Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 143 of 190
Previous
Next
Gone
Upon time's surging, billowy seaA ship now slowly disappears,With freight no human eye can see,But weighing just one hundred years.Their sighs, their tears, their weary moans,Their joy and pleasure, pomp and pride,Their angry and their gentle tones,Beneath its waves forever hide.Yes, sunk within oblivion's waves,They'll partly live in memory;To youth, who will their secrets crave,Mostly exist in history.Ah, what a truth steps in this strainThey are not lost within time's sea;Their words and actions live again,And blight or light eternity!A new ship comes within our view,Laden with dreams both sad and blest;To youth they're tinged with roseate hue;To weary ones bring longed-for rest.And still...
Nancy Campbell Glass
Cold And Quiet.
Cold, my dear, - cold and quiet. In their cups on yonder lea,Cowslips fold the brown bee's diet; So the moss enfoldeth thee."Plant me, plant me, O love, a lily flower - Plant at my head, I pray you, a green tree;And when our children sleep," she sighed, "at the dusk hour, And when the lily blossoms, O come out to me!" Lost, my dear? Lost! nay deepest Love is that which loseth least; Through the night-time while thou sleepest, Still I watch the shrouded east.Near thee, near thee, my wife that aye liveth, "Lost" is no word for such a love as mine;Love from her past to me a present giveth, And love itself doth comfort, making pain divine. Rest, my dear, rest. Fair showeth That which was, ...
Jean Ingelow
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXIV.
Spinse amor e dolor ove ir non debbe.REFLECTING THAT LAURA IS IN HEAVEN, HE REPENTS HIS EXCESSIVE GRIEF, AND IS CONSOLED. Sorrow and Love encouraged my poor tongue,Discreet in sadness, where it should not go,To speak of her for whom I burn'd and sung,What, even were it true, 'twere wrong to show.That blessèd saint my miserable stateMight surely soothe, and ease my spirit's strife,Since she in heaven is now domesticateWith Him who ever ruled her heart in life.Wherefore I am contented and consoled,Nor would again in life her form behold;Nay, I prefer to die, and live alone.Fairer than ever to my mental eye,I see her soaring with the angels high,Before our Lord, her maker and my own.MACGREGOR. ...
Francesco Petrarca
Love, Time, And Will
A soul immortal, Time, God everywhere,Without, within -how can a heart despair,Or talk of failure, obstacles, and doubt?(What proofs of God? The little seeds that sprout,Life, and the solar system, and their laws.Nature? Ah, yes; but what was Nature's cause?)All mighty words are short: God, life, and death,War, peace, and truth, are uttered in a breath.And briefly said are love, and will, and time;Yet in them lies a majesty sublime.Love is the vast constructive power of space;Time is the hour which calls it into place;Will is the means of using time and love,And bringing forth the heart's desires thereof.The way is love, the time is now, and willThe patient method. Let this knowledge fillThy consciousness, and fate...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Sonnet CLXXIX.
In nobil sangue vita umile e queta.SHE UNITES IN HERSELF THE HIGHEST EXCELLENCES OF VIRTUE AND BEAUTY. High birth in humble life, reserved yet kind,On youth's gay flower ripe fruits of age and rare,A virtuous heart, therewith a lofty mind,A happy spirit in a pensive air;Her planet, nay, heaven's king, has fitly shrinedAll gifts and graces in this lady fair,True honour, purest praises, worth refined,Above what rapt dreams of best poets are.Virtue and Love so rich in her unite,With natural beauty dignified address,Gestures that still a silent grace express,And in her eyes I know not what strange light,That makes the noonday dark, the dusk night clear,Bitter the sweet, and e'en sad absence dear.MACGREGOR.
Ode, To Hope
Thou Cherub fair! in whose blue, sparkling eyeNew joys, anticipated, ever play;Celestial Hope! with whose all-potent swayThe moral elements of life comply;At thy melodious voice their jarrings cease,And settle into order, beauty, peace;How dear to memory that thrice-hallow'd hourWhich gave Thee to the world, auspicious Power!Sent by thy parent, Mercy, from the sky,Invested with her own all-cheering ray,To dissipate the thick, black cloud of fateWhich long had shrouded this terrestrial state, What time fair Virtue, struggling with despair,Pour'd forth to pitying heaven her saddest soul in prayer: Then, then she saw the brightening gloom divide, And Thee, sweet Comforter! adown thy rainbow glide. From the veil'd awful future, to her v...
Thomas Oldham
Sonnet IX.
Seek not, my Lesbia, the sequester'd dale, Or bear thou to its shades a tranquil heart; Since rankles most in solitude the smart Of injur'd charms and talents, when they failTo meet their due regard; - nor e'en prevail Where most they wish to please: - Yet, since thy part Is large in Life's chief blessings, why desert Sullen the world? - Alas! how many wailDire loss of the best comforts Heaven can grant! While they the bitter tear in secret pour, Smote by the death of Friends, Disease, or Want,Slight wrongs if thy self-valuing soul deplore, Thou but resemblest, in thy lonely haunt, Narcissus pining on the watry shore.
Anna Seward
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXVI.
Donna che lieta col Principio nostro.HE CONJURES LAURA, BY THE PURE LOVE HE EVER BORE HER, TO OBTAIN FOR HIM A SPEEDY ADMISSION TO HER IN HEAVEN. Lady, in bliss who, by our Maker's feet,As suited for thine excellent life alone,Art now enthroned in high and glorious seat,Adorn'd with charms nor pearls nor purple own;O model high and rare of ladies sweet!Now in his face to whom all things are known,Look on my love, with that pure faith replete,As long my verse and truest tears have shown,And know at last my heart on earth to theeWas still as now in heaven, nor wish'd in lifeMore than beneath thine eyes' bright sun to be:Wherefore, to recompense the tedious strife,Which turn'd my liege heart from the world away,Pray that I so...
