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Sonnet CLXXIX.
In nobil sangue vita umile e queta.SHE UNITES IN HERSELF THE HIGHEST EXCELLENCES OF VIRTUE AND BEAUTY. High birth in humble life, reserved yet kind,On youth's gay flower ripe fruits of age and rare,A virtuous heart, therewith a lofty mind,A happy spirit in a pensive air;Her planet, nay, heaven's king, has fitly shrinedAll gifts and graces in this lady fair,True honour, purest praises, worth refined,Above what rapt dreams of best poets are.Virtue and Love so rich in her unite,With natural beauty dignified address,Gestures that still a silent grace express,And in her eyes I know not what strange light,That makes the noonday dark, the dusk night clear,Bitter the sweet, and e'en sad absence dear.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
To Chloris.
'Tis Friendship's pledge, my young, fair friend, Nor thou the gift refuse, Nor with unwilling ear attend The moralizing muse. Since thou in all thy youth and charms, Must bid the world adieu, (A world 'gainst peace in constant arms) To join the friendly few. Since, thy gay morn of life o'ercast, Chill came the tempest's lower; (And ne'er misfortune's eastern blast Did nip a fairer flower.) Since life's gay scenes must charm no more, Still much is left behind; Still nobler wealth hast thou in store, The comforts of the mind! Thine is the self-approving glow, On conscious honour's part; And, dearest gift of heaven belo...
Robert Burns
The Child's First Grief.
Sorrow has touched thee, my beautiful boy!And dimmed the bright eyes that were dancing with joy;Thy ruby lips tremble, thy soft cheek is wet,The tears on its roses are lingering yet.On thy quick-heaving heart is thy little hand pressed;There is care on thy brow--there is grief in thy breast,And slowly and darkly the shadow steals o'er thee,For the first time the vision of death is before thee!Meet emblem of childhood--that innocent doveWas the sharer alike of thy sports and thy love;Thy playmate is dead--and that tenantless cageHas stamped the first grief upon memory's page.And oh!--thou art weeping--Life's fountain of tears,Once unchained, will flow on through the desert of years;No joy will e'er equal thy first dawn of bliss,No sorrow blot ou...
Susanna Moodie
Vale
Good-bye, sweet friend, good-bye,And all the world must beBetween my friend and me;And nothing is, dear heart,But hands that meet to part;Good-bye, sweet friend, good-bye.Good-bye, sweet love, good-bye,And one long grave must beBetween my love and me;What comfort there, dear heart,For hands that meet to part?Good-bye, sweet love, good-bye.
Dora Sigerson Shorter
Sorrow and Joy.
In sad procession borne away To sound of funeral knell,Affection's tribute thus we pay,And in earth's shelt'ring bosom layThe friend to whom but yesterday We gave the sad farewell.But scarce the melancholy sound Has died upon the ear,Before the mournful dirge is drownedBy wedding-anthems' glad rebound,That stir the solemn air around With merry peals and clear.Within our home doth gladness tread So closely upon griefThat, in the tears of sorrow shedO'er our beloved, lamented dead,We see reflected joy instead That gives a blest relief.A father and a daughter gone Beyond our fireside -For one we loved and leaned uponThe skillful archer Death had drawnHis bow; and one in lif...
Hattie Howard
To Luna.
SISTER of the first-born light,Type of sorrowing gentleness!Quivering mists in silv'ry dressFloat around thy features bright;When thy gentle foot is heard,From the day-closed caverns thenWake the mournful ghosts of men,I, too, wake, and each night-bird.O'er a field of boundless spanLooks thy gaze both far and wide.Raise me upwards to thy side!Grant this to a raving man!And to heights of rapture raised,Let the knight so crafty peepAt his maiden while asleep,Through her lattice-window glazed.Soon the bliss of this sweet view,Pangs by distance caused allays;And I gather all thy rays,And my look I sharpen too.Round her unveil'd limbs I seeBri...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
My Schoolboy Days
The Spring is come forth, but no Spring is for meLike the Spring of my boyhood on woodland and lea,When flowers brought me heaven and knew me again,In the joy of their blooming o'er mountain and plain.My thoughts are confined and imprisoned: O whenWill freedom find me my own valleys again?The wind breathes so sweet, and the day is so calm;In the woods and the thicket the flowers look so warm;And the grass is so green, so delicious and sweet;O when shall my manhood my youth's valleys meet--The scenes where my children are laughing at play--The scenes that from memory are fading away?The primrose looks happy in every field;In strange woods the violets their odours will yield,And flowers in the sunshine, all brightly arrayed,Will bloom just ...
John Clare
Sketch Of A Schoolfellow.
