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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...
Madison Julius Cawein
Returned Birds
My heart to-day is like a southern wood, Through summer months it has been drunk with heat; And slumbered on unmindful of the beatOf life beyond it: sleep alone seemed good.Now milder Autumn's tints are in the sky; The fervid heats of summer noons depart; And backward to the old haunts in my heartThe golden robins and the blue birds fly.I hear the flutter of their airy wings, They flock about the Spring's deserted nest, And suddenly I feel within my breastThe stirring of sweet half-forgotten things.Bright sunny mornings -golden growing hours - The building of glad birds among the trees; Wide open windows and the kindly breezeBringing the perfume of half-open flowers.A blithe face at the window fai...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Meadow Tragedy
Heres a meadow full of sunshineRipe grasses lush and high;Theres a reaper on the roadway,And a lark hangs in the sky.Theres a nest of love enclosingThree little beaks that cry;The reapers in the meadowAnd a lark hangs in the sky.Heres a mead all full of summer,And tragedy goes byWith a knife amongst the grasses,And a song up in the sky.
Dora Sigerson Shorter
Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part II. - XIV - Waldenses
Those had given earliest notice, as the larkSprings from the ground the morn to gratulate;Or rather rose the day to antedate,By striking out a solitary spark,When all the world with midnight gloom was dark.Then followed the Waldensian bands, whom HateIn vain endeavours to exterminate,Whom Obloquy pursues with hideous bark:But they desist not; and the sacred fire,Rekindled thus, from dens and savage woodsMoves, handed on with never-ceasing care,Through courts, through camps, o'er limitary floods;Nor lacks this sea-girt Isle a timely shareOf the new Flame, not suffered to expire.
William Wordsworth
Winter In Canada.
Nay tell me not that, with shivering fear,You shrink from the thought of wintering here;That the cold intense of our winter-timeIs severe as that of Siberian clime,And, if wishes could waft you across the sea,You, to-night, in your English home would be.Remember, no hedges there now are brightWith verdure, or blossoms of hawthorn white;In damp, sodden fields or bare garden bedsNo daisies or cowslips show their heads;Whilst chill winds and skies of gloomy hueTell in England, as elsewhere, 'tis winter too.Away with dull thoughts! Raise your brooding eyesTo yonder unclouded azure skies;Look round on the earth, robed in bridal white,All glittering and flashing with diamonds bright,While o'er head, her lover and lord, the sun,Shine...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
The Tree And The Lady
I have done all I couldFor that lady I knew! Through the heats I have shaded her,Drawn to her songsters when summer has jaded her,Home from the heath or the wood.At the mirth-time of May,When my shadow first lured her, I'd donned my new braveryOf greenth: 'twas my all. Now I shiver in slavery,Icicles grieving me gray.Plumed to every twig's endI could tempt her chair under me. Much did I treasure herDuring those days she had nothing to pleasure her;Mutely she used me as friend.I'm a skeleton now,And she's gone, craving warmth. The rime sticks like a skin to me;Through me Arcturus peers; Nor'lights shoot into me;Gone is she, scorning my bough!
Thomas Hardy
To Springs And Fountains.
I heard ye could cool heat, and cameWith hope you would allay the same;Thrice I have wash'd but feel no cold,Nor find that true which was foretold.Methinks, like mine, your pulses beatAnd labour with unequal heat;Cure, cure yourselves, for I descryYe boil with love as well as I.
Robert Herrick
On A Similar Occasion. For The Year 1790.
Ne commonentem recta sperne.Buchanan.Despise not my good counsel.He who sits from day to dayWhere the prisond lark is hung,Heedless of his loudest lay,Hardly knows that he has sung.Where the watchman in his roundNightly lifts his voice on high,None, accustomd to the sound,Wakes the sooner for his cry.So your verse-man I, and clerk,Yearly in my song proclaimDeath at handyourselves his markAnd the foes unerring aim.Duly at my time I come,Publishing to all aloudSoon the grave must be your home,And your only suit, a shroud.But the monitory strain,Oft repeated in your ears,Seems to sound too much in vain,Wins no notice, wakes no fears.<...
