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The Gods Of Greece.
Ye in the age gone by,Who ruled the world a world how lovely then!And guided still the steps of happy menIn the light leading-strings of careless joy!Ah, flourished then your service of delight!How different, oh, how different, in the dayWhen thy sweet fanes with many a wreath were bright,O Venus Amathusia!Then, through a veil of dreamsWoven by song, truth's youthful beauty glowed,And life's redundant and rejoicing streamsGave to the soulless, soul where'r they flowedMan gifted nature with divinityTo lift and link her to the breast of love;All things betrayed to the initiate eyeThe track of gods above!Where lifeless fixed afar,A flaming ball to our dull sense is given,Phoebus Apollo, in his golden car,In silent glo...
Friedrich Schiller
Spleen
When low and heavy sky weighs like a lidUpon the spirit moaning in ennui,And when, spanning the circle of the world,It pours a black day sadder than our nights;When earth is changed into a sweaty cell,In which Hope, captured, like a frantic bat,Batters the walls with her enfeebled wing,Striking her head against the rotting beams;When steady rain trailing its giant trainDescends on us like heavy prison bars,And when a silent multitude of spidersSpins its disgusting threads deep in our brains,Bells all at once jump out with all their force,And hurl about a mad cacophonyAs if they were those lost and homeless soulsWho send a dogged whining to the skies.And long corteges minus drum or toneDeploy morosely through my bei...
Charles Baudelaire
The Father's Curse.
("Vous, sire, écoutez-moi.")[LE ROI S'AMUSE, Act I.]M. ST. VALLIER (an aged nobleman, from whom King Francis I. decoyed his daughter, the famous beauty, Diana of Poitiers).A king should listen when his subjects speak:'Tis true your mandate led me to the block,Where pardon came upon me, like a dream;I blessed you then, unconscious as I wasThat a king's mercy, sharper far than death,To save a father doomed his child to shame;Yes, without pity for the noble raceOf Poitiers, spotless for a thousand years,You, Francis of Valois, without one sparkOf love or pity, honor or remorse,Did on that night (thy couch her virtue's tomb),With cold embraces, foully bring to scornMy helpless daughter, Dian of Poitiers.To save...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Hope Dieth: Love Liveth.
Strong are thine arms, O love, & strongThine heart to live, and love, and long;But thou art wed to grief and wrong:Live, then, and long, though hope be dead!Live on, & labour thro' the years!Make pictures through the mist of tears,Of unforgotten happy fears,That crossed the time ere hope was dead.Draw near the place where once we stoodAmid delight's swift-rushing flood,And we and all the world seemed goodNor needed hope now cold and dead.Dream in the dawn I come to theeWeeping for things that may not be!Dream that thou layest lips on me!Wake, wake to clasp hope's body dead!Count o'er and o'er, and one by oneThe minutes of the happy sunThat while agone on kissed lips shone,Count on, rest not, for hope is dead.Weep...
William Morris
Another on "On the Gunpowder Plot."
Purgatorem animae derisit Jacobus ignem,Et sine quo superum non adeunda domus.Frenduit hoc trina monstrum Latiale coronaMovit & horrificum cornua dena minax.Et nec inultus ait temnes mea sacra Britanne,Supplicium spreta relligione dabis.Et si stelligeras unquam penetraveris arces,Non nisi per flammas triste patebit iter.O quam funesto cecinisti proxima vero,Verbaque ponderibus vix caritura suis!Nam prope Tartareo sublime rotatus ab igniIbat ad aethereas umbra perusta plagas.
John Milton
The Sacking Of The City.
