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Homesick In Heaven
THE DIVINE VOICEGo seek thine earth-born sisters, - thus the VoiceThat all obey, - the sad and silent three;These only, while the hosts of Heaven rejoice,Smile never; ask them what their sorrows be;And when the secret of their griefs they tell,Look on them with thy mild, half-human eyes;Say what thou wast on earth; thou knowest well;So shall they cease from unavailing sighs.THE ANGELWhy thus, apart, - the swift-winged herald spake, -Sit ye with silent lips and unstrung lyresWhile the trisagion's blending chords awakeIn shouts of joy from all the heavenly choirs?FIRST SPIRITChide not thy sisters, - thus the answer came; -Children of earth, our half-weaned nature clingsTo earth's fond memories, and her whispered name...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
After The Curfew
The Play is over. While the lightYet lingers in the darkening hall,I come to say a last Good-nightBefore the final Exeunt all.We gathered once, a joyous throng:The jovial toasts went gayly round;With jest, and laugh, and shout, and song,We made the floors and walls resound.We come with feeble steps and slow,A little band of four or five,Left from the wrecks of long ago,Still pleased to find ourselves alive.Alive! How living, too, are theyWhose memories it is ours to share!Spread the long table's full array, -There sits a ghost in every chair!One breathing form no more, alas!Amid our slender group we see;With him we still remained "The Class," -Without his presence what are we?The hand...
Her Eyes
In her dark eyes dreams poetize;The soul sits lost in love:There is no thing in all the skies,To gladden all the world I prize,Like the deep love in her dark eyes,Or one sweet dream thereof.In her dark eyes, where thoughts arise,Her soul's soft moods I see:Of hope and faith, that make life wise;And charity, whose food is sighsNot truer than her own true eyesIs truth's divinity.In her dark eyes the knowledge liesOf an immortal sod,Her soul once trod in angel-guise,Nor can forget its heavenly ties,Since, there in Heaven, upon her eyesOnce gazed the eyes of God.
Madison Julius Cawein
Ghosts
There are ghosts in the room.As I sit here alone, from the dark corners there They come out of the gloom,And they stand at my side and they lean on my chair. There's the ghost of a HopeThat lighted my days with a fanciful glow. In her hand is the ropeThat strangled her life out. Hope was slain long ago. But her ghost comes to-night,With its skeleton face and expressionless eyes, And it stands in the light,And mocks me, and jeers me with sobs and with sighs. There's the ghost of a Joy,A frail, fragile thing, and I prized it too much, And the hands that destroyClasped it close, and it died at the withering touch. There's the ghost of a Love,Born with joy, reared with hope, died in pain ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Tears.
The tears of saints more sweet by farThan all the songs of sinners are.
Robert Herrick
Lines To Fanny
What can I do to drive awayRemembrance from my eyes? for they have seen,Aye, an hour ago, my brilliant Queen!Touch has a memory. O say, love, say,What can I do to kill it and be freeIn my old liberty?When every fair one that I saw was fairEnough to catch me in but half a snare,Not keep me there:When, howe'er poor or particolour'd things,My muse had wings,And ever ready was to take her courseWhither I bent her force,Unintellectual, yet divine to me;Divine, I say! What sea-bird o'er the seaIs a philosopher the while he goesWinging along where the great water throes?How shall I doTo get anewThose moulted feathers, and so mount once moreAbove, aboveThe reach of fluttering Love,And make him cower lowly while...
John Keats
Sonnet LXXVI.
Ahi bella libertà, come tu m' hai.HE DEPLORES HIS LOST LIBERTY AND THE UNHAPPINESS OF HIS PRESENT STATE. Alas! fair Liberty, thus left by thee,Well hast thou taught my discontented heartTo mourn the peace it felt, ere yet Love's dartDealt me the wound which heal'd can never be;Mine eyes so charm'd with their own weakness growThat my dull mind of reason spurns the chain;All worldly occupation they disdain,Ah! that I should myself have train'd them so.Naught, save of her who is my death, mine earConsents to learn; and from my tongue there flowsNo accent save the name to me so dear;Love to no other chase my spirit spurs,No other path my feet pursue; nor knowsMy hand to write in other praise but hers.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Lament For Israel.
Where is thy home in thy promised land? Desolate and forsaken!The stranger's arm hath seized thy brand,Thou art bowed beneath the stranger's hand, And the stranger thy birthright hath taken.Where is the mark of thy chosen race? Infamous and degraded!It hath fallen on thee, on thy dwelling-place,And that heaven-stamped sign to a foul disgrace And the scoff of the world, has faded.First-born of nations! upon thy brow, Resistless and revenging,The fiery finger of God hath nowWritten the sentence of thy wo, The innocent blood avenging!Lion of Judah! thy glory is past, Vanished and fled for ever.Homeless and scattered, thy race is castLike chaff in the breath of the sweeping blast, To rally...
Frances Anne Kemble
Sonnet XI.
Se la mia vita dall' aspro tormento.HE HOPES THAT TIME WILL RENDER HER MORE MERCIFUL. If o'er each bitter pang, each hidden throeSadly triumphant I my years drag on,Till even the radiance of those eyes is gone,Lady, which star-like now illume thy brow;And silver'd are those locks of golden glow,And wreaths and robes of green aside are thrown,And from thy cheek those hues of beauty flown,Which check'd so long the utterance of my woe,Haply my bolder tongue may then revealThe bosom'd annals of my heart's fierce fire,The martyr-throbs that now in night I veil:And should the chill Time frown on young Desire.Still, still some late remorse that breast may feel,And heave a tardy sigh--ere love with life expire.WRANGHAM...
