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After A Night Of Rain
The rain made ruin of the rose and frayedThe lily into tatters: now the MornLooks from the hopeless East with eyes forlorn,As from her attic looks a dull-eyed maid.The coreopsis drips; the sunflowers fade;The garden reeks with rain: beneath the thornThe toadstools crowd their rims where, dim of horn,The slow snail slimes the grasses gaunt and greyed.Like some pale nun, in penitential weeds,Weary with weeping, telling sad her beads,Her rosary of pods of hollyhocks,September comes, heavy of heart and head,While in her path the draggled four-o'-clocksDroop all their flowers, saying, "Summer's dead."
Madison Julius Cawein
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
Death
Death is a road our dearest friends have gone;Why with such leaders, fear to say, Lead on?Its gate repels, lest it too soon be tried,But turns in balm on the immortal side.Mothers have passed it: fathers, children; menWhose like we look not to behold again;Women that smiled away their loving breath;Soft is the travelling on the road to death!But guilt has passed it? men not fit to die?O, hushfor He that made us all is by!Human were allall men, all born of mothers;All our own selves in the worn-out shape of others;Our used, and oh, be sure, not to be ill-used brothers!
James Henry Leigh Hunt
The Grief Of A Girl's Heart
O Donall og, if you go across the sea, bring myself with you and do not forget it; and you will have a sweetheart for fair days and market days, and the daughter of the King of Greece beside you at night. It is late last night the dog was speaking of you; the snipe was speaking of you in her deep marsh. It is you are the lonely bird through the woods; and that you may be without a mate until you find me.You promised me, and you said a lie to me, that you would be before me where the sheep are flocked; I gave a whistle and three hundred cries to you, and I found nothing there but a bleating lamb.You promised me a thing that was hard for you, a ship of gold under a silver mast; twelve towns with a market in all of them, and a fine white court by the side of the sea.You promised me a thing that is not p...
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
Solstice
The ant is busy with its house,The bee is at its tree;And by its nest among the boughsThe bird makes melody.The Day, reluctant still to leave,Sits crystal at its noon,Like some sweet girl, with naught to grieve,Sighing a dreamy tune.Oh, hark, my heart, and quit your quest!The song she sighs is one of rest.The butterfly is on its flower;The wasp is at its clay;The wind to bramble lane and bowerWhispers of yesterday.The Afternoon goes to its close,With bright attendant states,Like some calm queen who seeks repose.Behind her palace gates.Oh, look, my heart, your pining cease!That way, at last, you shall find peace.The cricket trills; the beetle booms;The mole heaves at its mound:Pale moths come forth like ghosts...
The Man To The Angel
I have wept a million tears:Pure and proud one, where are thine,What the gain though all thy yearsIn unbroken beauty shine?All your beauty cannot winTruth we learn in pain and sighs:You can never enter inTo the circle of the wise.They are but the slaves of lightWho have never known the gloom,And between the dark and brightWilled in freedom their own doom.Think not in your pureness there,That our pain but follows sin:There are fires for those who dareSeek the throne of might to win.Pure one, from your pride refrain:Dark and lost amid the strifeI am myriad years of painNearer to the fount of life.When defiance fierce is thrownAt the God to whom you bow,Rest the lips of the Unknown<...
George William Russell
In The Mist.
Sitting all day in a silver mist,In silver silence all the day,Save for the low, soft kiss of spray,And the lisp of sands by waters kissed,As the tide draws up the bay.Little I hear and nothing I see,Wrapped in that veil by fairies spun;The solid earth is vanished for me,And the shining hours speed noiselessly,A web of shadow and sun.Suddenly out of the shifting veilA magical bark, by the sunbeams lit,Flits like a dream,--or seems to flit,--With a golden prow and a gossamer sail,And the waves make room for it.A fair, swift bark from some radiant realm,Its diamond cordage cuts the skyIn glittering lines; all silentlyA seeming spirit holds the helmAnd steers: will he pass me by?Ah, not for me is the...
Susan Coolidge
Fragments Of Ancient Poetry, Fragment III
Evening is grey on the hills. Thenorth wind resounds through thewoods. White clouds rise on the sky: thetrembling snow descends. The river howlsafar, along its winding course. Sad,by a hollow rock, the grey-hair'd Carrylsat. Dry fern waves over his head; hisseat is in an aged birch. Clear to theroaring winds he lifts his voice of woe.Tossed on the wavy ocean is He,the hope of the isles; Malcolm, thesupport of the poor; foe to the proudin arms! Why hast thou left us behind?why live we to mourn thy fate? Wemight have heard, with thee, the voiceof the deep; have seen the oozy rock.Sad on the sea-beat shore thy spouselooketh for thy return. The time ofthy promise is come; the night is gatheringaround. But no white sail...
James Macpherson
The Sprig Of Lime
He lay, and those who watched him were amazedTo see unheralded beneath the lidsTwin tears, new-gathered at the price of pain,Start and at once run crookedly athwartCheeks channelled long by pain, never by tears.So desolate too the sigh next utteredThey had wept also, but his great lips moved,And bending down one heard, 'A sprig of lime;Bring me a sprig of lime.' Whereat she stoleWith dumb signs forth to pluck the thing he craved.So lay he till a lime-twig had been snappedFrom some still branch that swept the outer grassFar from the silver pillar of the boleWhich mounting past the house's crusted roofSplit into massy limbs, crossed boughs, a mazeOf close-compacted intercontorted staffsBowered in foliage wherethrough the sunShot sudde...
