Where mortal eye may shun you;"Lie hid--the stain of manly hearts, "That bled for me, is on you."But vain her wish, her weeping vain,-- As Time too well hath taught her--Each year the Fiend returns again, And dives into that water;And brings, triumphant, from beneath His shafts of desolation,And sends them, winged with worse than death, Through all her maddening nation.Alas for her who sits and mourns, Even now, beside that river--Unwearied still the Fiend returns, And stored is still his quiver."When will this end, y...
A Reiver's Neck-Verse
Some die singing, and some die swinging,And weel mot a' they be:Some die playing, and some die praying,And I wot sae winna we, my dear,And I wot sae winna we.Some die sailing, and some die wailing,And some die fair and free:Some die flyting, and some die fighting,But I for a fause love's fee, my dear,But I for a fause love's fee.Some die laughing, and some die quaffing,And some die high on tree:Some die spinning, and some die sinning,But faggot and fire for ye, my dear,Faggot and fire for ye.Some die weeping, and some die sleeping,And some die under sea:Some die ganging, and some die hanging,And a twine of a tow for me, my dear,A twine of a tow for me.
Algernon Charles Swinburne