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Fragment III - Years After
Fade off the ridges, rosy light,Fade slowly from the last gray height,And leave no gloomy cloud to grieveThe heart of this enchanted eve!All things beneath the still sky seemBound by the spell of a sweet dream;In the dusk forest, dreamingly,Droops slowly down each plumèd head;The river flowing softly byDreams of the sea; the quiet seaDreams of the unseen stars; and IAm dreaming of the dreamless dead.The river has a silken sheen,But red rays of the sunset stainIts pictures, from the steep shore caught,Till shades of rock, and fern, and treeGlow like the figures on a paneOf some old church by twilight seen,Or like the rich devices wroughtIn mediaeval tapestry.All lonely in a drifting boatThrough shi...
Victor James Daley
Loved And Lost.
I.Sweetly to sleep beneath the fresh green turf They laid the loved and lost away;A chair is vacant by the household hearth, And shadow-vested Sorrow's there to-day.II.The tender hands that guided us in youth Are folded now upon the gentle breast,And those dear eyes whose depths were love and truth Are closed to open in eternal rest.III.Through simple faith and duty well performed, A crown of light forever shall be hers;And though with bitter grief and anguish mourned, A consolation gleams through blinding tears!
George W. Doneghy
My Dear Mistress Has A Heart
My dear mistress has a heartSoft as those kind looks she gave me,When with love's resistless art,And her eyes, she did enslave me;But her constancy's so weak,She's so wild and apt to wander,That my jealous heart would breakShould we live one day asunder.Melting joys about her move,Killing pleasures, wounding blisses;She can dress her eyes in love,And her lips can arm with kisses;Angels listen when she speaks,She's my delight, all mankind's wonder;But my jealous heart would breakShould we live one day asunder.
John Wilmot
Nay, not To-night
Nay, not to-night; - the slow, sad rain is fallingSorrowful tears, beneath a grieving sky,Far off a famished jackal, faintly calling,Renders the dusk more lonely with its cry.The mighty river rushes, sobbing, seawards,The shadows shelter faint mysterious fears,I turn mine eyes for consolation theewards,And find thy lashes tremulous with tears.If some new soul, asearch for incarnation,Should, through our kisses, enter Life again,It would inherit all our desolation,All the soft sorrow of the slanting rain.When thou desirest Love's supreme surrender,Come while the morning revels in the light,Bulbuls around us, passionately tender,Singing among the roses red and white.Thus, if it be my sweet and sacred duty,Subservient...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Back to the Border
The tremulous morning is breaking Against the white waste of the sky,And hundreds of birds are awaking In tamarisk bushes hard by.I, waiting alone in the station, Can hear in the distance, grey-blue,The sound of that iron desolation, The train that will bear me from you.'T will carry me under your casement, You'll feel in your dreams as you lieThe quiver, from gable to basement, The rush of my train sweeping by.And I shall look out as I pass it, - Your dear, unforgettable door,'T was ours till last night, but alas! it Will never be mine any more.Through twilight blue-grey and uncertain, Where frost leaves the window-pane free,I'll look at the tinsel-edged curtain That hid so muc...
Which
We are both of us sad at heart, But I wonder who can sayWhich has the harder part, Or the bitterer grief to-day.You grieve for a love that was lost Before it had reached its prime;I sit here and count the cost Of a love that has lived its time.Your blossom was plucked in its May, In its dawning beauty and pride;Mine lived till the August day, And reached fruition and died.You pressed its leaves in a book, And you weep sweet tears o'er them.Dry eyed I sit and look On a withered and broken stem.And now that all is told, Which is the sadder, pray,To give up your dream with its gold, Or to see it fade into grey?
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Picture At Newstead
What made my heart, at Newstead, fullest swell?Twas not the thought of Byron, of his cryStormily sweet, his Titan agony;It was the sight of that Lord ArundelWho struck, in heat, the child he loved so well,And the childs reason flickered, and did die.Painted (he willd it) in the galleryThey hang; the picture doth the story tell.Behold the stern, maild father, staff in hand!The little fair-haird son, with vacant gaze,Where no more lights of sense or knowledge are!Methinks the woe which made that father standBaring his dumb remorse to future days,Was woe than Byrons woe more tragic far.
