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A Thanksgiving For F. D. Maurice
The veil hath lifted and hath fallen; and him Who next it stood before us, first so long, We see not; but between the cherubim The light burns clearer: come--a thankful song! Lord, for thy prophet's calm commanding voice, For his majestic innocence and truth, For his unswerving purity of choice, For all his tender wrath and plenteous ruth; For his obedient, wise, clear-listening care To hear for us what word The Word would say, For all the trembling fervency of prayer With which he led our souls the prayerful way; For all the heavenly glory of his face That caught the white Transfiguration's shine And cast on us the reflex of thy grace-- Of all thy men late left, the most divine;
George MacDonald
The Quid Pro Quo; Or The Mistakes
DAME FORTUNE often loves a laugh to raise,And, playing off her tricks and roguish ways,Instead of giving us what we desire,Mere quid pro quo permits us to acquire.I've found her gambols such from first to last,And judge the future by experience past.Fair Cloris and myself felt mutual flame;And, when a year had run, the sprightly damePrepared to grant me, if I may be plain,Some slight concessions that would ease my pain.This was her aim; but whatsoe'er in view,'Tis opportunity we should pursue;The lover, who's discreet, will moments seize;And ev'ry effort then will tend to please.ONE eve I went this charming fair to see;The husband happened (luckily for me)To be abroad; but just as it was nightThe master came, not doubting all was ri...
Jean de La Fontaine
To Madame De Montespan
[1]The apologue[2] is from the immortal gods;Or, if the gift of man it is,Its author merits apotheosis.Whoever magic genius laudsWill do what in him liesTo raise this art's inventor to the skies.It hath the potence of a charm,On dulness lays a conquering arm,Subjects the mind to its control,And works its will upon the soul.O lady, arm'd with equal power,If e'er within celestial bower,With messmate gods reclined,My muse ambrosially hath dined,Lend me the favour of a smileOn this her playful toil.If you support, the tooth of time will shun,And let my work the envious years outrun.If authors would themselves survive,To gain your suffrage they should strive.On you my verses wait to get their...
God's New Year's Gift
What shall the coming year bring forth, O Lord, who rulest the land? For the navies of the sea and air Are but stubble in Thy hand. The battalions in the field go forth; They arm in mighty line; Do they kneel to know Thy holy will? Have they asked from Thee a sign? The kings invoke Thy holy name, In their carnage and their strife; But the purple gift it was Thine to give Recks not of pity nor life: For they're drunk with the wine of lustful power, And seared with the sins of earth; And their prayers and preachments now mock Thy name, And make of Thy laws but mirth. January 1, 1916. For Duncan Campbell Scott.
Thomas O'Hagan
Helen Of Tyre
What phantom is this that appearsThrough the purple mist of the years, Itself but a mist like these?A woman of cloud and of fire;It is she; it is Helen of Tyre, The town in the midst of the seas.O Tyre! in thy crowded streetsThe phantom appears and retreats, And the Israelites that sellThy lilies and lions of brass,Look up as they see her pass, And murmur "Jezebel!"Then another phantom is seenAt her side, in a gray gabardine, With beard that floats to his waist;It is Simon Magus, the Seer;He speaks, and she pauses to hear The words he utters in haste.He says: "From this evil fame,From this life of sorrow and shame, I will lift thee and make thee mine;Thou hast been Queen Canda...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Cuba
Spake one upon the vessel's prow, beforeThe sinking sun had kissed the glittering seas:"'Twas here Columbus with his GenoeseSteered his frail barks toward the unknown store,With hope unfaltering, though all hope seemed o'er;Calm 'mid the mutineers the prophet mindSaw the New World to which their eyes were blind,Heard on its continents the breakers' roar,Told of the golden promise of the main,While cursed his crew, and called a madman's dreamThe land his ashes only hold for Spain!It rose on dim horizon with the gleamOf morn, proclaiming to the kneeling throngAll treasures theirs, because one heart was strong."
