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Nursery Rhyme. DLX. Natural History.
Snail, snail, put out your horns, I'll give you bread and barleycorns.
Unknown
Youth.
Sweet empty sky of June without a stain, Faint, gray-blue dewy mists on far-off hills,Warm, yellow sunlight flooding mead and plain, That each dark copse and hollow overfills; The rippling laugh of unseen, rain-fed rills,Weeds delicate-flowered, white and pink and gold,A murmur and a singing manifold.The gray, austere old earth renews her youth With dew-lines, sunshine, gossamer, and haze.How still she lies and dreams, and veils the truth, While all is fresh as in the early days! What simple things be these the soul to raiseTo bounding joy, and make young pulses beat,With nameless pleasure finding life so sweet.On such a golden morning forth there floats, Between the soft earth and the softer sky,In ...
Emma Lazarus
Nursery Rhyme. DXLI. Natural History.
Shoe the colt, Shoe the colt, Shoe the wild mare, Here a nail, There a nail, Yet she goes bare.
The Landscape
You and your landscape! There it liesStripped, resuming its disguise,Clothed in dreams, made bare again,Symbol infinite of pain,Rapture, magic, mysteryOf vanished days and days to be.There's its sea of tidal grassOver which the south winds pass,And the sun-set's Tuscan goldWhich the distant windows holdFor an instant like a sphereBursting ere it disappear.There's the dark green woods which throveIn the spell of Leese's Grove.And the winding of the road;And the hill o'er which the skyStretched its pallied vacancyEre the dawn or evening glowed.And the wonder of the townSomewhere from the hill-top downNestling under hills and woodsAnd the meadow's solitudes. * * * * *
Edgar Lee Masters
September 1819
The sylvan slopes with corn-clad fieldsAre hung, as if with golden shields,Bright trophies of the sun!Like a fair sister of the sky,Unruffled doth the blue lake lie,The mountains looking on.And, sooth to say, yon vocal grove,Albeit uninspired by love,By love untaught to ring,May well afford to mortal earAn impulse more profoundly dearThan music of the Spring.For 'that' from turbulence and heatProceeds, from some uneasy seatIn nature's struggling frame,Some region of impatient life:And jealousy, and quivering strife,Therein a portion claim.This, this is holy; while I hearThese vespers of another year,This hymn of thanks and praise,My spirit seems to mount aboveThe anxieties of human love,
William Wordsworth
The Old Cumberland Beggar
I saw an aged Beggar in my walk;And he was seated, by the highway side,On a low structure of rude masonryBuilt at the foot of a huge hill, that theyWho lead their horses down the steep rough roadMay thence remount at ease. The aged ManHad placed his staff across the broad smooth stoneThat overlays the pile; and, from a bagAll white with flour, the dole of village dames,He drew his scraps and fragments, one by one;And scanned them with a fixed and serious lookOf idle computation. In the sun,Upon the second step of that small pile,Surrounded by those wild unpeopled hills,He sat, and ate his food in solitude:And ever, scattered from his palsied hand,That, still attempting to prevent the waste,Was baffled still, the crumbs in little showers
The Trinity
Much may be done with the world we are in,Much with the race to better it;We can unfetter it,Free it from chains of the old traditions;Broaden its viewpoint of virtue and sin;Change its conditionsOf labour and wealth;And open new roadways to knowledge and health.Yet some things ever must stay as they areWhile the sea has its tide and the sky has its star.A man and a woman with love between,Loyal and tender and true and clean,Nothing better has been or can beThan just those three.Woman may alter the first great plan.Daughters and sisters and mothersMay stalk with their brothersForth from their homes into noisy placesFit (and fit only) for masculine man.Marring their gracesWith conflict and strifeTo widen the o...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Idleness.
The rain is playing its soft pleasant tuneFitfully on the skylight, and the shadeOf the fast flying clouds across my bookPasses with delicate change. My merry fireSings cheerfully to itself; my musing catPurrs as she wakes from her unquiet sleep,And looks into my face as if she feltLike me the gentle influence of the rain.Here have I sat since morn, reading sometimes,And sometimes listening to the faster fallOf the large drops, or rising with the stirOf an unbidden thought, have walked awhileWith the slow steps of indolence, my room,And then sat down composedly againTo my quaint book of olden poetry.It is a kind of idleness, I know;And I am said to be an idle man -And it is very true. I love to goOut in the pleasant sun, and let my ...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Mutability.
1.The flower that smiles to-dayTo-morrow dies;All that we wish to stayTempts and then flies.What is this world's delight?Lightning that mocks the night,Brief even as bright.2.Virtue, how frail it is!Friendship how rare!Love, how it sells poor blissFor proud despair!But we, though soon they fall,Survive their joy, and allWhich ours we call.3.Whilst skies are blue and bright,Whilst flowers are gay,Whilst eyes that change ere nightMake glad the day;Whilst yet the calm hours creep,Dream thou - and from thy sleepThen wake to weep.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Life.
