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The Memory Of Earth
In the wet dusk silver-sweet,Down the violet scented ways,As I moved with quiet feetI was met by mighty days.On the hedge the hanging dewGlassed the eve and stars and skies;While I gazed a madness grewInto thundered battle cries.Where the hawthorn glimmered white,Flashed the spear and fell the stroke--Ah, what faces pale and brightWhere the dazzling battle broke!There a hero-hearted queenWith young beauty lit the van.Gone! the darkness flowed betweenAll the ancient wars of man.While I paced the valley's gloomWhere the rabbits pattered near,Shone a temple and a tombWith the legend carven clear:'Time put by a myriad fatesThat her day might dawn in glory.Death made wide a million ga...
George William Russell
The Bluebird.
Before you thought of spring,Except as a surmise,You see, God bless his suddenness,A fellow in the skiesOf independent hues,A little weather-worn,Inspiriting habilimentsOf indigo and brown.With specimens of song,As if for you to choose,Discretion in the interval,With gay delays he goesTo some superior treeWithout a single leaf,And shouts for joy to nobodyBut his seraphic self!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Above The Clouds.
And can this be my own world? 'Tis all gold and snow,Save where scarlet waves are hurled Down yon gulf below.'Tis thy world, 'tis my world, City, mead, and shore,For he that hath his own world Hath many worlds more.
Jean Ingelow
To G. F. M. This Volume Is Inscribed In Memory Of Many Days. (One Day And Another)
What though I dreamed of mountain heights, Of peaks, the barriers of the world,Around whose tops the Northern Lights And tempests are unfurled.Mine are the footpaths leading through Life's lowly fields and woods, - with rifts,Above, of heaven's Eden blue, - By which the violet liftsIts shy appeal; and holding up Its chaliced gold, like some wild wine,Along the hillside, cup on cup, Blooms bright the celandine.Where soft upon each flowering stock The butterfly spreads damask wings;And under grassy loam and rock The cottage cricket sings.Where overhead eve blooms with fire, In which the new moon bends her bow,And, arrow-like, one white star by her ...
Madison Julius Cawein
To A Skylark
Ethereal minstrel! pilgrim of the sky!Dost thou despise the earth where cares abound?Or, while the wings aspire, are heart and eyeBoth with thy nest upon the dewy ground?Thy nest which thou canst drop into at will,Those quivering wings composed, that music still!Leave to the nightingale her shady wood;A privacy of glorious light is thine;Whence thou dost pour upon the world a floodOf harmony, with instinct more divine;Type of the wise who soar, but never roam;True to the kindred points of Heaven and Home!
William Wordsworth
Song
My silks and fine array,My smiles and languish'd air,By love are driv'n away;And mournful lean DespairBrings me yew to deck my grave;Such end true lovers have.His face is fair as heav'nWhen springing buds unfold;O why to him was't giv'nWhose heart is wintry cold?His breast is love's all-worshipp'd tomb,Where all love's pilgrims come.Bring me an axe and spade,Bring me a winding sheet;When I my grave have madeLet winds and tempests beat:Then down I'll lie as cold as clay.True love doth pass away!
William Blake
Sonnet: - XVI.
My footsteps press where, centuries ago,The Red Men fought and conquered; lost and won.Whole tribes and races, gone like last year's snow,Have found the Eternal Hunting-Grounds, and runThe fiery gauntlet of their active days,Till few are left to tell the mournful tale:And these inspire us with such wild amazeThey seem like spectres passing down a valeSteeped in uncertain moonlight, on their wayTowards some bourn where darkness blinds the day,And night is wrapped in mystery profound.We cannot lift the mantle of the past:We seem to wander over hallowed ground:We scan the trail of Thought, but all is overcast.
Charles Sangster
Spring
To what purpose, April, do you return again? Beauty is not enough. You can no longer quiet me with the redness Of little leaves opening stickily. I know what I know. The sun is hot on my neck as I observe The spikes of the crocus. The smell of the earth is good. It is apparent that there is no death. But what does that signify? Not only under ground are the brains of men Eaten by maggots, Life in itself Is nothing, An empty cup, a flight of uncarpeted stairs. It is not enough that yearly, down this hill, April Comes like an idiot, babbling and strewing flowers.
Edna St. Vincent Millay
The Passing Of The Beautiful.
On southern winds shot through with amber light,Breeding soft balm, and clothed in cloudy white,The lily-fingered Spring came o'er the hillsWaking the crocus and the daffodils.O'er the cold earth she breathed a tender sigh, -The maples sang and flung their banners high,Their crimson-tasseled pennons, and the elmBound his dark brows with a green-crested helm.Beneath the musky rot of Autumn's leaves,Under the forest's myriad naked eaves,Life woke and rose in gold and green and blue,Robed in the star-light of the twinkling dew.With timid tread adown the barren woodSpring held her way, when, lo! before her stoodWhite-mantled Winter wagging his white head,Stormy his brow, and stormily he said: -"Sole lord of terror, and the fiend of storm,Crow...
