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The Love Of Illusion
When I watch you go by, in all your indolence,To sound of instruments within the echoing hallSuspending your appeal of lingering harmony,And showing in your glance the ennui of your soul;And when I contemplate, in colouring flames of gas,Your pallid brow enhanced with a morbidity,Where torches of the evening light a promised dawn,Abd your alluring eyes, a master's artistry,I think, how lovely! and how oddly innocent!Massive remembrance, that great tower raised above,Crowns her, and oh, her heart, bruised like a softened peach,Is mellow, like her body, ripe for skilful love.Are you the fruit of fall, when flavour is supreme?Funeral vase, that waits for tears in darkened rooms,Perfume that brings the far oases to our dreams,Caressing ...
Charles Baudelaire
To Tommaso De' Cavalieri. Love's Lordship.
A che più debb' io.Why should I seek to ease intense desire With still more tears and windy words of grief, When heaven, or late or soon, sends no relief To souls whom love hath robed around with fire?Why need my aching heart to death aspire, When all must die? Nay, death beyond belief Unto these eyes would be both sweet and brief, Since in my sum of woes all joys expire!Therefore because I cannot shun the blow I rather seek, say who must rule my breast, Gliding between her gladness and her woe?If only chains and bands can make me blest, No marvel if alone and bare I go An arméd Knight's captive and slave confessed.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
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...
Madison Julius Cawein
Margaret.
I saw her for a moment, Her presence haunts me yet,In oft-recurring visions Of grace and gladness metThat marked the sweet demeanor Of dainty Margaret.Like gossamer her robe was Around her lightly drawn,A filmy summer-garment That fairy maidens donTo make them look like angels Croqueting on the lawn.The mallet-sport became her In hue of exerciseThat tinged her cheek with roses; And, dancing in her eyes,Were pantomime suggestions Of having won - a prize.No more to me a stranger Is she who occupiesA place in all my musings; And brings in tender guiseA thought of one so like her - Long years in Paradise.Dear Margaret! that "pearl-name"...
Hattie Howard
To A Lady - In Answer To A Request That I Would Write Her A Poem Upon Some Drawings That She Had Made Of Flowers In The Island Of Madeira
Fair Lady! can I sing of flowersThat in Madeira bloom and fade,I who ne'er sate within their bowers,Nor through their sunny lawns have strayed?How they in sprightly dance are wornBy Shepherd-groom or May-day queen,Or holy festal pomps adorn,These eyes have never seen.Yet tho' to me the pencil's artNo like remembrances can give,Your portraits still may reach the heartAnd there for gentle pleasure live;While Fancy ranging with free scopeShall on some lovely Alien setA name with us endeared to hope,To peace, or fond regret.Still as we look with nicer care,Some new resemblance we may trace:A 'Heart's-ease' will perhaps be there,A 'Speedwell' may not want its place.And so may we, with charmed mindBeholding w...
William Wordsworth
Home and Love
Just Home and Love! the words are small Four little letters unto each; And yet you will not find in all The wide and gracious range of speech Two more so tenderly complete: When angels talk in Heaven above, I'm sure they have no words more sweet Than Home and Love. Just Home and Love! it's hard to guess Which of the two were best to gain; Home without Love is bitterness; Love without Home is often pain. No! each alone will seldom do; Somehow they travel hand and glove: If you win one you must have two, Both Home and Love. And if you've both, well then I'm sure You ought to sing the whole day long; It doesn't matter if you're poor With these to make divine...
Robert William Service
Little Sunshine.
Winsome, wee and witty,Like a little fay,Carolling her dittyAll the livelong day,Saucy as a sparrowIn the summer glade,Flitting o'er the meadowCame the little maid.A youth big and burly,Loitered near the stile,He had risen early,Just to win her smile.And she came towards himTrying to look grave,But she couldn't do it,Not her life to save.For the fun within her,Well'd out from her eyes,And the tell-tale blushesTo her brow would rise.Then he gave her greeting,And with bashful bow,Said in tones entreating,"Darling tell me now,You are all the sunshine,This world holds for me;Be my little valentine,I have come for thee."But she only titteredWhen he told his love,And ...
John Hartley
Song
As the inhastening tide doth roll,Dear and desired, along the whole Wide shining strand, and floods the caves, Your love comes filling with happy wavesThe open sea-shore of my soul.But inland from the seaward spaces,None knows, not even you, the places Brimmed, at your coming, out of sight, --The little solitudes of delightThis tide constrains in dim embraces.You see the happy shore, wave-rimmed,But know not of the quiet dimmed Rivers your coming floods and fills, The little pools 'mid happier hills,My silent rivulets, over-brimmed.What, I have secrets from you? Yes.But, visiting Sea, your love doth press And reach in further than you know, And fills all these; and when you go,There...
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
From A Bachelor's Private Journal
Sweet Mary, I have never breathedThe love it were in vain to name;Though round my heart a serpent wreathed,I smiled, or strove to smile, the same.Once more the pulse of Nature glowsWith faster throb and fresher fire,While music round her pathway flows,Like echoes from a hidden lyre.And is there none with me to shareThe glories of the earth and sky?The eagle through the pathless airIs followed by one burning eye.Ah no! the cradled flowers may wake,Again may flow the frozen sea,From every cloud a star may break, -There conies no second spring to me.Go, - ere the painted toys of youthAre crushed beneath the tread of years;Ere visions have been chilled to truth,And hopes are washed away in tears.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Shew Us The Father
"Shew us the Father." Chiming stars of space, And lives that fit the worlds, and means and powers, A Thought that holds them up reveal to ours--A Wisdom we have been made wise to trace.And, looking out from sweetest Nature's face, From sunsets, moonlights, rivers, hills, and flowers, Infinite love and beauty, all the hours,Woo men that love them with divinest grace;And to the depths of all the answering soul High Justice speaks, and calls the world her own; And yet we long, and yet we have not knownThe very Father's face who means the whole! Shew us the Father! Nature, conscience, love Revealed in beauty, is there One above?