Matthew Arnold
Despair. Song.
Ask not the pallid stranger's woe,With beating heart and throbbing breast,Whose step is faltering, weak, and slow,As though the body needed rest. -Whose 'wildered eye no object meets,Nor cares to ken a friendly glance,With silent grief his bosom beats, -Now fixed, as in a deathlike trance.Who looks around with fearful eye,And shuns all converse with man kind,As though some one his griefs might spy,And soothe them with a kindred mind.A friend or foe to him the same,He looks on each with equal eye;The difference lies but in the name,To none for comfort can he fly. -'Twas deep despair, and sorrow's trace,To him too keenly given,Whose memory, time could not efface -His peace was lodged in Heaven. -
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Shut Out
The door was shut. I looked between Its iron bars; and saw it lie, My garden, mine, beneath the sky,Pied with all flowers bedewed and green:From bough to bough the song-birds crossed, From flower to flower the moths and bees; With all its nests and stately treesIt had been mine, and it was lost.A shadowless spirit kept the gate, Blank and unchanging like the grave. I peering through said: 'Let me haveSome buds to cheer my outcast state.'He answered not. 'Or give me, then, But one small twig from shrub or tree; And bid my home remember meUntil I come to it again.'The spirit was silent; but he took Mortar and stone to build a wall; He left no loophole great or smallThrough wh...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Fragment - Her Last Day
It was a day of sombre heat:The still, dense air was void of soundAnd life; no wing of bird did beatA little breeze through it, the groundWas like live ashes to the feet.From the black hills that loomed aroundThe valley many a sudden spireOf flame shot up, and writhed, and curled,And sank again for heaviness:And heavy seemed to men that dayThe burden of the weary world.For evermore the sky did pressCloser upon the earth that layFainting beneath, as one in direDreams of the night, upon whose breastSits a black phantom of unrestThat holds him down. The earth and skyAppeared unto the troubled eyeA roof of smoke, a floor of fire.There was no water in the land.Deep in the night of each ravineMen, vainly searching ...
Fragment Of The Elegy On The Death Of Adonis.
FROM THE GREEK OF BION.I mourn Adonis dead - loveliest Adonis -Dead, dead Adonis - and the Loves lament.Sleep no more, Venus, wrapped in purple woof -Wake violet-stoled queen, and weave the crownOf Death, - 'tis Misery calls, - for he is dead.The lovely one lies wounded in the mountains,His white thigh struck with the white tooth; he scarceYet breathes; and Venus hangs in agony there.The dark blood wanders o'er his snowy limbs,His eyes beneath their lids are lustreless,The rose has fled from his wan lips, and thereThat kiss is dead, which Venus gathers yet.A deep, deep wound Adonis...A deeper Venus bears upon her heart.See, his beloved dogs are gathering round -The Oread nymphs are weeping - AphroditeWith hair unbo...
Once There Was Time
Let no tears fallIf then they fell not.If eyes told nothing,Now let them tell not.Once there was timeFor words, looks and tears:That time is past, is past--Heart, thou shalt tell not!Beyond any speechIs silence bitter,As between love and loveNothing is sweeter.Once there was time, time yetFor words, looks and tears ...Past, past, past, past--Nothing so bitter!Now if tears comeThat then fell never;If eyes such sad, sad thingsLook now for ever;If words, looks or tearsTremble with telling,Oh, what returning voice is it whispersNever, never, never!
