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Verlaine.
Avid of life and love, insatiate vagabond,With quest too furious for the graal he would have won,He flung himself at the eternal sky, as oneWrenching his chains but impotent to burst the bond.Yet under the revolt, the revel, the despond,What pools of innocence, what crystal benison!As through a riven mist that glowers in the sun,A stretch of God's blue calm glassed in a virgin pond.Prowler of obscene streets that riot reek along,And aisles with incense numb and gardens mad with rose,Monastic cells and dreams of dim brocaded lawns,Death, which has set the calm of Time upon his song,Surely upon his soul has kissed the same reposeIn some fair heaven the Christ has set apart for Fauns.
Bliss Carman
The Song Of The Waste-Paper Basket
O bard of fortune, you deem me noughtBut a mark for your careless scorn.For I am the echo-less grave of thoughtThat is strangled before its born.You think perchance that I am a doomWhich only a dunce should dread,Nor dream Ive been the dishonoured tombOf the noblest and brightest dead.The brightest fancies that eer can flyFrom the labouring minds of menAre often written in lines awry,And marred by a blundering pen;And thus it comes that I gain a partOf what to the world is loss,Of genius lost for the want of art,Of pearls that are set in dross.And though I am of a lowly birthMy fame has been cheaply bought,A power am I, for I rob the earthOf the brightest gems of thought;The Press gains much of my lawful s...
Henry Lawson
The Complaint
Ah! this wild desolated spot,Calls forth the plaintive tear;Remembrance paints my little cot,Which once did flourish here.No more the early lark and thrushShall hail the rising day,Nor warble on their native bush,Nor charm me with their lay.No more the foliage of the oakShall spread its wonted shade;Now fell'd beneath the hostile strokeOf red destruction's blade.Beneath its bloom when summer smil'd,How oft the rural trainThe lingering hours with tales beguil'd,Or danc'd to Colin's strain.And, when Aurora with the dawnDispell'd the midnight shade,Her flocks to the accustom'd lawnWould lovely Phillis lead.Delusive grandeur never wreath'dAround Contentment's head,'Till war its flami...
Thomas Gent
To Ralph Waldo Emerson
Poet, whose words are like the tight-packed seed Sealed in the capsule of a silver flower,Still at your art we wonder as we read, The art dynamic charging each word with power.Seeds of the silver flower of Emerson: One, on the winds to Scotland brought, did sinkIn Carlyle's heart; and one was lately blown To Belgium, and flowered in - Maeterlinck.
Richard Le Gallienne
O Let Me Dream The Dreams Of Long Ago
Call me not back, O cold and crafty world:I scorn your thankless thanks and hollow praise.Wiser than seer or scientist contentTo tread no paths beyond these bleating hills,Here let me lie beneath this dear old elm,Among the blossoms of the clover-fields,And listen to the humming of the bees.Here in those far-off, happy, boyhood years,When all my world was bounded by these hills,I dreamed my first dreams underneath this elm.Dreamed? Aye, and builded castles in the clouds;Dreamed, and made glad a fond, proud mother's heart,Now moldering into clay on yonder hill;Dreamed till my day-dreams paved the world with gold;Dreamed till my mad dreams made one desolate;Dreamed O my soul, and was it all a dream?As I lay dreaming under this old elm,
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Listening
His step? Ah, no; 'tis but the rainThat hurtles on the window pane.Let's draw the curtains close and sitBeside the fire awhile and knit.Two purl -- two plain. A well-shaped sock,And warm. (I thought I heard a knock,But 'twas the slam of Jones's door.)Yes, good Scotch yarn is far beforeThe fleecy wools -- a different thing,And best for wear. (Was that his ring?)No. 'Tis the muffin man I see;We'll have threepennyworth for tea.Two plain -- two purl; that heel is neat.(I hear his step far down the street.)Two purl -- two plain. The sock can wait;I'll make the tea. (He's at the gate!)
Fay Inchfawn
Minnie And Winnie
Minnie and WinnieSlept in a shell.Sleep, little ladies!And they slept well.Pink was the shell within,Silver without;Sounds of the great seaWander'd about.Sleep, little ladies!Wake not soon!Echo on echoDies to the moon.Two bright starsPeep'd into the shell."What are you dreaming of?Who can tell?"Started a green linnetOut of the croft;Wake, little ladies,The sun is aloft!
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Love And Duty
Of love that never found his earthly close,What sequel? Streaming eyes and breaking hearts?Or all the same as if he had not been?Not so. Shall Error in the round of timeStill father Truth? O shall the braggart shoutFor some blind glimpse of freedom work itselfThro madness, hated by the wise, to lawSystem and empire? Sin itself be foundThe cloudy porch oft opening on the Sun?And only he, this wonder, dead, becomeMere highway dust? or year by year aloneSit brooding in the ruins of a life,Nightmare of youth, the spectre of himself!If this were thus, if this, indeed, were all,Better the narrow brain, the stony heart,The staring eye glazed oer with sapless days,The long mechanic pacings to and fro,The set gray life, and apathetic end.B...