("La flamme par ton ordre, O roi!")[XXIII., November, 1825.]Thy will, O King, is done! Lighting but to consume,The roar of the fierce flames drowned even the shouts and shrieks;Reddening each roof, like some day-dawn of bloody doom,Seemed they in joyous flight to dance about their wrecks.Slaughter his thousand giant arms hath tossed on high,Fell fathers, husbands, wives, beneath his streaming steel;Prostrate, the palaces, huge tombs of fire, lie,While gathering overhead the vultures scream and wheel!Died the pale mothers, and the virgins, from their arms,O Caliph, fiercely torn, bewailed their young years' blight;With stabs and kisses fouled, all their yet quivering charms,At our fleet coursers' heels were dragged in mocking ...
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Purgatory: Canto XXIV
Our journey was not slacken'd by our talk,Nor yet our talk by journeying. Still we spake,And urg'd our travel stoutly, like a shipWhen the wind sits astern. The shadowy forms,That seem'd things dead and dead again, drew inAt their deep-delved orbs rare wonder of me,Perceiving I had life; and I my wordsContinued, and thus spake; "He journeys upPerhaps more tardily then else he would,For others' sake. But tell me, if thou know'st,Where is Piccarda? Tell me, if I seeAny of mark, among this multitude,Who eye me thus."--"My sister (she for whom,'Twixt beautiful and good I cannot sayWhich name was fitter ) wears e'en now her crown,And triumphs in Olympus." Saying this,He added: "Since spare diet hath so wornOur semblance out, 't is lawful...
Dante Alighieri
Widow Fortelka
Marie Fortelka, widow, mother of Josef, Now seventeen, an invalid at home In a house, in Halstead Street, his running side Aching with broken ribs, read in the Times Of Lowell's death the editor, dressed herself To call on William Rummler, legal mind For Lowell and the Times. It was a day When fog hung over the city, and she thought Of fogs in Germany whence she came, and thought Of hard conditions there when she was young. Then as her boy, this Josef, coughed, she looked And felt a pang at heart, a rise of wrath, And heard him moan for broken ribs and lungs That had been bruised or mashed. America, Oh yes, America, she said to self, How is it different from the land I left...
Edgar Lee Masters
A Parody
Once upon a midnight dreary, as I sauntered weak and wearyFrom a jovial fellow-student's room upon another floor;As I sauntered, sadder, sicker, suddenly I heard a snicker,And the lights began to flicker, and right out went three or four."Some infernal trick!" I muttered, as I neared my chamber door; "I won't stand this any more."Ah! distinctly I remember, it was in my first September,And each night-attired member fled like ghost upon the floor.Lamp I vainly sought to borrow, though I threatened on the morrowThey would catch it to their sorrow, they would catch it sad and sore -I would have them on the morrow the dread Faculty before - Fearful here for evermore.And the hushed and humorous talking, and the doors' successive lockingFilled...
W. M. MacKeracher
Recollections.
Ye dear stars of the Bear, I did not think I should again be turning, as I used, To see you over father's garden shine, And from the windows talk with you again Of this old house, where as a child I dwelt, And where I saw the end of all my joys. What charming images, what fables, once, The sight of you created in my thought, And of the lights that bear you company! Silent upon the verdant clod I sat, My evening thus consuming, as I gazed Upon the heavens, and listened to the chant Of frogs that in the distant marshes croaked; While o'er the hedges, ditches, fire-flies roamed, And the green avenues and cypresses In yonder grove were murmuring to the wind; While in the house were heard, at inter...
Giacomo Leopardi
Hereafter.
Ah, when this world and I have shaken hands,And all the frowns of this sad life got through,When from pale Care and Sorrow's dismal landsI turn a welcome and a wish'd adieu;How blest and happy, to eternal day,To endless happiness without a pain,Will my poor weary spirit sail away,That long long look'd for "better place" to gain:How sweet the scenes will open on her eye,Where no more troubles, no more cares annoy;All the sharp troubles of this life torn by,And safely moor'd in heaven's eternal joy:Sweet will it seem to Fate's oppressed worm,As trembling Sunbeams creeping from the storm.
John Clare
The Flame in the Wind
Dost thou burn low and tremble, all but die?And dost thou fear in darkness to be whirled?Nay, flame, thou art mine immortality,The wind is but the passing of the world!
