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Reverie ["Only a few more years!"]
Only a few more years! Weary years! Only a few more tears! Bitter tears!And then -- and then -- like other men,I cease to wander, cease to weep,Dim shadows o'er my way shall creep;And out of the day and into the night,Into the dark and out of the brightI go, and Death shall veil my face,The feet of the years shall fast effaceMy very name, and every traceI leave on earth; for the stern years tread --Tread out the names of the gone and dead!And then, ah! then, like other men,I close my eyes and go to sleep,Only a few, one hour, shall weep:Ah! me, the grave is dark and deep! Alas! Alas! How soon we pass! And ah! we go So far away;When go we must,<...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Autumn
There is a wind where the rose was;Cold rain where sweet grass was;And clouds like sheepStream o'er the steepGrey skies where the lark was.Nought gold where your hair was;Nought warm where your hand was;But phantom, forlorn,Beneath the thorn,Your ghost where your face was.Sad winds where your voice was;Tears, tears where my heart was;And ever with me,Child, ever with me,Silence where hope was.
Walter De La Mare
Clari
Too cold, O my brother, too cold for my wifeIs the Beauty you showed me this morning:Nor yet have I found the sweet dream of my life,And good-bye to the sneering and scorning.Would you have me cast down in the dark of her frown,Like others who bend at her shrine;And would barter their souls for a statue-like face,And a heart that can never be mine?That can never be theirs nor mine.Go after her, look at her, kneel at her feet,And mimic the lover romantic;I have hated deceit, and she misses the treatOf driving me hopelessly frantic!Now watch her, as deep in her carriage she lies,And love her, my friend, if you dare!She would wither your life with her beautiful eyes,And strangle your soul with her hair!With a mesh of her splendid hair.
Henry Kendall
Forlorn, My Love, No Comfort Near.
Tune - "Let me in this ae night."I. Forlorn, my love, no comfort near, Far, far from thee, I wander here; Far, far from thee, the fate severe At which I most repine, love. O wert thou, love, but near me; But near, near, near me; How kindly thou wouldst cheer me, And mingle sighs with mine, loveII. Around me scowls a wintry sky, That blasts each bud of hope and joy; And shelter, shade, nor home have I, Save in those arms of thine, love.III. Cold, alter'd friendship's cruel part, To poison Fortune's ruthless dart, Let me not break thy faithful heart, And say that fate is mine, lov...
Robert Burns
The Lost Heart.
One golden summer day,Along the forest-way,Young Colin passed with blithesome steps alert.His locks with careless graceRimmed round his handsome faceAnd drifted outward on the airy surge.So blithe of heart was he,He hummed a melody,And all the birds were hushed to hear him sing.Across his shoulders flungHis bow and baldric hung:So, in true huntsman's guise, he threads the wood.The sun mounts up the sky,The air moves sluggishly,And reeks with summer heat in every pore.His limbs begin to tire,Slumbers his youthful fire;He sinks upon a violet-bed to rest.The soft winds go and comeWith low and drowsy hum,And ope for him the ivory gate of dreams.Beneath the forest-shadeThe...
Horatio Alger, Jr.
The Fall Of Jerusalem.
The sunset on Judah's high places grew pale,And purple tints shadowed the gorge and the vale,While Venus in beauty, with dilating eye,Out-riding the star-host, looked down from the skyOn the city that struggled with foemen below, -Jerusalem, peerless in grandeur and woe!O'er the fast crumbling walls thronged the cohorts of Rome,Their batteries thundered on palace and dome,And the children of Israel in voiceless despairAt the foot of the Temple had breathed a last prayer;For their armies were spent in the unequal strife,And Famine was maddening the pulses of life,The pestilence lurked in the zephyr's soft breath,And the gall-drops were poured from the drawn sword of Death.The Night with starred garments moved noiseless on high,When they felt a h...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
The Sonnets LXIV - When I have seen by Times fell hand defacd
When I have seen by Times fell hand defacdThe rich-proud cost of outworn buried age;When sometime lofty towers I see down-razd,And brass eternal slave to mortal rage;When I have seen the hungry ocean gainAdvantage on the kingdom of the shore,And the firm soil win of the watery main,Increasing store with loss, and loss with store;When I have seen such interchange of state,Or state itself confounded, to decay;Ruin hath taught me thus to ruminateThat Time will come and take my love away.This thought is as a death which cannot chooseBut weep to have, that which it fears to lose.
William Shakespeare
An Impression Received From A Symphony
There was a day, when I, if that was I, Surrendered lay beneath a burning sky, Where overhead the azure ached with heat, And many red fierce poppies splashed the wheat; Motion was dead, and silence was complete, And stains of red fierce poppies splashed the wheat, And as I lay upon a scent-warm bank, I fell away, slipped back from earth, and sank, I lost the place of sky and field and tree, One covering face obscured the world for me, And for an hour I knew eternity, For one fixed face suspended Time for me. O had those eyes in that extreme of bliss Shed one more wise and culminating kiss, My end had come, nor had I lived to quail, Frightened and dumb as things must do that fail, A...
