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Both Sides Of The Medal
And because you love methink you you do not hate me?Ha, since you love me to ecstasyit follows you hate me to ecstasy.Because when you hear mego down the road outside the houseyou must come to the window to watch me go,do you think it is pure worship?Because, when I sit in the room,here, in my own house,and you want to enlarge yourself with this friend of mine,such a friend as he is,yet you cannot get beyond your awareness of meyou are held back by my being in the same world with you,do you think it is bliss alone?sheer harmony?No doubt if I were dead, you mustreach into death after me,but would not your hate reach even more madly than your love?your impassioned, unfinished hate?Since you have a p...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
My Mother's Kiss.
My mother's kiss, my mother's kiss, I feel its impress now;As in the bright and happy days She pressed it on my brow.You say it is a fancied thing Within my memory fraught;To me it has a sacred place - The treasure house of thought.Again, I feel her fingers glide Amid my clustering hair;I see the love-light in her eyes, When all my life was fair.Again, I hear her gentle voice In warning or in love.How precious was the faith that taught My soul of things above.The music of her voice is stilled, Her lips are paled in death.As precious pearls I'll clasp her words Until my latest breath.The world has scattered round my path Honor and wealth and fame;B...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Memories
Oft I remember those whom I have known In other days, to whom my heart was led As by a magnet, and who are not dead, But absent, and their memories overgrownWith other thoughts and troubles of my own, As graves with grasses are, and at their head The stone with moss and lichens so o'erspread, Nothing is legible but the name alone.And is it so with them? After long years, Do they remember me in the same way, And is the memory pleasant as to me?I fear to ask; yet wherefore are my fears? Pleasures, like flowers, may wither and decay, And yet the root perennial may be.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Footsteps Of Angels.
When the hours of Day are numbered, And the voices of the NightWake the better soul, that slumbered, To a holy, calm delight;Ere the evening lamps are lighted, And, like phantoms grim and tall,Shadows from the fitful firelight Dance upon the parlor wall;Then the forms of the departed Enter at the open door;The beloved, the true-hearted, Come to visit me once more;He, the young and strong, who cherished Noble longings for the strife,By the roadside fell and perished, Weary with the march of life!They, the holy ones and weakly, Who the cross of suffering bore,Folded their pale hands so meekly, Spake with us on earth no more!And with them the Being Beauteous,...
On A Packet Of Letters.
"To-day" Oh! not to-day shall soundThy mild and gentle voice;Nor yet "to-morrow" will it bidMy heart rejoice.But one, one fondly treasured thingIs left me 'mid decay,This record, hallowed with thy thoughtsOf yesterday.Chaste thoughts and holy, such as stillTo purest hearts are given,Breathing of Earth, yet wafting highThe soul to Heaven;Soaring beyond the bounds of Time,Beyond the blight of Death,To worlds where "parting is no more,""Nor Life a breath."'Tis true they whisper mournfullyOf buds too bright to bloom,Of hopes that blossomed but to dieAround the tomb.Still they are sweet remembrancesOf life's unclouded daySketches of mind, which death aloneCan wrench away;<...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
The Rosicrucian
IThe tripod flared with a purple spark,And the mist hung emerald in the dark:Now he stooped to the lilac flameOver the glare of the amber embers,Thrice to utter no earthly name;Thrice, like a mind that half remembers;Bathing his face in the magic mistWhere the brilliance burned like an amethyst.II"Sylph, whose soul was born of mine,Born of the love that made me thine,Once more flash on my eyes! AgainBe the loved caresses taken!Lip to lip let our forms remain! -Here in the circle sense, awaken!Ere spirit meet spirit, the flesh laid by,Let me touch thee, and let me die."IIISunset heavens may burn, but neverKnow such splendor! There bloomed an everOpaline orb, where the sylphid rose...
Madison Julius Cawein
Golden Silences.
There is silence that saith, "Ah me!"There is silence that nothing saith;One the silence of life forlorn,One the silence of death;One is, and the other shall be.One we know and have known for long,One we know not, but we shall know,All we who have ever been born;Even so, be it so, -There is silence, despite a song.Sowing day is a silent day,Resting night is a silent night;But whoso reaps the ripened cornShall shout in his delight,While silences vanish away.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
To Sylvia.
O Sylvia, dost thou remember still That period of thy mortal life, When beauty so bewildering Shone in thy laughing, glancing eyes, As thou, so merry, yet so wise, Youth's threshold then wast entering? How did the quiet rooms, And all the paths around, With thy perpetual song resound, As thou didst sit, on woman's work intent, Abundantly content With the vague future, floating on thy mind! Thy custom thus to spend the day In that sweet time of youth and May! How could I, then, at times, In those fair days of youth, The only happy days I ever knew, My hard tasks dropping, or my careless rhymes, My station take, on father's balcony, And listen to thy voice'...
Giacomo Leopardi
Testamentum Amoris
I cannot raise my eyelids up from sleep,But I am visited with thoughts of you;Slumber has no refreshment half so deepAs the sweet morn, that wakes my heart anew.I cannot put away life's trivial care,But you straightway steal on me with delight:My purest moments are your mirror fair;My deepest thought finds you the truth most bright.You are the lovely regent of my mind,The constant sky to my unresting sea;Yet, since 'tis you that rule me, I but findA finer freedom in such tyranny.Were the world's anxious kingdoms govern'd so,Lost were their wrongs, and vanish'd half their woe!
Robert Laurence Binyon
The Morning Comes Before The Sun.