Life.
A dewy flower, bathed in crimson light,May touch the soul--a pure and beauteous sight;A golden river flashing 'neath the sun,May reach the spot where life's dark waters run;Yet, when the sun is gone, the splendor dies,With drooping head the tender flower lies.And such is life; a golden mist of light,A tangled web that glitters in the sun;When shadows come, the glory takes its flight,The treads are dark and worn, and life is done.Oh! tears, that chill us like the dews of eve,Why come unbid--why should we ever grieve?Why is it, though life hath its leaves of gold,The book each day some sorrow must unfold!What human heart with truth can dare to sayNo grief is mine--this is a perfect day?Oh! poet, take your harp of gold and sing,And all the e...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Land Clearing.
The first winter which I did spend In Canada was with a friend, And when the snow had passed away Quite early in the month of May. Friend started off for a barn raising, And told me to get stumps ablazing, Around each stump I heaped a pile Of roots and junks of wood so vile. For he wished the field to clear So it a crop of wheat would rear, And there was one high withered pine Which was full of turpentine. As soon as I applied the torch, Blaze quick did start and it did scorch The fences, and the woods were nigh, For the old tree it blazed on high. I was the only man or boy Near there that ...
James McIntyre
Frida
(See Note 18)Frida, I knew that thy life-years were counted.If but before thee a lifting thought mounted,Upward thy gaze turned all wistful to view it,As wouldst thou pursue it.Eyes that so clear saw the wonderful visionLooked far away beyond earth's indecision.Snow-white unfolded the pinions that laterBore thee to the greater.Speaking or asking thou broughtest me sorrow;Eyes thine and words thine seemed wanting to borrowClearness more pure and thoughts, victory gainingBeyond my attaining.When thou wert dancing in all a child's lightness,Shaking thy locks like a fountain in brightness,Laughing till heaven was opened in gladnessOver thy gladness, -Or when affliction in sternness had spoken,So that thy he...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
The Scare-Fire.
Water, water I desire,Here's a house of flesh on fire;Ope the fountains and the springs,And come all to bucketings:What ye cannot quench pull down;Spoil a house to save a town:Better 'tis that one should fall,Than by one to hazard all.
Robert Herrick
Inevitable Change
Young as the Spring seemed life when sheCame from her silent East to me;Unquiet as Autumn was my breastWhen she declined into her West.Such tender, such untroubling thingsShe taught me, daughter of all Springs;Such dusty deathly lore I learnedWhen her last embers redly burned.How should it hap (Love, canst thou say?)Such end should be to so pure day?Such shining chastity give placeTo this annulling grave's disgrace?Such hopes be quenched in this despair,Grace chilled to granite everywhere?How should--in vain I cry--how shouldThat be, alas, which only could!
John Frederick Freeman
Epitaph
Serene descent, as a red leaf's descendingWhen there is neither wind nor noise of rain,But only autum air and the unendingDrawing of all things to the earth again.So be it, let the snow fall deep and coverAll that was drunken once with light and air.The earth will not regret her tireless lover,Nor he awake to know she does not care.
Sara Teasdale
The Man With A Past
There was merry-makingWhen the first dart fellAs a heralding, -Till grinned the fully bared thing,And froze like a spell -Like a spell.Innocent was she,Innocent was I,Too simple we!Before us we did not see,Nearing, aught wry -Aught wry!I can tell it not now,It was long ago;And such things cow;But that is why and howTwo lives were so -Were so.Yes, the years matured,And the blows were threeThat time ensuredOn her, which she dumbly endured;And one on me -One on me.
Thomas Hardy
Twilight
Dreamily over the roofsThe cold spring rain is falling;Out in the lonely treeA bird is calling, calling.Slowly over the earthThe wings of night are falling;My heart like the bird in the treeIs calling, calling, calling.
Sonnet XXXVII.
Il mio avversario, in cui veder solete.LAURA AT HER LOOKING-GLASS. My foe, in whom you see your own bright eyes,Adored by Love and Heaven with honour due,With beauties not its own enamours you,Sweeter and happier than in mortal guise.Me, by its counsel, lady, from your breast,My chosen cherish'd home, your scorn expell'dIn wretched banishment, perchance not heldWorthy to dwell where you alone should rest.But were I fasten'd there with strongest keys,That mirror should not make you, at my cost,Severe and proud yourself alone to please.Remember how Narcissus erst was lost!His course and thine to one conclusion lead,Of flower so fair though worthless here the mead.MACGREGOR. My mirror'd foe re...
Francesco Petrarca