John Campbell
Maternal Hope
Lo! at the couch where infant beauty sleeps,Her silent watch the mournful mother keeps:She, while the lovely babe unconscious lies,Smiles on her slumb'ring child with pensive eyes,And weaves a song of melancholy joy:"Sleep, image of thy father! sleep, my boy!No ling'ring hour of sorrow shall be thine,No sigh that rends thy father's heart and mine.Bright, as his manly sire, the son shall be,In form and soul; but, ah! more blest than he!Thy fame, thy worth, thy filial love, at last,Shall soothe his aching heart for all the past;With many a smile my solitude repay,And chase the world's ungenerous scorn away."And say, when summon'd from the world and theeI lay my head beneath the willow-tree,And soothe may parted spirit ling'ring near?O...
Thomas Campbell
Hoffer
Of mortal parents is the Hero bornBy whom the undaunted Tyrolese are led?Or is it Tell's great Spirit, from the deadReturned to animate an age forlorn?He comes like Phoebus through the gates of mornWhen dreary darkness is discomfited,Yet mark his modest state! upon his head,That simple crest, a heron's plume, is worn.O Liberty! they stagger at the shockFrom van to rear, and with one mind would flee,But half their host is buried: rock on rockDescends: beneath this godlike Warrior, see!Hills, torrents, woods, embodied to bemockThe Tyrant, and confound his cruelty.
William Wordsworth
A Light In The Window
Rain and wind and candlelightAnd let us pray a prayer to-night:For every soul, since life is brief,Little of trouble and less of grief.And set a light at the windowpane,To guide Love home through the night and rain.Rain and wind and candlelightAnd what shall we pray again to-night?For every life, whose way is dim,The grace of God and trust in Him.A word, a song, till the tears be dried,And Faith and Hope sit down beside.Rain and wind and candlelightAnd one last prayer to pray to-night:For every heart in the dark and rainTo know its prayer is not in vain:A door flung wide, and a face aglowLove come back from the Long-Ago.Then let the rain and the wind withoutThreaten their worst and rave and shout:For who will care, thoug...
Madison Julius Cawein
Evening Hymn.
Sinking now in floods of light,The sun resigns the world to night;When a lingering glance he turns,The glowing west with glory burns,And the blushing heavens awhileLong retain his parting smile.Ere gray evening's sullen eye,Bids those tints of beauty die;Ere her tears have washed awayThe footsteps of departing day,Nature from her verdant bowersHer last long strain of rapture pours;Shrouded in her misty vest,She sings a drowsy world to rest,And tells to man, in thrilling strains,That the Lord Jehovah reigns! Lingering twilight dies away,Night resumes her ancient sway,Round her sable tresses twiningCountless hosts of stars are shining;Weaving round the brow of nightA coronet of living light:O'er the co...
Susanna Moodie
The Ducks And The Frogs - A Tale Of The Bogs.
It chanced upon a certain day,When cheerful Summer, bright and gay,Had brought once more her gift of flowers,To dress anew her pleasant bowers;When birds and insects on the wingMade all the air with music ring;When sunshine smiled on dell and knoll,Two Ducks set forth to take a stroll.'Twas morning; and each grassy bankOf cooling dew had deeply drank--Each fair young flower was holding upIts sweet and freshly painted cup,Filled with bright dew drops, every one;Gay, sparkling treasures for the sun,Who bears them lightly to the sky,Holds them as vapor far on high,Till with his rays in dazzling tints,The rainbow on the cloud he paints.But our two Ducks we'll not forget,They were not troubled by the wet;They rambled on, and ...
Fanny Fire-Fly
The Half-Breed Girl
She is free of the trap and the paddle,The portage and the trail,But something behind her savage lifeShines like a fragile veil.Her dreams are undiscovered,Shadows trouble her breast,When the time for resting comethThen least is she at rest.Oft in the morns of winter,When she visits the rabbit snares,An appearance floats in the crystal airBeyond the balsam firs.Oft in the summer morningsWhen she strips the nets of fish,The smell of the dripping net-twineGives to her heart a wish.But she cannot learn the meaningOf the shadows in her soul,The lights that break and gather,The clouds that part and roll,The reek of rock-built cities,Where her fathers dwelt of yore,The gleam of loch an...