To A Usurper
Aha! a traitor in the camp,A rebel strangely bold,--A lisping, laughing, toddling scamp,Not more than four years old!To think that I, who've ruled aloneSo proudly in the past,Should be ejected from my throneBy my own son at last!He trots his treason to and fro,As only babies can,And says he'll be his mamma's beauWhen he's a "gweat, big man"!You stingy boy! you've always hadA share in mamma's heart;Would you begrudge your poor old dadThe tiniest little part?That mamma, I regret to see,Inclines to take your part,--As if a dual monarchyShould rule her gentle heart!But when the years of youth have sped,The bearded man, I trow,Will quite forget he ever saidHe'd be his mamma's be...
Eugene Field
Woodnotes I
1When the pine tosses its conesTo the song of its waterfall tones,Who speeds to the woodland walks?To birds and trees who talks?Caesar of his leafy Rome,There the poet is at home.He goes to the river-side,--Not hook nor line hath he;He stands in the meadows wide,--Nor gun nor scythe to see.Sure some god his eye enchants:What he knows nobody wants.In the wood he travels glad,Without better fortune had,Melancholy without bad.Knowledge this man prizes bestSeems fantastic to the rest:Pondering shadows, colors, clouds,Grass-buds and caterpillar-shrouds,Boughs on which the wild bees settle,Tints that spot the violet's petal,Why Nature loves the number five,And why the star-form she repeats:Lover o...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Elegiac Stanzas In Memory Of My Brother, John Commander Of The E. I. Companys 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
Sorrows.
Sorrows our portion are: ere hence we go,Crosses we must have; or, hereafter woe.
Robert Herrick
Under A Stagnant Sky
To James McNeill WhistlerUnder a stagnant sky,Gloom out of gloom uncoiling into gloom,The River, jaded and forlorn,Welters and wanders wearily - wretchedly - on;Yet in and out among the ribsOf the old skeleton bridge, as in the pilesOf some dead lake-built city, full of skulls,Worm-worn, rat-riddled, mouldy with memories,Lingers to babble to a broken tune(Once, O, the unvoiced music of my heart!)So melancholy a soliloquyIt sounds as it might tellThe secret of the unending grief-in-grain,The terror of Time and Change and Death,That wastes this floating, transitory world.What of the incantationThat forced the huddled shapes on yonder shoreTo take and wear the nightLike a material majesty?That touched the ...
William Ernest Henley
Home
Rest, rest - there is no rest,Until the quiet graveComes with its narrow archThe heart to saveFrom life's long cankering rust,From torpor, cold and still -The loveless, saddened dust,The jaded will.And yet, be far the hourWhose haven calls me home;Long be the arduous dayTill evening come;What sureness now remainsBut that through livelong strifeOnly the loser gainsAn end to life?Then in the soundless deepOf even the shallowest graveChildhood and love he'll keep,And his soul save;All vext desire, all vainCries of a conflict doneFallen to rest again;Death's refuge won.
Walter De La Mare
Another Tattered Rhymster In The Ring
Another tattered rhymster in the ring,With but the old plea to the sneering schools,That on him too, some secret night in springCame the old frenzy of a hundred foolsTo make some thing: the old want dark and deep,The thirst of men, the hunger of the stars,Since first it tinged even the Eternal's sleep,With monstrous dreams of trees and towns and mars.When all He made for the first time He saw,Scattering stars as misers shake their pelf.Then in the last strange wrath broke His own law,And made a graven image of Himself.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
The Farm Child's Lullaby
Oh, the little bird is rocking in the cradle of the wind,And it's bye, my little wee one, bye;The harvest all is gathered and the pippins all are binned;Bye, my little wee one, bye;The little rabbit's hiding in the golden shock of corn,The thrifty squirrel's laughing bunny's idleness to scorn;You are smiling with the angels in your slumber, smile till morn;So it's bye, my little wee one, bye.There'll be plenty in the cellar, there'll be plenty on the shelf;Bye, my little wee one, bye;There'll be goodly store of sweetings for a dainty little elf;Bye, my little wee one, bye.The snow may be a-flying o'er the meadow and the hill,The ice has checked the chatter of the little laughing rill,But in your cosey cradle you are warm and happy still;So bye,...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
To A Friend.
In years to come, when looking o'erThese lines I've penn'd for thee,I trust that thou shalt ne'er have causeTo think unkind of me.And if you have, let memoryTry hard to blunt the dart,And tho' I may deserve the blame,Let kindness soothe the smart.
Thomas Frederick Young
An Easter Market.
Today, through your Easter marketIn the lazy Southern sun,I strolled with hands in pocketsPast the flower-stalls one by one.Indolent, dreamy, readyFor anything to amuse,Shyfoot out for a rambleIn his oldest hat and shoes.Roses creamy and yellow,Azaleas crimson and white,And the flaky fresh carnationsMy Orient of delight,--Masses and banks of blossomThat dazzle and summon the eye,Till the buyers are half bewilderedTo know what they want. Not I.Who would not rather be artistAnd slip through the crowd unseenTo gather it all in a pictureAnd guess what the faces mean?So down through the chaffering darkiesI pass to the sidewalk's end,Through the smiling gingham bonnetsWith their ...