George MacDonald
Illusions.
I.As down life's morning stream we glide,Full oft some Flower stoops o'er its side,And beckons to the smiling shore,Where roses strew the landscape o'er:Yet as we reach that Flower to clasp,It seems to mock the cheated grasp,And whisper soft, with siren glee,"My bloom is not oh not for thee!"II.Within Youth's flowery vale I tread,By some entrancing shadow ledAnd Echo to my call repliesYet, as she answers, lo, she flies!And, as I seem to reach her cellThe grotto, where she weaves her spellThe Nymph's sweet voice afar I hearSo Love departs, as we draw near!III.Upon a mountain's dizzy height,Ambition's temple gleams with light:Proud forms are moving fair within,And bid u...
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
Portrait Of A Woman
The pathos in your face is like a peace, It is like resignation or a grace Which smiles at the surcease Of hope. But there is in your face The shadow of pain, and there is a trace Of memory of pain. I look at you again and again, And hide my looks lest your quick eye perceives My search for your despair. I look at your pale hands, I look at your hair; And I watch you use your hands, I watch the flare Of thought in your eyes like light that interweaves A flutter of color running under leaves, Such anguished dreams in your eyes! And I listen to you speak Words like crystals breaking with a tinkle, Or a star's twinkle. Sometimes as we talk you rise And leave the room, and ...
Edgar Lee Masters
Beauty Is Vain
While roses are so red, While lilies are so white,Shall a woman exalt her face Because it gives delight?She's not so sweet as a rose, A lily's straighter than she,And if she were as red or white She'd be but one of three.Whether she flush in love's summer Or in its winter grow pale,Whether she flaunt her beauty Or hide it away in a veil,Be she red or white, And stand she erect or bowed,Time will win the race he runs with her And hide her away in a shroud.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Savitri. Part V.
As consciousness came slowly backHe recognised his loving wife--"Who was it, Love, through regions blackWhere hardly seemed a sign of lifeCarried me bound? Methinks I viewThe dark face yet--a noble face,He had a robe of scarlet hue,And ruby crown; far, far through spaceHe bore me, on and on, but now,"--"Thou hast been sleeping, but the manWith glory on his kingly brow,Is gone, thou seest, Satyavan!"O my belovèd,--thou art free!Sleep which had bound thee fast, hath leftThine eyelids. Try thyself to be!For late of every sense bereftThou seemedst in a rigid trance;And if thou canst, my love, arise,Regard the night, the dark expanseSpread out before us, and the skies."Supported by her, looked he longUpon the land...
Toru Dutt
Maternal Grief
Departed Child! I could forget thee onceThough at my bosom nursed; this woeful gainThy dissolution brings, that in my soulIs present and perpetually abidesA shadow, never, never to be displacedBy the returning substance, seen or touched,Seen by mine eyes, or clasped in my embrace.Absence and death how differ they! and howShall I admit that nothing can restoreWhat one short sigh so easily removed?Death, life, and sleep, reality and thought,Assist me, God, their boundaries to know,O teach me calm submission to thy Will!The Child she mourned had overstepped the paleOf Infancy, but still did breathe the airThat sanctifies its confines, and partookReflected beams of that celestial lightTo all the Little-ones on sinful earthNot unvouchsaf...
A Little Budding Rose
It was a little budding rose,Round like a fairy globe,And shyly did its leaves uncloseHid in their mossy robe,But sweet was the slight and spicy smellIt breathed from its heart invisible.The rose is blasted, withered, blighted,Its root has felt a worm,And like a heart beloved and slighted,Failed, faded, shrunk its form.Bud of beauty, bonnie flower,I stole thee from thy natal bower.I was the worm that withered thee,Thy tears of dew all fell for me;Leaf and stalk and rose are gone,Exile earth they died upon.Yes, that last breath of balmy scentWith alien breezes sadly blent!
Emily Bronte
In Youth I Have Known One
IIn youth I have known one with whom the EarthIn secret communing held, as he with it,In daylight, and in beauty, from his birth:Whose fervid, flickering torch of life was litFrom the sun and stars, whence he had drawn forthA passionate light such for his spirit was fit,And yet that spirit knew, not in the hourOf its own fervor, what had oer it power.IIPerhaps it may be that my mind is wroughtTo a ferver by the moonbeam that hangs oer,But I will half believe that wild light fraughtWith more of sovereignty than ancient loreHath ever told, or is it of a thoughtThe unembodied essence, and no moreThat with a quickening spell doth oer us passAs dew of the night-time, oer the summer grass?III<...
Edgar Allan Poe
Woman.
O Woman, lovely Woman, magic flower,What loves, what pleasures in thy graces meet!Thou blushing blossom, dropt from Eden's bower;Thou fair exotic, delicately sweet!--Thy tender beauty Mercy wrung from heaven,A drop of honey in a world of woe;From Wisdom's pitying hand thy sweets were given,That man a glimpse of happiness might know.-If destitute of Woman, what were life?Could wealth and wine thy loveliness bestow,And give the bliss that centres in a wife,That makes one loth to leave this heaven belowPains they might soothe, and cares subdue awhile,But soon the soul would sigh for 'witching Woman's smile.
John Clare