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Nephelidia
From the depth of the dreamy decline of the dawn through a notable nimbus of nebulous noonshine,Pallid and pink as the palm of the flag-flower that flickers with fear of the flies as they float,Are they looks of our lovers that lustrously lean from a marvel of mystic miraculous moonshine,These that we feel in the blood of our blushes that thicken and threaten with throbs through the throat?Thicken and thrill as a theatre thronged at appeal of an actor's appalled agitation,Fainter with fear of the fires of the future than pale with the promise of pride in the past;Flushed with the famishing fullness of fever that reddens with radiance of rathe recreation,Gaunt as the ghastliest of glimpses that gleam through the gloom of the gloaming when ghosts go aghast?Nay, for the nick of the tick of the ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Unsatisfied
The bird flies home to its young;The flower folds its leaves about an opening bud;And in my neighbour's house there is the cry of a child.I close my window that I need not hear.She is mine, and she is very beautiful:And in her heart there is no evil thought.There is even love in her heart -Love of life, love of joy, love of this fair world,And love of me (or love of my love for her);Yet she will never consent to bear me a child.And when I speak of it she weeps,Always she weeps, saying:'Do I not bring joy enough into your life?Are you not satisfied with me and my love,As I am satisfied with you?Never would I urge you to some great perilTo please my whim; yet ever so you urge me,Urge me to risk my happiness - yea, life itself -S...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Song
I am as weary as a childThat weeps upon its mother's breastFor joy of comforting. But IHave no such place to rest.I am as weary as a birdBlown by wild winds far out to seaWhen it regains its nest. But, Oh,There waits no nest for me.What think you may sustain the birdThat finds no housing after flight?And what the little child consoleWho weeps alone at night?
Theodosia Garrison
Alone
From childhoods hour I have not beenAs others were, I have not seenAs others saw, I could not bringMy passions from a common spring,From the same source I have not takenMy sorrow, I could not awakenMy heart to joy at the same tone,And all I loved, I loved alone,Thou,in my childhood,in the dawnOf a most stormy life,was drawnFrom every depth of good and illThe mystery which binds me still,From the torrent, or the fountain,From the red cliff of the mountain,From the sun that round me rolldIn its autumn tint of gold,From the lightning in the skyAs it passed me flying by,From the thunder and the storm,And the cloud that took the form(When the rest of Heaven was blue)Of a demon in my view.
Edgar Allan Poe
Winter Nightfall
The old yellow stucco Of the time of the Regent Is flaking and peeling: The rows of square windows In the straight yellow building Are empty and still; And the dusty dark evergreens Guarding the wicket Are draped with wet cobwebs, And above this poor wilderness Toneless and sombre Is the flat of the hill. They said that a colonel Who long ago died here Was the last one to live here: An old retired colonel, Some Fraser or Murray, I don't know his name; Death came here and summoned him, And the shells of him vanished Beyond all speculation; And silence resumed here, Silence and emptiness, And nobody came. Was it ...
John Collings Squire, Sir
The Rose Of The World
Who dreamed that beauty passes like a dream?For these red lips, with all their mournful pride,Mournful that no new wonder may betide,Troy passed away in one high funeral gleam,And Usna's children died.We and the labouring world are passing by:Amid men's souls, that waver and give placeLike the pale waters in their wintry race,Under the passing stars, foam of the sky,Lives on this lonely face.Bow down, archangels, in your dim abode:Before you were, or any hearts to beat,Weary and kind one lingered by His seat;He made the world to be a grassy roadBefore her wandering feet.
William Butler Yeats
To His Orphan Grandchildren.
