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Beeny Cliff
March 1870 March 1913IO the opal and the sapphire of that wandering western sea,And the woman riding high above with bright hair flapping free -The woman whom I loved so, and who loyally loved me.IIThe pale mews plained below us, and the waves seemed far awayIn a nether sky, engrossed in saying their ceaseless babbling say,As we laughed light-heartedly aloft on that clear-sunned March day.IIIA little cloud then cloaked us, and there flew an irised rain,And the Atlantic dyed its levels with a dull misfeatured stain,And then the sun burst out again, and purples prinked the main.IVStill in all its chasmal beauty bulks old Beeny to the sky,And shall she and I not go there once again now March is...
Thomas Hardy
The Cry
There's a voice in my heart that cries and cries for tears. It is not a voice, but a pain of many fears. It is not a pain, but the rune of far-off spheres. It may be a dæmon of pent and high emprise, That looks on my soul till my soul hides and cries, Loath to rebuke my soul and bid it arise. It may be myself as I was in another life, Fashioned to lead where strife gives way to strife, Pinioned here in failure by knife thrown after knife. The child turns o'er in the womb; and perhaps the soul Nurtures a dream too strong for the soul's control, When the dream hath eyes, and senses its destined goal. Deep in darkness the bulb under mould and clod Feels the sun in the sky and pushes above the sod;
Edgar Lee Masters
Early Love
The Spring of life is o'er with me,And love and all gone by;Like broken bough upon yon tree,I'm left to fade and die.Stern ruin seized my home and me,And desolate's my cot:Ruins of halls, the blasted tree,Are emblems of my lot.I lived and loved, I woo'd and won,Her love was all to me,But blight fell o'er that youthful one,And like a blasted treeI withered, till I all forgotBut Mary's smile on me;She never lived where love was not,And I from bonds was free.The Spring it clothed the fields with pride,When first we met together;And then unknown to all besideWe loved in sunny weather;We met where oaks grew overhead,And whitethorns hung with may;Wild thyme beneath her feet was spread,And cows in ...
John Clare
Patience.
The passion of despair is quelled at last; The cruel sense of undeserved wrong,The wild self-pity, these are also past; She knows not what may come, but she is strong;She feels she hath not aught to lose nor gain,Her patience is the essence of all pain.As one who sits beside a lapsing stream, She sees the flow of changeless day by day,Too sick and tired to think, too sad to dream, Nor cares how soon the waters slip away,Nor where they lead; at the wise God's decree,She will depart or bide indifferently.There is deeper pathos in the mild And settled sorrow of the quiet eyes,Than in the tumults of the anguish wild, That made her curse all things beneath the skies;No question, no reproaches, no complaint,<...
Emma Lazarus
Ribb At The Tomb Of Baile And Aillinn
Because you have found me in the pitch-dark nightWith open book you ask me what I do.Mark and digest my tale, carry it afarTo those that never saw this tonsured headNor heard this voice that ninety years have cracked.Of Baile and Aillinn you need not speak,All know their tale, all know what leaf and twig,What juncture of the apple and the yew,Surmount their bones; but speak what none ha'veheard.The miracle that gave them such a deathTransfigured to pure substance what had onceBeen bone and sinew; when such bodies joinThere is no touching here, nor touching there,Nor straining joy, but whole is joined to whole;For the intercourse of angels is a lightWhere for its moment both seem lost, consumed.Here in the pitch-dark atmosphere above...
William Butler Yeats
Grief.
What though the Eden morns were sweet with songPassing all sweetness that our thought can reach;Crushing its flowers noon's chariot moved alongIn brightness far transcending mortal speech;Yet in the twilight shades did God appear,Oh welcome shadows so that He draw near.Prosperity is flushed with Papal easeAnd grants indulgences to pride of word,Robing our soul in pomp and vanities,Ah! no fit dwelling for our gentle Lord;Grief rends those draperies of pride and sin,And so our Lord will deign to enter in.Then carefully we curb each thought of wrong,We walk more softly, with more reverent feet -As in His presence chamber, hush our tongue,And in the holy quiet, solemn, sweet,We feel His smile, we hear His voice so low,So we can bl...