Duncan Campbell Scott
A Little Grey Curl
A little grey curl from my father's head I find unburned on the hearth, And give it a place in my diary here, With a feeling half sadness, half mirth. For the long white locks are our special pride, Though he smiles at his daughter's praise; But, oh, they have grown each year more thin, Till they are now but a silvery haze. That wise old head! (though it does grow bald With the knocks hard fortune may give) Has a store of faith and hope and trust, Which have taught him how to live. Though the hat be old, there's a face below Which telleth to those who look The history of a good man's life, And it cheers like a blessed book. [A]A peddler of jewels, of clocks, and of books, ...
Louisa May Alcott
Memorial Verses on the Death of William Bell Scott
A life more bright than the sun's face, bowedThrough stress of season and coil of cloud,Sets: and the sorrow that casts out fearScarce deems him dead in his chill still shroud,Dead on the breast of the dying year,Poet and painter and friend, thrice dearFor love of the suns long set, for loveOf song that sets not with sunset here,For love of the fervent heart, aboveTheir sense who saw not the swift light moveThat filled with sense of the loud sun's lyreThe thoughts that passion was fain to proveIn fervent labour of high desireAnd faith that leapt from its own quenched pyreAlive and strong as the sun, and caughtFrom darkness light, and from twilight fire.Passion, deep as the depths unsoughtWhence faith's own hope may redeem us nought,...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Time 2
Wait for the morning! Ah! We wait indeedFor daylight, we who toss about through stressOf vacant-armed desires and emptinessOf all the warm, warm touches that we need,And the warm kisses upon which we feedOur famished lips in fancy! May God blessThe starved lips of us with but one caressWarm as the yearning blood our poor hearts bleed...!A wild prayer! Bite thy pillow, praying so -Toss this side, and whirl that, and moan for dawn;Let the clock's seconds dribble out their woe,And Time be drained of sorrow! Long agoWe heard the crowing cock, with answer drawnAs hoarsely sad at throat as sobs... Pray on!
James Whitcomb Riley
Manners
Grace, Beauty and CapriceBuild this golden portal;Graceful women, chosen men,Dazzle every mortal.Their sweet and lofty countenanceHis enchanted food;He need not go to them, their formsBeset his solitude.He looketh seldom in their face,His eyes explore the ground,--The green grass is a looking-glassWhereon their traits are found.Little and less he says to them,So dances his heart in his breast;Their tranquil mien bereaveth himOf wit, of words, of rest.Too weak to win, too fond to shunThe tyrants of his doom,The much deceived EndymionSlips behind a tomb.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Palladium
Set where the upper streams of Simois flowWas the Palladium, high 'mid rock and wood;And Hector was in Ilium, far below,And fought, and saw it not but there it stood!It stood, and sun and moonshine rain'd their lightOn the pure columns of its glen-built hall.Backward and forward roll'd the waves of fightRound Troy but while this stood, Troy could not fall.So, in its lovely moonlight, lives the soul.Mountains surround it, and sweet virgin air;Cold plashing, past it, crystal waters roll;We visit it by moments, ah, too rare!We shall renew the battle in the plainTo-morrow; red with blood will Xanthus be;Hector and Ajax will be there again,Helen will come upon the wall to see.Then we shall rust in shade, or shine in strife,
Matthew Arnold
The Noble Balm
High-spirited friend,I send nor balms nor cor'sives to your wound:Your fate hath foundA gentler and more agile hand to tendThe cure of that which is but corporal;And doubtful days, which were named critical,Have made their fairest flightAnd now are out of sight.Yet doth some wholesome physic for the mindWrapp'd in this paper lie,Which in the taking if you misapply,You are unkind.Your covetous hand,Happy in that fair honour it hath gain'd,Must now be rein'd.True valour doth her own renown commandIn one full action; nor have you now moreTo do, than be a husband of that store.Think but how dear you boughtThis fame which you have caught:Such thoughts will make you more in love with truth.'Tis wisdom, and that hig...
Ben Jonson