A Bronze Head
Here at right of the entrance this bronze head,Human, superhuman, a bird's round eye,Everything else withered and mummy-dead.What great tomb-haunter sweeps the distant sky(Something may linger there though all else die;)And finds there nothing to make its tetror lessi{Hysterica passio} of its own emptiness?No dark tomb-haunter once; her form all fullAs though with magnanimity of light,Yet a most gentle woman; who can tellWhich of her forms has shown her substance right?Or maybe substance can be composite,profound McTaggart thought so, and in a breathA mouthful held the extreme of life and death.But even at the starting-post, all sleek and new,I saw the wildness in her and I thoughtA vision of terror that it must live throughHa...
William Butler Yeats
A Ballad Of Sark
High beyond the granite portal arched acrossLike the gateway of some godlike giants holdSweep and swell the billowy breasts of moor and mossEast and westward, and the dell their slopes enfoldBasks in purple, glows in green, exults in goldGlens that know the dove and fells that hear the larkFill with joy the rapturous island, as an arkFull of spicery wrought from herb and flower and tree.None would dream that grief even here may disembarkOn the wrathful woful marge of earth and sea.Rocks emblazoned like the mid shields royal bossTake the sun with all their blossom broad and bold.None would dream that all this moorlands glow and glossCould be dark as tombs that strike the spirit acoldEven in eyes that opened here, and here beholdNow no sun relume fr...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Light That Never Was On Sea Or Land
O gone are now those eager great glad days of days, but I rememberYet even yet the light that turned the saddest of sad hours to mirth;I remember how elate I swung upon the thrusting bowsprits,And how the sun in setting burned and made the earth all unlike earth.O gone are now those mighty ships I haunted days and days together,And gone the mighty men that sang as crawled the tall craft out to sea;And fallen ev'n the forest tips and changed the eyes that watched their burning,But still I hear that shout and clang, and still the old spell stirs in me.And as to some poor ship close locked in water dense and dark and vileThe wind comes garrulous from afar and sets the idle masts a-quiver;And ev'n to her so foully docked, swift as the sun's first beam at dawnThe sea...
John Frederick Freeman
The Old House In The Wood
Weeds and dead leaves, and leaves the Autumn stainsWith hues of rust and rose whence moisture weeps;Gnarl'd thorns, from which the knotted haw-fruit rainsOn paths the gray moss heaps.One golden flower, like a dreamy thoughtIn the sad mind of Age, makes bright the wood;And near it, like a fancy Childhood-fraught,The toadstool's jaunty hood.Webs, in whose snares the nimble spiders crouch,Waiting the prey that comes, moon-winged, with night:Slugs and the snail which trails the mushroom's pouch,That marks the wood with white.An old gaunt house, round which the trees decay,Its porches fallen and its windows gone,Starts out at you as if to bar the way,Or bid you hurry on.A picket fence, grim as a skeleton arm,Is flung ar...
Astra Castra.
Departed to the judgment,A mighty afternoon;Great clouds like ushers leaning,Creation looking on.The flesh surrendered, cancelled,The bodiless begun;Two worlds, like audiences, disperseAnd leave the soul alone.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Sonnet II.
Think Valentine, as speeding on thy way Homeward thou hastest light of heart along, If heavily creep on one little day The medley crew of travellers among, Think on thine absent friend: reflect that here On Life's sad journey comfortless he roves, Remote from every scene his heart holds dear, From him he values, and from her he loves. And when disgusted with the vain and dull Whom chance companions of thy way may doom, Thy mind, of each domestic comfort full, Turns to itself and meditates on home, Ah think what Cares must ache within his breastWho loaths the lingering road, yet has no home of rest!
Robert Southey
A Smile And A Sigh
(Macmillan's Magazine, May 1868.)A smile because the nights are short! And every morning brings such pleasureOf sweet love-making, harmless sport: Love, that makes and finds its treasure; Love, treasure without measure.A sigh because the days are long! Long long these days that pass in sighing,A burden saddens every song: While time lags who should be flying, We live who would be dying.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Lines Written By A Death-Bed
Yes, now the longing is oerpast,Which, doggd by fear and fought by shame,Shook her weak bosom day and night,Consumd her beauty like a flame,And dimmd it like the desert blast.And though the curtains hide her face,Yet were it lifted to the lightThe sweet expression of her browWould charm the gazer, till his thoughtErasd the ravages of time,Filld up the hollow cheek, and broughtA freshness back as of her prime,So healing is her quiet now.So perfectly the lines expressA placid, settled loveliness;Her youngest rivals freshest grace.But ah, though peace indeed is here,And ease from shame, and rest from fear;Though nothing can dismarble nowThe smoothness of that limpid brow;Yet is a calm like this, in truth,...
Matthew Arnold
Mortality
Ashes to ashes, dust unto dust,What of his loving, what of his lust?What of his passion, what of his pain?What of his poverty, what of his pride?Earth, the great mother, has called him again:Deeply he sleeps, the world's verdict defied.Shall he be tried again? Shall he go free?Who shall the court convene? Where shall it be?No answer on the land, none from the sea.Only we know that as he did, we must:You with your theories, you with your trust,--Ashes to ashes, dust unto dust!
Paul Laurence Dunbar