William Cowper
Literary Squabbles
Ah God! the petty fools of rhymeThat shriek and sweat in pigmy warsBefore the stony face of Time,And lookd at by the silent stars;Who hate each other for a song,And do their little best to biteAnd pinch their brethren in the throng,And scratch the very dead for spite;And strain to make an inch of roomFor their sweet selves, and cannot hearThe sullen Lethe rolling doomOn them and theirs and all things here;When one small touch of CharityCould lift them nearer Godlike stateThan if the crowded Orb should cryLike those who cried Diana great.And I too talk, and lose the touchI talk of. Surely, after all,The noblest answer unto suchIs perfect stillness when they brawl.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Earth! My Likeness!
Earth! my likeness!Though you look so impassive, ample and spheric there,I now suspect that is not all;I now suspect there is something fierce in you, eligible to burst forth;For an athlete is enamour'd of me--and I of him;But toward him there is something fierce and terrible in me, eligible to burst forth,I dare not tell it in words--not even in these songs.
Walt Whitman
Stanzas Written On The Road Between Florence And Pisa.[603]
1.Oh, talk not to me of a name great in story -The days of our Youth are the days of our glory;And the myrtle and ivy of sweet two-and-twentyAre worth all your laurels, though ever so plenty.[604]2.What are garlands and crowns to the brow that is wrinkled?Tis but as a dead flower with May-dew besprinkled:Then away with all such from the head that is hoary,What care I for the wreaths that can only give glory?3.Oh Fame! - if I e'er took delight in thy praises,'Twas less for the sake of thy high-sounding phrases,Than to see the bright eyes of the dear One discover,She thought that I was not unworthy to love her.4.There chiefly I sought thee, there only I found thee;
George Gordon Byron
A Wet Day
Dark, drear, and drizzly, with vapor grizzly,The day goes dully unto its close;Its wet robe smutches each thing it touches,Its fingers sully and wreck the rose.Around the railing and garden-palingThe dripping lily hangs low its head:A brood-mare whinnies; and hens and guineasDroop, damp and chilly, beneath the shed.In splashing mire about the byreThe cattle huddle, the farmhand plods;While to some neighbor's a wagon laborsThrough pool and puddle and clay that clods.The day, unsplendid, at last is ended,Is dead and buried, and night is come;Night, blind and footless, and foul and fruitless,With weeping wearied and sorrow dumb.Ah, God! for thunder! for winds to sunderThe clouds and o'er us smite rushing bars!An...
Upon Her Feet
Her pretty feetLike snails did creepA little out, and then,As if they played at Bo-peep,Did soon draw in again.
Poetics
So say the foolish! Say the foolish so, Love?Flower she is, my rose or else, My very swan is sheOr perhaps, Yon maid-moon, blessing earth below, Love,That art thou! to them, belike: no such vain words from me.Hush, rose, blush! no balm like breath, I chide it:Bend thy neck its best, swan, hers the whiter curve!Be the moon the moon: my Love I place beside it:What is she? Her human self, no lower word will serve.
Robert Browning
In The Dawn.
At night it is not strange that thou art dead;I give thee to the stars, the moonlight snow;But ah, when desolate I lift my head,And thou art gone at early morning, No!
Margaret Steele Anderson
The Two Graves.
'Tis a bleak wild hill, but green and brightIn the summer warmth and the mid-day light;There's the hum of the bee and the chirp of the wren,And the dash of the brook from the alder glen;There's the sound of a bell from the scattered flock,And the shade of the beech lies cool on the rock,And fresh from the west is the free wind's breath,There is nothing here that speaks of death.Far yonder, where orchards and gardens lie,And dwellings cluster, 'tis there men die.They are born, they die, and are buried near,Where the populous grave-yard lightens the bier;For strict and close are the ties that bindIn death the children of human-kind;Yea, stricter and closer than those of life,'Tis a neighbourhood that knows no strife.They are noiselessly gat...
William Cullen Bryant
After Reading Trollope's History Of Florence
My books are on their shelves againAnd clouds lie low with mist and rain.Afar the Arno murmurs lowThe tale of fields of melting snow.List to the bells of times agoneThe while I wait me for the dawn.Beneath great Giotto's CampanileThe gray ghosts throng; their whispers stealFrom poets' bosoms long since dust;They ask me now to go. I trustTheir fleeter footsteps where againThey come at night and live as men.The rain falls on Ghiberti's gates;The big drops hang on purple dates;And yet beneath the ilex-shades--Dear trysting-place for boys and maids--There comes a form from days of old,With Beatrice's hair of gold.The breath of lands or lilied streamsFloats through the fabric of my dreams;And yonder from the...
Eugene Field
Weathering
A day without rain is likea day without sunshine
A. R. Ammons