Margaret Steele Anderson
The Spirit of the Unborn Babe
The Spirit of the Unborn Babe peered through the window-pane,Peered through the window-pane that glowed like beacon in the night;For, oh, the sky was desolate and wild with wind and rain;And how the little room was crammed with coziness and light!Except the flirting of the fire there was no sound at all;The Woman sat beside the hearth, her knitting on her knee;The shadow of her husband's head was dancing on the wall;She looked with staring eyes at it, she looked yet did not see.She only saw a childish face that topped the table rim,A little wistful ghost that smiled and vanished quick away;And then because her tender eyes were flooding to the brim,She lowered her head. . . . "Don't sorrow, dear," she heard him softly say;"It's over now. We'll try to be as happy as bef...
Robert William Service
Mirrors Of Life And Death.
The mystery of Life, the mysteryOf Death, I seeDarkly as in a glass;Their shadows pass,And talk with me.As the flush of a Morning Sky,As a Morning Sky colorless -Each yields its measure of lightTo a wet world or a dry;Each fares through day to nightWith equal pace,And then each oneIs done.As the Sun with glory and graceIn his face,Benignantly hot,Graciously radiant and keen,Ready to rise and to run, -Not without spot,Not even the Sun.As the MoonOn the wax, on the wane,With night for her noon;Vanishing soon,To appear again.As Roses that droopHalf warm, half chill, in the languid May,And breathe out a scentSweet and faint;Till the wind gives one ...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Fragment: Love The Universe To-Day.
And who feels discord now or sorrow?Love is the universe to-day -These are the slaves of dim to-morrow,Darkening Life's labyrinthine way.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
My Grave.
Shall they bury me in the deep,Where wind-forgetting waters sleep?Shall they dig a grave for me,Under the green-wood tree?Or on the wild heath,Where the wilder breathOf the storm doth blow?Oh, no! oh, no!Shall they bury me in the Palace Tombs,Or under the shade of Cathedral domes?Sweet 'twere to lie on Italy's shore;Yet not there--nor in Greece, though I love it more,In the wolf or the vulture my grave shall I find?Shall my ashes career on the world-seeing wind?Shall they fling my corpse in the battle mound,Where coffinless thousands lie under the ground?Just as they fall they are buried so--Oh, no! oh, no!No! on an Irish green hill-side,On an opening lawn--but not too wide;For I love the drip of the wetted t...
Thomas Osborne Davis
The Missionary. Canto Sixth
Argument.The City of Conception, The City of Penco, Castle, Lautaro, Wild Indian Maid, Zarinel, Missionary.The second moon had now begun to wane,Since bold Valdivia left the southern plain;Goal of his labours, Penco's port and bay,Far gleaming to the summer sunset lay.The wayworn veteran, who had slowly passedThrough trackless woods, or o'er savannahs vast,With hope impatient sees the city spiresGild the horizon, like ascending fires.Now well-known sounds salute him, as more nearThe citadel and battlements appear;The approaching trumpets ring at intervals;The trumpet answers from the rampart walls,Where many a maiden casts an anxious eye,Some long-lost object of her love to espy,Or watches, as the evening light illumesThe poin...
William Lisle Bowles
Years That Are To Be.
Wild years that are to be The sad completion of my weary life, In ghostly mantles of despairing strife Your phanton dimness darkly shadows me! Gaunt demons dancing from your horrid halls Entwine my soul in gloomy arms of woe, While mystic fancies to my madness show The monsters on your walls. Your forms are skeletons, Whose bony hands with mortal fingers play, Where grinning skulls are heaping on the way, And airy specters meet the timid ones; Death drops his arrows from your sullen skies, Destruction dances in your noisome shades, And in the dreadful darkness of your glades The horrid shriekings rise. There in your cycles are Dark valleys where my wear...
Freeman Edwin Miller