John Frederick Freeman
Unrequited
Passion? not hers! who held me with pure eyes:One hand among the deep curls of her brow,I drank the girlhood of her gaze with sighs:She never sighed, nor gave me kiss or vow.So have I seen a clear October pool,Cold, liquid topaz, set within the sereGold of the woodland, tremorless and cool,Reflecting all the heartbreak of the year.Sweetheart? not she! whose voice was music-sweet;Whose face loaned language to melodious prayer.Sweetheart I called her. When did she repeatSweet to one hope, or heart to one despair!So have I seen a wildflower's fragrant headSung to and sung to by a longing bird;And at the last, albeit the bird lay dead,No blossom wilted, for it had not heard.
Madison Julius Cawein
Elegiac Stanzas In Memory Of My Brother, John Wordsworth, Commander Of The E. I. Company's Ship The Earl Of Abergavenny In Which He Perished By Calamitous Shipwreck, Feb. 6, 1805.
IThe Sheep-boy whistled loud, and lo!That instant, startled by the shock,The Buzzard mounted from the rockDeliberate and slow:Lord of the air, he took his flight;Oh! could he on that woeful nightHave lent his wing, my Brother dear,For one poor moment's space to Thee,And all who struggled with the Sea,When safety was so near.IIThus in the weakness of my heartI spoke (but let that pang be still)When rising from the rock at will,I saw the Bird depart.And let me calmly bless the PowerThat meets me in this unknown Flower.Affecting type of him I mourn!With calmness suffer and believe,And grieve, and know that I must grieve,Not cheerless, though forlorn.IIIHere did we stop; and he...
William Wordsworth
Where Shall The Lover Rest
Where shall the lover restWhom the fates severFrom the true maiden's breast,Parted for ever?Where, through groves deep and high,Sounds the fair billow,Where early violets die,Under the willow.Chorus.Soft shall be his pillow.There, through the summer day,Cool streams are laving;There, while the tempests sway,Scarce are boughs waving;There, thy rest shall thou take,Parted for ever,Never again to wake,Never, O never!Chorus.Never, O never!Where shall the traitor rest,He, the deceiver,Who could win maiden's breast,Ruin and leave her?In the lost battle,Borne down by the flying,Where mingles war's rattleWith groans of the dying.,P>Choru...
Walter Scott
Frank Denz
In the roar of the storm, in the wild bitter voice of the tempest-whipped sea,The cry of my darling, my child, comes ever and ever to me;And I stand where the haggard-faced wood stares down on a sinister shore,But all that is left is the hood of the babe I can cherish no more.A little blue hood, with the shawl of the girl that I took for my wifeIn a happy old season, is all that remains of the light of my life;The wail of a woman in pain, and the sob of a smothering bird,They come through the darkness again in the wind and the rain they are heard.Oh, women and men who have known the perils of weather and wave,It is sad that my sweet ones are blown under sea without shelter of grave;I sob like a child in the night, when the gale on the waters is loudMy darlings w...
Henry Kendall
A Spot
In years defaced and lost,Two sat here, transport-tossed,Lit by a living loveThe wilted world knew nothing of:Scared momentlyBy gaingivings,Then hoping thingsThat could not be.Of love and us no traceAbides upon the place;The sun and shadows wheel,Season and season sereward steal;Foul days and fairHere, too, prevail,And gust and galeAs everywhere.But lonely shepherd soulsWho bask amid these knollsMay catch a faery soundOn sleepy noontides from the ground:"O not againTill Earth outwearsShall love like theirsSuffuse this glen!"
Thomas Hardy
Frances.
She will not sleep, for fear of dreams,But, rising, quits her restless bed,And walks where some beclouded beamsOf moonlight through the hall are shed.Obedient to the goad of grief,Her steps, now fast, now lingering slow,In varying motion seek reliefFrom the Eumenides of woe.Wringing her hands, at intervals,But long as mute as phantom dim,She glides along the dusky walls,Under the black oak rafters grim.The close air of the grated towerStifles a heart that scarce can beat,And, though so late and lone the hour,Forth pass her wandering, faltering feet;And on the pavement spread beforeThe long front of the mansion grey,Her steps imprint the night-frost hoar,Which pale on grass and granite lay.No...
Charlotte Bronte