Slow buds the pink dawn like a roseFrom out night's gray and cloudy sheath;Softly and still it grows and grows,Petal by petal, leaf by leaf;Each sleep-imprisoned creature breaksIts dreamy fetters, one by one,And love awakes, and labor wakes,--The morning comes before the sun.What is this message from the lightSo fairer far than light can be?Youth stands a-tiptoe, eager, bright,In haste the risen sun to see;Ah! check thy lunging, restless heart,Count the charmed moments as they run,It is life's best and fairest part,This morning hour before the sun.When once thy day shall burst to flower,When once the sun shall climb the sky,And busy hour by busy hour,The urgent noontide draws anigh;When the long shadows creep...
Susan Coolidge
Her Right Name
As Nancy at her toilette sat,Admiring this, and blaming that,Tell me, she said, but tell me true,The nymph who could your heart subdue.What sort of charms does she possess?Absolve me, fair one, I'll confessWith pleasure, I replied: Her hair,In ringlets rather dark than fair,Does down her ivory bosom roll,And hiding half adorns the whole,In her high forehead's fair half roundLove sits, in open triumph crown'd;He, in the dimple of her chin,In private state, by friends is seen.Her eyes are neither black nor grey,Nor fierce nor feeble is their ray;Their dubious lustre seems to showSomething that speaks nor yes nor no.Her lips no living bard, I weet,May say how red, how round, how sweet:Old Homer only could inditeTheir ...
Matthew Prior
A Test Of Love
"Now who shall say he loves me not."He wooed her first in an atmosphere Of tender and low-breathed sighs;But the pang of her laugh went cutting clear To the soul of the enterprise;"You beg so pert for the kiss you seek It reminds me, John," she said,"Of a poodle pet that jumps to 'speak' For a crumb or a crust of bread."And flashing up, with the blush that flushed His face like a tableau-light,Came a bitter threat that his white lips hushed To a chill, hoarse-voiced "Good night!"And again her laugh, like a knell that tolled, And a wide-eyed mock surprise, -"Why, John," she said, "you have taken cold In the chill air of your sighs!"And then he turned, and with teeth tight clenched, He told...
James Whitcomb Riley
Evening
'T is evening: the black snail has got on his track,And gone to its nest is the wren,And the packman snail, too, with his home on his back,Clings to the bowed bents like a wen.The shepherd has made a rude mark with his footWhere his shadow reached when he first came,And it just touched the tree where his secret love cutTwo letters that stand for love's name.The evening comes in with the wishes of love,And the shepherd he looks on the flowers,And thinks who would praise the soft song of the dove,And meet joy in these dew-falling hours.For Nature is love, and finds haunts for true love,Where nothing can hear or intrude;It hides from the eagle and joins with the dove,In beautiful green solitude.
John Clare
To----
1.Oh! well I know your subtle Sex,Frail daughters of the wanton Eve, -While jealous pangs our Souls perplex,No passion prompts you to relieve.2From Love, or Pity ne'er you fall,By you, no mutual Flame is felt,"Tis Vanity, which rules you all,Desire alone which makes you melt.3I will not say no souls are yours,Aye, ye have Souls, and dark ones too,Souls to contrive those smiling lures,To snare our simple hearts for you.4Yet shall you never bind me fast,Long to adore such brittle toys,I'll rove along, from first to last,And change whene'er my fancy cloys.5Oh! I should be a baby fool,To sigh the dupe of female art -Woman! perhaps...
George Gordon Byron
Love And The Spring-Flower.
'Tis pity, ev'ry maiden knows,Just as she cools, Love warmer grows;But, if the chill be too severe,Trust me, he'll wither in a tear.Thus will the spring-flow'r bud and blow,Wrapp'd round in many a fold of snow;But, if an ice-wind pierce the sky,'Twill drop upon its bed, and die!
John Carr
The Window Overlooking the Harbour
Sad is the Evening: all the level sand Lies left and lonely, while the restless sea,Tired of the green caresses of the land, Withdraws into its own infinity.But still more sad this white and chilly Dawn Filling the vacant spaces of the sky,While little winds blow here and there forlorn And all the stars, weary of shining, die.And more than desolate, to wake, to rise, Leaving the couch, where softly sleeping still,What through the past night made my heaven, lies; And looking out across the window sillSee, from the upper window's vantage ground, Mankind slip into harness once again,And wearily resume his daily round Of love and labour, toil and strife and pain.How the sad thoughts slip back across t...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Altitude
I wonderhow it would be here with you,where the windthat has shaken off its dust in low valleystouches one cleanly,as with a new-washed hand,and painis as the remote hunger of droning things,and angerbut a little silencesinking into the great silence.
Lola Ridge
Ode On A Grecian Urn
Thou still unravishd bride of quietness,Thou foster-child of silence and slow time,Sylvan historian, who canst thus expressA flowery tale more sweetly than our rhyme:What leaf-fringd legend haunts about thy shapeOf deities or mortals, or of both,In Tempe or the dales of Arcady?What men or gods are these? What maidens loth?What mad pursuit? What struggle to escape?What pipes and timbrels? What wild ecstasy?Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheardAre sweeter; therefore, ye soft pipes, play on;Not to the sensual ear, but, more endeard,Pipe to the spirit ditties of no tone:Fair youth, beneath the trees, thou canst not leaveThy song, nor ever can those trees be bare;Bold Lover, never, never canst thou kiss,Though winning near the g...
John Keats