Oh Life! I breathe thee in the breeze,I feel thee bounding in my veins,I see thee in these stretching trees,These flowers, this still rock's mossy stains.This stream of odours flowing byFrom clover-field and clumps of pine,This music, thrilling all the sky,From all the morning birds, are thine.Thou fill'st with joy this little one,That leaps and shouts beside me here,Where Isar's clay-white rivulets runThrough the dark woods like frighted deer.Ah! must thy mighty breath, that wakesInsect and bird, and flower and tree,From the low trodden dust, and makesTheir daily gladness, pass from me,Pass, pulse by pulse, till o'er the groundThese limbs, now strong, shall creep with pain,And this fair world of sight and so...
William Cullen Bryant
Roots And Leaves Themselves Alone
Roots and leaves themselves alone are these;Scents brought to men and women from the wild woods, and from the pond-side,Breast-sorrel and pinks of love--fingers that wind around tighter than vines,Gushes from the throats of birds, hid in the foliage of trees, as the sun is risen;Breezes of land and love--breezes set from living shores out to you on the living sea--to you, O sailors!Frost-mellow'd berries, and Third-month twigs, offer'd fresh to young persons wandering out in the fields when the winter breaks up,Love-buds, put before you and within you, whoever you are,Buds to be unfolded on the old terms;If you bring the warmth of the sun to them, they will open, and bring form, color, perfume, to you;If you become the aliment and the wet, they will become flowers, fruits, tall blanche...
Walt Whitman
An Ode to Natural Beauty
There is a power whose inspiration fillsNature's fair fabric, sun- and star-inwrought,Like airy dew ere any drop distils,Like perfume in the laden flower, like aughtUnseen which interfused throughout the wholeBecomes its quickening pulse and principle and soul.Now when, the drift of old desire renewing,Warm tides flow northward over valley and field,When half-forgotten sound and scent are wooingFrom their deep-chambered recesses long sealedSuch memories as breathe once moreOf childhood and the happy hues it wore,Now, with a fervor that has never beenIn years gone by, it stirs me to respond, -Not as a force whose fountains are withinThe faculties of the percipient mind,Subject with them to darkness and decay,But something absolute, somethi...
Alan Seeger
Night.
Night spreads upon the plain her ebon pall,Day seems unable to wash out the stain;A pausing truce kind nature gives to all,And fairy nations now have leave to reign:So may conjecturing Fancy think, and feign.Doubtless in tiny legions, now unseen,They venture from their dwellings once again:From keck-stalk cavity, or hollow bean,Or perfum'd bosom of pea-flower between,They to the dark green rings now haste, to meet,To dance, or pay some homage to their queen;Or journey on, some pilgrim-friend to greet.With rushy switch they urge some beetle's flight,And ride to revel, ere 'tis morning-light.
John Clare
The Pleasures Of Imagination
BOOK IWith what attractive charms this goodly frameOf Nature touches the consenting heartsOf mortal men; and what the pleasing storesWhich beauteous imitation thence derivesTo deck the poet's, or the painter's toil;My verse unfolds. Attend, ye gentle pow'rsOf musical delight! and while I singYour gifts, your honours, dance around my strain.Thou, smiling queen of every tuneful breast,Indulgent Fancy! from the fruitful banksOf Avon, whence thy rosy fingers cullFresh flowers and dews to sprinkle on the turfWhere Shakespeare lies, be present: and with theeLet Fiction come, upon her vagrant wingsWafting ten thousand colours through the air,Which, by the glances of her magic eye,She blends and shifts at will, through countless forms,
Mark Akenside
Written In Very Early Youth
Calm is all nature as a resting wheel.The kine are couched upon the dewy grass;The horse alone, seen dimly as I pass,Is cropping audibly his later meal:Dark is the ground; a slumber seems to stealO'er vale, and mountain, and the starless sky.Now, in this blank of things, a harmony,Home-felt, and home-created, comes to healThat grief for which the senses still supplyFresh food; for only then, when memoryIs hushed, am I at rest. My Friends! restrainThose busy cares that would allay my pain;Oh! leave me to myself, nor let me feelThe officious touch that makes me droop again.
To The Daisy (2)
"Her divine skill taught me this,That from every thing I sawI could some instruction draw,And raise pleasure to the heightThrough the meanest objects sight.By the murmur of a spring,Or the least bough's rustelling;By a Daisy whose leaves spreadShut when Titan goes to bed;Or a shady bush or tree;She could more infuse in meThan all Nature's beauties canIn some other wiser man.' G. Wither. In youth from rock to rock I went,From hill to hill in discontentOf pleasure high and turbulent,Most pleased when most uneasy;But now my own delights I make,My thirst at every rill can slake,And gladly Nature's love partake,Of Thee, sweet Daisy!Thee Winter in the garland wearsThat thinly...
The Mean.
'Tis much among the filthy to be clean;Our heat of youth can hardly keep the mean.
Robert Herrick
To ..........
Let other bards of angels sing,Bright suns without a spot;But thou art no such perfect thing:Rejoice that thou art not!Heed not tho' none should call thee fair;So, Mary, let it beIf nought in loveliness compareWith what thou art to me.True beauty dwells in deep retreats,Whose veil is unremovedTill heart with heart in concord beats,And the lover is beloved.