Marietta Holley
Autumn Flowers.
O crimson-tined flowers That live when others die,What thoughtless hand unloving Could ever pass you by?You are the last bright blossoms, The summer's after-glow,When all her early children Have faded long ago.Sweet golden-rod and xenia And crimson marigold,What dreams of autumn splendor Your velvet leaves unfold.Long, long ago the violets Have closed their sweet blue eyes,And lain with pale, dead faces Beneath the summer skies.And on their graves you blossom With leaves of gold and red,And yet--how soon forever Your beauty will be fled.The frost will come to kill you The snows will wrap you round;And you will sleep forgotten Upon the fro...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Exit Anima
"Hospes comesque corporis,Quae nunc abitis in loca?"Cease, Wind, to blowAnd drive the peopled snow,And move the haunted arras to and fro,And moan of things I fear to knowYet would rend from thee, Wind, before I goOn the blind pilgrimage.Cease, Wind, to blow.Thy brother too,I leave no print of shoeIn all these vasty rooms I rummage through,No word at threshold, and no clueOf whence I come and whither I pursueThe search of treasures lostWhen time was new.Thou janitorOf the dim curtained door,Stir thy old bones along the dusty floorOf this unlighted corridor.Open! I have been this dark way before;Thy hollow face shall peerIn mine no more. . . . .Sky, the dear sky!Ah, ghostly h...
Bliss Carman
Deep In The Night
Deep in the night the cry of a swallow,Under the stars he flew,Keen as pain was his call to followOver the world to you.Love in my heart is a cry foreverLost as the swallow's flight,Seeking for you and never, neverStilled by the stars at night.
Sara Teasdale
The Unwed Mother To The Wife
I had been almost happy for an hour,Lost to the world that knew me in the parkAmong strange faces; while my little girlLeaped with the squirrels, chirruped with the birdsAnd with the sunlight glowed. She was so dear,So beautiful, so sweet; and for the timeThe rose of love, shorn of its thorn of shame,Bloomed in my heart. Then suddenly you passed.I sat alone upon the public bench;You, with your lawful husband, rode in state;And when your eyes fell on me and my child,They were not eyes, but daggers, poison tipped.God! how good women slaughter with a look!And, like cold steel, your glance cut through my heart,Struck every petal from the rose of loveAnd left the ragged stalk alive with thorns.My little one came running to my side<...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
All Lovely Things
All lovely things will have an ending,All lovely things will fade and die,And youth, thats now so bravely spending,Will beg a penny by and by.Fine ladies soon are all forgotten,And goldenrod is dust when dead,The sweetest flesh and flowers are rottenAnd cobwebs tent the brightest head.Come back, true love! Sweet youth, return!But time goes on, and will, unheeding,Though hands will reach, and eyes will yearn,And the wild days set true hearts bleeding.Come back, true love! Sweet youth, remain!But goldenrod and daisies wither,And over them blows autumn rain,They pass, they pass, and know not whither.
Conrad Aiken
To Julia.
Though Fate, my girl, may bid us part, Our souls it cannot, shall not sever;The heart will seek its kindred heart, And cling to it as close as ever.But must we, must we part indeed? Is all our dream of rapture over?And does not Julia's bosom bleed To leave so dear, so fond a lover?Does she, too, mourn?--Perhaps she may; Perhaps she mourns our bliss so fleeting;But why is Julia's eye so gay, If Julia's heart like mine is beating?I oft have loved that sunny glow Of gladness in her blue eye beaming--But can the bosom bleed with woe While joy is in the glances beaming?No, no!--Yet, love, I will not chide; Although your heart were fond of roving,Nor that, nor all the world ...