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols
Love's Argument With Reason.
La ragion meco si lamenta.Reason laments and grieves full sore with me, The while I hope by loving to be blest; With precepts sound and true philosophy My shame she quickens thus within my breast:'What else but death will that sun deal to thee-- Nor like the phoenix in her flaming nest?' Yet nought avails this wise morality; No hand can save a suicide confessed.I know my doom; the truth I apprehend: But on the other side my traitorous heart Slays me whene'er to wisdom's words I bend.Between two deaths my lady stands apart: This death I dread; that none can comprehend. In this suspense body and soul must part.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
The Unuttered
For so long and so long had I forgot,Serenely busiedWith thousand things; at whiles desire grew hotAnd my soul dizziedWith hapless and insatiable salt thirst.Nor was I humbledSaving with shame that, running with the worstMy feet yet stumbled.Pride and delight of life enchained my heart,My heart enchanted,And oh, soft subtle fingers had their part,And eyes love-haunted.But while my busy mind was thus intent,Or thus surrendered,What was it, oh what strange thing was it sentThrough all that hinderedA thrill that woke the buried soul in me?--It seemed there flutteredA thought--or was it a sudden fear?--of Thee,Remote, unuttered.
John Frederick Freeman
Idleness.
The street was brisk, an animated scene,And every man was on some business bent,Absorbed in some employment or intent,Pre-occupied, intelligent and keen.True, some were dwarf'd and some were pale and lean.But to the sorriest visage Labor lentA light, transfiguring with her sacramentThe abject countenance and slavish mien.But one - he shambled aimlessly alongAsham'd, and shrunk from the abstracted ken Of passers-by with conscience-struck recoil,A pariah, a leper in the throng,An alien from the commonwealth of men, A stranger to the covenant of toil.
W. M. MacKeracher
The Prophet
All day long he kept the sheep:-- Far and early, from the crowd,On the hills from steep to steep, Where the silence cried aloud; And the shadow of the cloudWrapt him in a noonday sleep.Where he dipped the water's cool, Filling boyish hands from thence,Something breathed across the pool Stir of sweet enlightenments; And he drank, with thirsty sense,Till his heart was brimmed and full.Still, the hovering Voice unshed, And the Vision unbeheld,And the mute sky overhead, And his longing, still withheld! --Even when the two tears welled,Salt, upon that lonely bread.Vaguely blessèd in the leaves, Dim-companioned in the sun,Eager mornings, wistful eves, Very hunger drew hi...
Josephine Preston Peabody
Maiden May.
Maiden May sat in her bower,In her blush rose bower in flower,Sweet of scent;Sat and dreamed away an hour,Half content, half uncontent."Why should rose blossoms be born,Tender blossoms, on a thornThough so sweet?Never a thorn besets the cornScentless in its strength complete."Why are roses all so frail,At the mercy of the gale,Of a breath?Yet so sweet and perfect pale,Still so sweet in life and death."Maiden May sat in her bower,In her blush rose bower in flower,Where a linnetMade one bristling branch the towerFor her nest and young ones in it."Gay and clear the linnet trills;Yet the skylark only, thrillsHeaven and earthWhen he breasts the height, and fillsHeight and depth ...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
So We Grew Together
Reading over your letters I find you wrote me "My dear boy," or at times "dear boy," and the envelope Said "master" - all as I had been your very son, And not the orphan whom you adopted. Well, you were father to me! And I can recall The things you did for me or gave me: One time we rode in a box car to Springfield To see the greatest show on earth; And one time you gave me redtop boots, And one time a watch, and one time a gun. Well, I grew to gawkiness with a voice Like a rooster trying to crow in August Hatched in April, we'll say. And you went about wrapped up in silence With eyes aflame, and I heard little rumors Of what they were doing to you, and how They wronged you - and we were p...
Edgar Lee Masters
Fragment: 'Great Spirit'.
Great Spirit whom the sea of boundless thoughtNurtures within its unimagined caves,In which thou sittest sole, as in my mind,Giving a voice to its mysterious waves -
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Lines To Annette.
Canst thou, Annette, thy lover see?His trembling love unfolded hear?And mark the while th' impassion'd tear,Th' impassion'd tear of agony?Adown his anxious features steal,Nor then one burst of pity feel?But, as bereav'd of ev'ry sense,Look on with cold indifference.Go, then, Annette, in all thy charms,Go bless some gayer, happier, arms;Go, rest secure, thy fear give o'er,These eyes shall follow thee no more;And never shall these lips impartOne thought of all that rends my heart.Yet, since will burst the frequent sigh,And since the tear will ever fall,From thee and from the world I'll fly;Deserts shall hide, shall silence, all.
John Carr
Intimations Of The Beautiful
IThe hills are full of propheciesAnd ancient voices of the dead;Of hidden shapes that no man sees,Pale, visionary presences,That speak the things no tongue hath said,No mind hath thought, no eye hath read.The streams are full of oracles,And momentary whisperings;An immaterial beauty swellsIts breezy silver o'er the shellsWith wordless speech that sings and singsThe message of diviner things.No indeterminable thought is theirs,The stars', the sunsets' and the flowers';Whose inexpressible speech declaresTh' immortal Beautiful, who sharesThis mortal riddle which is ours,Beyond the forward-flying hours.IIIt holds and beckons in the streams;It lures and touches us in allThe flowers of...