("O Charles, je te sens près de moi.")[July, 1871.]I feel thy presence, Charles. Sweet martyr! down In earth, where men decay,I search, and see from cracks which rend thy tomb, Burst out pale morning's ray.Close linked are bier and cradle: here the dead, To charm us, live again:Kneeling, I mourn, when on my threshold sounds Two little children's strain.George, Jeanne, sing on! George, Jeanne, unconscious play! Your father's form recall,Now darkened by his sombre shade, now gilt By beams that wandering fall.Oh, knowledge! what thy use? did we not know Death holds no more the dead;But Heaven, where, hand in hand, angel and star Smile at the grave we dread?A Heave...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Mental Cases
Who are these? Why sit they here in twilight? Wherefore rock they, purgatorial shadows, Drooping tongues from jaws that slob their relish, Baring teeth that leer like skulls' tongues wicked? Stroke on stroke of pain,--but what slow panic, Gouged these chasms round their fretted sockets? Ever from their hair and through their hand palms Misery swelters. Surely we have perished Sleeping, and walk hell; but who these hellish?--These are men whose minds the Dead have ravished. Memory fingers in their hair of murders, Multitudinous murders they once witnessed. Wading sloughs of flesh these helpless wander, Treading blood from lungs that had loved laughter. Always they must see these things and hear them, ...
Wilfred Edward Salter Owen
Sonnet CCXVI.
I' pur ascolto, e non odo novella.HEARING NO TIDINGS OF HER, HE BEGINS TO DESPAIR. Still do I wait to hear, in vain still wait,Of that sweet enemy I love so well:What now to think or say I cannot tell,'Twixt hope and fear my feelings fluctuate:The beautiful are still the marks of fate;And sure her worth and beauty most excel:What if her God have call'd her hence, to dwellWhere virtue finds a more congenial state?If so, she will illuminate that sphereEven as a sun: but I--'tis done with me!I then am nothing, have no business here!O cruel absence! why not let me seeThe worst? my little tale is told, I fear,My scene is closed ere it accomplish'd be.MOREHEAD. No tidings yet--I listen, but in va...
Francesco Petrarca
Thy Brother's Blood Crieth.
All her corn-fields rippled in the sunshine,All her lovely vines, sweets-laden, bowed;Yet some weeks to harvest and to vintage:When, as one man's hand, a cloudRose and spread, and, blackening, burst asunderIn rain and fire and thunder.Is there nought to reap in the day of harvest?Hath the vine in her day no fruit to yield?Yea, men tread the press, but not for sweetness,And they reap a red crop from the field.Build barns, ye reapers, garner all aright,Though your souls be called to-night.A cry of tears goes up from blackened homesteads,A cry of blood goes up from reeking earth:Tears and blood have a cry that pierces HeavenThrough all its Hallelujah swells of mirth;God hears their cry, and though He tarry, yetHe doth not forget....
Christina Georgina Rossetti
When Age Comes On.
When Age comes on! -"The deepening dusk is where the dawn Once glittered splendid, and the dewIn honey-drips, from red rose-lips Was kissed away by me and you. -And now across the frosty lawnBlack foot-prints trail, and Age comes on - And Age comes on! And biting wild-winds whistle throughOur tattered hopes - and Age comes on!When Age comes on! -O tide of raptures, long withdrawn, Flow back in summer-floods, and flingHere at our feet our childhood sweet, And all the songs we used to sing! . . .Old loves, old friends - all dead and gone -Our old faith lost - and Age comes on - And Age comes on! Poor hearts! have we not anythingBut longings left when Age comes on?
James Whitcomb Riley
Dusk.