Thomas Moore
The Little Old Women
for Victor HugoI.In sinuous coils of the old capitalsWhere even horror weaves a magic spell,Gripped by my fatal humours, I observeSingular beings with appalling charms.These dislocated wrecks were women once,Were Eponine or Lais! hunchbacked freaks,Though broken let us love them! they are souls.Under cold rags, their shredded petticoats,They creep, lashed by the merciless north wind,Quake from the riot of an omnibus,Clasp by their sides like relics of a saintEmbroidered bags of flowery design;They toddle, every bit like marionettes,Or drag themselves like wounded animals,Or dance against their will, poor little bellsThat a remorseless demon rings! Worn outThey are, yet they have eyes piercing like...
Charles Baudelaire
Elegy On A Rhinoceros (Recently Deceased)
Come, let us weep for Begum; he is dead.Dead; and afar, where Thamis' waters laveThe busy marge, he lies unvisited,Unsung; above no cypress branches wave,Nor tributary blossoms fringe his grave;Only would these poor numbers advertiseHis copious charms, and mourn for his demise.Blithesome was he and beautiful; the ZooHath nought to match with Begum. He was oneOf infinite humour; well indeed he knewTo catch with mobile lips th' impetuous bunTossed him-ward by some sire-encouraged son,Half-fearful, yet of pride fulfilled to noteThe dough, swift-homing down th' exultant throat.Whilom he pensive stood, infoliateOf comfortable mud, and idly stirredHis tiny caudal, disproportionateBut not ungraceful, while a wanton herdOf revel...
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
Gertrude.
[In Memory: 1877.]What shall I say, my friend, my own heart healing,When for my love you cannot answer me?This earth would quake, alas! might I but seeYou smile, death's rigorous law repealing!Pale lips, your mystery so well concealing,May not the eloquent, varied minstrelsyOf my inspired ardor potent beTo touch your chords to music's uttered feeling?Friend, here you cherished flowers: send me nowOne ghostly bloom to prove that you are blessed.No? If denial such as brands my browBe in your heavenly regions, too, confessed,Oh may it prove the truth that your still eyesForesee the end of all futurities!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Before Knowledge
When I walked roseless tracks and wide,Ere dawned your date for meeting me,O why did you not cry HallooAcross the stretch between, and say:"We move, while years as yet divide,On closing lines which - though it beYou know me not nor I know you -Will intersect and join some day!"Then well I had borneEach scraping thorn;But the winters froze,And grew no rose;No bridge bestrodeThe gap at all;No shape you showed,And I heard no call!
Rhymes On The Road. Extract XV. Rome.
Mary Magdalen.--Her Story.--Numerous Pictures of her.--Correggio--Guido --Raphael, etc.--Canova's two exquisite Statues.--The Somariva Magdalen. --Chantrey's Admiration of Canova's Works.No wonder, MARY, that thy story Touches all hearts--for there we see thee.The soul's corruption and its glory, Its death and life combine in thee.From the first moment when we find Thy spirit haunted by a swarmOf dark desires,--like demons shrined Unholily in that fair form,--Till when by touch of Heaven set free, Thou camest, with those bright locks of gold(So oft the gaze of BETHANY), And covering in their precious foldThy Saviour's feet didst shed such tearsAs paid, each drop, the sins of years!--Thence on thro' all thy c...
An Old Sweetheart Of Mine
As one who cons at evening o'er an album all alone,And muses on the faces of the friends that he has known,So I turn the leaves of fancy till, in shadowy design,I find the smiling features of an old sweetheart of mine.The lamplight seems to glimmer with a flicker of surprise,As I turn it low to rest me of the dazzle in my eyes,And light my pipe in silence, save a sigh that seems to yokeIts fate with my tobacco and to vanish with the smoke.'Tis a fragrant retrospection - for the loving thoughts that startInto being are like perfume from the blossom of the heart;And to dream the old dreams over is a luxury divine -When my truant fancy wanders with that old sweetheart of mine.Though I hear, beneath my study, like a fluttering of wings,The voices o...
James Whitcomb Riley