To Laura In Death. Canzone IV.
Tacer non posso, e temo non adopre.HE RECALLS HER MANY GRACES. Fain would I speak--too long has silence seal'dLips that would gladly with my full heart moveWith one consent, and yieldHomage to her who listens from above;Yet how can I, without thy prompting, Love,With mortal words e'er equal things divine,And picture faithfullyThe high humility whose chosen shrineWas that fair prison whence she now is free?Which held, erewhile, her gentle spirit, whenSo in my conscious heart her power began.That, instantly, I ran,--Alike o' th' year and me 'twas April then--From these gay meadows round sweet flowers to bind,Hoping rich pleasure at her eyes to find.The walls were alabaster, the roof gold,Ivory the doo...
Overseas
Non numero horas nisi serenasWhen Fall drowns morns in mist, it seemsIn soul I am a part of it;A portion of its humid beams,A form of fog, I seem to flitFrom dreams to dreams....An old château sleeps 'mid the hillsOf France: an avenue of sorbsConceals it: drifts of daffodilsBloom by a 'scutcheoned gate with barbsLike iron bills.I pass the gate unquestioned; yet,I feel, announced. Broad holm-oaks makeDark pools of restless violet.Between high bramble banks a lake,As in a netThe tangled scales twist silver, shines....Gray, mossy turrets swell aboveA sea of leaves. And where the pinesShade ivied walls, there lies my love,My heart divines.I know her window, slimly seenFrom distant lanes with hawthorn hedged...
Madison Julius Cawein
Grief.
There is a hungry longing in the soul, A craving sense of emptiness and pain,She may not satisfy nor yet control, For all the teeming world looks void and vain.No compensation in eternal spheres,She knows the loneliness of all her years.There is no comfort looking forth nor back, The present gives the lie to all her past.Will cruel time restore what she doth lack? Why was no shadow of this doom forecast?Ah! she hath played with many a keen-edged thing;Naught is too small and soft to turn and sting.In the unnatural glory of the hour, Exalted over time, and death, and fate,No earthly task appears beyond her power, No possible endurance seemeth great.She knows her misery and her majesty,And recks not...
Emma Lazarus
To His Mistress
There comes an end to summer,To spring showers and hoar rime;His mumming to each mummerHas somewhere end in time,And since life ends and laughter,And leaves fall and tears dry,Who shall call love immortal,When all that is must die?Nay, sweet, let's leave unspokenThe vows the fates gainsay,For all vows made are broken,We love but while we may.Let's kiss when kissing pleases,And part when kisses pall,Perchance, this time to-morrow,We shall not love at all.You ask my love completest,As strong next year as now,The devil take you, sweetest,Ere I make aught such vow.Life is a masque that changes,A fig for constancy!No love at all were better,Than love which is not free.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Rachel
Rachel sings sweet -Oh yes, at night,Her pale face bentIn the candle-light,Her slim hands touchThe answering keys,And she sings of hopeAnd of memories:Sings to the littleBoy that standsWatching those slim,Light, heedful hands.He looks in her face;Her dark eyes seemDark with a beautifulDistant dream;And still she plays,Sings tenderlyTo him of hope,And of memory.
Walter De La Mare
Too Young For Love
Too young for love?Ah, say not so!Tell reddening rose-buds not to blowWait not for spring to pass away, -Love's summer months begin with May!Too young for love?Ah, say not so!Too young? Too young?Ah, no! no! no!Too young for love?Ah, say not so,To practise all love learned in May.June soon will come with lengthened dayWhile daisies bloom and tulips glow!Too young for love?Ah, say not so!Too young? Too young?Ah, no! no! no!
Oliver Wendell Holmes
How To Ask And Have
"Oh, 'tis time I should talk to your mother, Sweet Mary," says I;"Oh, don't talk to my mother," says Mary, Beginning to cry:"For my mother says men are decaivers, And never, I know, will consent;She says girls in a hurry to marry, At leisure repent.""Then, suppose I should talk to your father, Sweet Mary," says I;"Oh, don't talk to my father," says Mary, Beginning to cry:"For my father he loves me so dearly, He'll never consent I should go;If you talk to my father," says Mary, "He'll surely say 'No.'""Then how shall I get you, my jewel, Sweet Mary?" says I;"If your father and mother's so cruel, Most surely I'll die!""Oh, never say die, dear...
Samuel Lover
In An Album
Like the south-flying swallow the summer has flown,Like a fast-falling star, from unknown to unknownLife flashes and falters and fails from our sight,Good-night, friends, good-night.Like home-coming swallows that seek the old eaves,Like the buds that wait patient beneath the dead leaves,Love shall sleep in our hearts till our hands meet again,Till then, friends, till then!
Arthur Sherburne Hardy
Her Eyes Are Wild
IHer eyes are wild, her head is bare,The sun has burnt her coal-black hair;Her eyebrows have a rusty stain,And she came far from over the main.She has a baby on her arm,Or else she were alone:And underneath the hay-stack warm,And on the greenwood stone,She talked and sung the woods among,And it was in the English tongue.II"Sweet babe! they say that I am mad,But nay, my heart is far too glad;And I am happy when I singFull many a sad and doleful thing:Then, lovely baby, do not fear!I pray thee have no fear of me;But safe as in a cradle, here,My lovely baby! thou shalt be:To thee I know too much I owe;I cannot work thee any woe.III"A fire was once within my brain;And in ...
William Wordsworth
Evening
Tis 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 loves 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