Corn-Colored clouds upon a sky of gold,And 'mid their sheaves, where, like a daisy bloomLeft by the reapers to the gathering gloom,The star of twilight flames, as Ruth, 't is told,Dreamed homesick 'mid the harvest fields of old,The Dusk goes gleaning color and perfumeFrom Bible slopes of heaven, that illumeHer pensive beauty deep in shadows stoled.Hushed is the forest; and blue vale and hillAre still, save for the brooklet, sleepilyStumbling the stone, its foam like some white foot:Save for the note of one far whippoorwill,And in my heart her name, like some sweet beeWithin a flow'r, blowing a fairy flute.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Hag Of Beare
It is of Corca Dubhne she was, and she had her youth seven times over, and every man that had lived with her died of old age, and her grandsons and great-grandsons were tribes and races. And through a hundred years she wore upon her head the veil Cuimire had blessed. Then age and weakness came upon her and it is what she said:Ebb-tide to me as to the sea; old age brings me reproach; I used to wear a shift that was always new; to-day, I have not even a cast one.It is riches you are loving, it is not men; it was men we loved in the time we were living.There were dear men on whose plains we used to be driving; it is good the time we passed with them; it is little we were broken afterwards.When my arms are seen it is long and thin they are; once they used to be fondling, they used to be around g...
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
Peccavi, Domine
O Power to whom this earthly climeIs but an atom in the whole,O Poet-heart of Space and Time,O Maker and Immortal Soul,Within whose glowing rings are bound,Out of whose sleepless heart had birthThe cloudy blue, the starry round,And this small miracle of earth:Who liv'st in every living thing,And all things are thy script and chart,Who rid'st upon the eagle's wing,And yearnest in the human heart;O Riddle with a single clue,Love, deathless, protean, secure,The ever old, the ever new,O Energy, serene and pure.Thou, who art also part of me,Whose glory I have sometime seen,O Vision of the Ought-to-be,O Memory of the Might-have-been,I have had glimpses of thy way,And moved with winds and walked with stars,
Archibald Lampman
To Knole
October 1, 1913 I I left thee in the crowds and in the light, And if I laughed or sorrowed none could tell. They could not know our true and deep farewell Was spoken in the long preceding night. Thy mighty shadow in the garden's dip! To others dormant, but to me awake; I saw a window in the moonlight shake, And traced the angle of the gable's lip, And knew thy soul, benign and grave and mild, Towards me, morsel of morality, And grieving at the parting soon to be, A patriarch about to lose a child. For many come and soon their tale is told, And thou remainest, dimly feeling pain, Aware the time draws near to don again The sober mourning of the very old. ...
Victoria Mary Sackville-West
Feroke
The rice-birds fly so white, so silver white,The velvet rice-flats lie so emerald green,My heart inhales, with sorrowful delight,The sweet and poignant sadness of the scene.The swollen tawny river seeks the sea,Its hungry waters, never satisfied,Beflecked with fallen log and torn-up tree,Engulph the fisher-huts on either side.The current brought a stranger yesterday,And laid him on the sand beneath a palm,His worn young face was partly torn away,His eyes, that saw the world no more, were calmWe could not close his eyelids, stiff with blood, -But, oh, my brother, I had changed with theeFor I am still tormented in the flood,Whilst thou hast done thy work, and reached the sea.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Death At The Window
This morning, while we sat in talk Of spring and apple-bloom,Lo! Death stood in the garden walk, And peered into the room.Your back was turned, you did not see The shadow that he made.He bent his head and looked at me; It made my soul afraid.The words I had begun to speak Fell broken in the air.You saw the pallor of my cheek, And turned--but none was there.He came as sudden as a thought, And so departed too.What made him leave his task unwrought? It was the sight of you.Though Death but seldom turns aside From those he means to take,He would not yet our hearts divide, For love and pity's sake.
Robert Fuller Murray
A Song Of Cheer
Be of good cheer, and have no fearOf Fortune or Tomorrow:To Hope's low whisper lend an earAnd turn away from Sorrow.Time out of mind the soul is blindTo things God sends as blessings:And Fortune often proves unkindMerely in foolish guessings.Within the soul we bear the wholeOf Hell and also Heaven;And 'twixt the two is set the goalOf dreams our lives have driven.What counts above all deeds is Love,And Friendship, that, remember,In heart-beats keeps Life's record ofIts April and December.To every one come rain and sun,And calm and stormy weather:What helps is not what Life has done,But Life and Love together.Of sun and rain and joy and painThe web of Life is woven;And ever through...