John Collings Squire, Sir
The Dead Dream
Between the darkness and the dayAs, lost in doubt, I went my way,I met a shape, as faint as fair,With star-like blossoms in its hair:Its body, which the moon shone through,Was partly cloud and partly dew:Its eyes were bright as if with tears,And held the look of long-gone years;Its mouth was piteous, sweet yet dread,As if with kisses of the dead:And in its hand it bore a flower,In memory of some haunted hour.I knew it for the Dream I'd hadIn days when life was young and glad.Why had it come with love and woeOut of the happy Long-Ago?Upon my brow I felt its breath,Heard ancient. words of faith and death,Sweet with the immortalityOf many a fragrant memory:And to my heart again I tookIts joy and sorrow in a look,
Madison Julius Cawein
Farewell
'Farewell. What a subject! How sweetIt looks to the careless observer!So simple; so easy to treatWith tenderness, mark you, and fervour.Farewell. It's a poem; the songOf nightingales crying and calling!'O Reader, you're utterly wrong.It's not. It's appalling!And yet when she asked me to sendSome trifle of verse to remind herOf days that had come to an end,And one she was leaving behind her,It looked, as we stood on the shore,A theme so entirely delightsomeThat I, like a lunatic, swore(Quite calmly) to write some.I've toiled with unwavering pluck;I've struggled if ever a man did;Infringed every postulate, stuckAt nothing, - nay, once, to be candid,I shifted the cadence - designedA fresh but unauth...
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
To Ruin.
I. All hail! inexorable lord! At whose destruction-breathing word, The mightiest empires fall! Thy cruel, woe-delighted train, The ministers of grief and pain, A sullen welcome, all! With stern-resolv'd, despairing eye, I see each aimed dart; For one has cut my dearest tie, And quivers in my heart. Then low'ring and pouring, The storm no more I dread; Though thick'ning and black'ning, Round my devoted head.II. And thou grim pow'r, by life abhorr'd, While life a pleasure can afford, Oh! hear a wretch's prayer! No more I shrink appall'd, afraid; I court, I beg thy friendly aid, ...
Sonnet.
There's not a fibre in my trembling frameThat does not vibrate when thy step draws near,There's not a pulse that throbs not when I hearThy voice, thy breathing, nay, thy very name.When thou art with me, every sense seems dull,And all I am, or know, or feel, is thee;My soul grows faint, my veins run liquid flame,And my bewildered spirit seems to swimIn eddying whirls of passion, dizzily.When thou art gone, there creeps into my heartA cold and bitter consciousness of pain:The light, the warmth of life, with thee depart,And I sit dreaming o'er and o'er againThy greeting clasp, thy parting look, and tone;And suddenly I wake - and am alone.
Frances Anne Kemble
Harmony Of Evening
Now those days arrive when, stem throbbing,each flower sheds its fragrance like a censer:sounds and scents twine in the evening air:languorous dizziness, Melancholy dancing!Each flower sheds its fragrance like a censer:the violin quivers, a heart thats suffering:languorous dizziness, Melancholy dancing!the sky is lovely, sad like a huge altar.The violin quivers, a heart thats suffering:a heart, hating the vast black void, so tender!the sky is lovely, sad like a huge altar:the sun is drowned, in its own blood congealing.A heart, hating the vast black void, so tender:each trace of the luminous past its gathering!The sun is drowned, in its own blood congealingA vessel of the host, your memory shines there.
Charles Baudelaire
The Friend
Through the dark wood There came to me a friend,Bringing in his cold hands Two words - 'The End.'His face was fair As fading autumn flowers,And the lost joy Of unforgotten hours.His voice was sweet As rain upon a grave;'Be brave,' he smiled. And yet again - 'be brave.'
Richard Le Gallienne
Grinie's Flight With Diarmid.
(From The Gaelic)The Hern at early morning cries,Where at Sleve-gail the meadow lies.Say, Dúin's son, whom I love well,Canst thou thereof the reason tell?O! Gormla's daughter, thou whose sireWas named from tireless steeds of fire;Thou evil-working one! thy feetTread treacherous ways of ice and sleet.Grinie! of lovelier hue than SpringTo flower, or bloom on bough can bring,More fleeting far your love that fliesLike the cold clouds of dawning skies.Because of thine ill-chosen partMy fortune's firm set rivets start.Yes, thine the deed, brought low to pain,My grievous woe thine only gain.From palaces of kings beguiled,For ever outcast and exiled:Like night-owl mourning, a...
John Campbell
Times Revenges
Ive a Friend, over the sea;I like him, but he loves me;It all grew out of the books I write;They find such favour in his sightThat he slaughters you with savage looksBecause you dont admire my books:He does himself though, and if some veinWere to snap to-night in this heavy brain,To-morrow month, if I lived to try,Round should I just turn quietly,Or out of the bedclothes stretch my handTill I found him, come from his foreign landTo be my nurse in this poor place,And make my broth and wash my face,And light my fire and, all the while,Bear with his old good-humoured smileThat I told him Better have kept awayThan come and kill me, night and day,With, worse than fever throbs and shoots,The creaking of his clumsy boots.
Robert Browning
Is It Done?
It is done! in the fire's fitful flashes, The last line has withered and curled.In a tiny white heap of dead ashes Lie buried the hopes of your world.There were mad foolish vows in each letter, It is well they have shriveled and burned,And the ring! oh, the ring was a fetter, It was better removed and returned.But ah, is it done? in the embers Where letters and tokens were cast,Have you burned up the heart that remembers, And treasures its beautiful past?Do you think in this swift reckless fashion To ruthlessly burn and destroyThe months that were freighted with passion, The dreams that were drunken with joy?Can you burn up the rapture of kisses That flashed from the lips to the soul?Or the hea...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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,...