He sat by me in school. His face is nowVividly in my mind, as if he wentFrom me but yesterday - its pleasant smileAnd the rich, joyous laughter of his eye,And the free play of his unhaughty lip,So redolent of his heart! He was not fair,Nor singular, nor over-fond of books,And never melancholy when alone.He was the heartiest in the ring, the lastHome from the summer's wanderings, and the firstOver the threshold when the school was done.All of us loved him. We shall speak his nameIn the far years to come, and think of himWhen we have lost life's simplest passages,And pray for him - forgetting he is dead -Life was in him so passing beautiful!His childhood had been wasted in the closeAnd airless city. He had never thoughtThat the ...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
On the Portrait of Two Beautiful Young People A Brother and Sister
O I admire and sorrow! The heart's eye grievesDiscovering you, dark tramplers, tyrant years.A juice rides rich through bluebells, in vine leaves,And beauty's dearest veriest vein is tears.Happy the father, mother of these! Too fast:Not that, but thus far, all with frailty, blestIn one fair fall; but, for time's aftercast,Creatures all heft, hope, hazard, interest.And are they thus? The fine, the fingering beamsTheir young delightful hour do feature downThat fleeted else like day-dissolvèd dreamsOr ringlet-race on burling Barrow brown.She leans on him with such contentment fondAs well the sister sits, would well the wife;His looks, the soul's own letters, see beyond,Gaze on, and fall directly forth on life.But...
Gerard Manley Hopkins
Cloe Jealous
Forbear to ask Me, why I weep;Vext Cloe to her Shepherd said:'Tis for my Two poor stragling SheepPerhaps, or for my Squirrel dead.For mind I what You late have writ?Your subtle Questions, and Replies;Emblems, to teach a Female WitThe Ways, where changing Cupid flies.Your Riddle, purpos'd to rehearseThe general Pow'r that Beauty has:But why did no peculiar VerseDescribe one Charm of Cloe's Face?The Glass, which was at Venus' Shrine,With such Mysterious Sorrow laid:The Garland (and You call it Mine)Which show'd how Youth and Beauty fade.Ten thousand Trifles light as TheseNor can my Rage, nor Anger move:She shou'd be humble, who wou'd please:And She must suffer, who can love.When in My Glass I chanc'd to look;Of Venus...
Matthew Prior
Here, Take My Heart.
Here, take my heart--'twill be safe in thy keeping, While I go wandering o'er land and o'er sea;Smiling or sorrowing, waking or sleeping, What need I care, so my heart is with thee?If in the race we are destined to run, love, They who have light hearts the happiest be,Then happier still must be they who have none, love. And that will be my case when mine is with thee.It matters not where I may now be a rover, I care not how many bright eyes I may see;Should Venus herself come and ask me to love her, I'd tell her I couldn't--my heart is with thee.And there let it lie, growing fonder and, fonder-- For, even should Fortune turn truant to me,Why, let her go--I've a treasure beyond her, As long as my heart'...
Thomas Moore
Rejected.
Gooid bye, lass, aw dunnot blame,Tho' mi loss is hard to bide!For it wod ha' been a shame,Had tha ivver been the brideOf a workin chap like me;One 'ats nowt but love to gie.Hard hoof'd neives like thease o' mine.Surely ne'er wor made to pressHands so lily-white as thine;Nor should arms like thease caressOne so slender, fair, an' pure,'Twor unlikely, lass, aw'm sure.But thease tears aw cannot stay, -Drops o' sorrow fallin fast,Hopes once held aw've put awayAs a dream, an think its past;But mi poor heart loves thi still,An' wol life is mine it will.When aw'm seated, lone and sad,Wi mi scanty, hard won meal,One thowt still shall mak me glad,Thankful that alone aw feelWhat it is to tew an' striv...
John Hartley
Dearth
I hold your trembling hand to-night - and yetI may not know what wealth of bliss is mine,My heart is such a curious designOf trust and jealousy! Your eyes are wet -So must I think they jewel some regret,And lo, the loving arms that round me twineCling only as the tendrils of a vineWhose fruit has long been gathered: I forget,While crimson clusters of your kisses pressTheir wine out on my lips, my royal fairOf rapture, since blind fancy needs must guessThey once poured out their sweetness otherwhere,With fuller flavoring of happinessThan e'en your broken sobs may now declare.
James Whitcomb Riley
To My Sister
Lines written by the late A. L. GordonOn 4th August, 1853,Being three days before he sailed for Australia.Across the trackless seas I go,No matter when or where,And few my future lot will know,And fewer still will care.My hopes are gone, my time is spent,I little heed their loss,And if I cannot feel content,I cannot feel remorse.My parents bid me cross the flood,My kindred frowned at me;They say I have belied my blood,And stained my pedigree.But I must turn from those who chide,And laugh at those who frown;I cannot quench my stubborn pride,Nor keep my spirits down.I once had talents fit to winSuccess in lifes career,And if I chose a part of sin,My choice has cost me dear.But th...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Lovers
They sit within a woodland place, Trellised with rustling light and shade;So like a spirit is her face That he is half afraid To speak - lest she should fade.Mysterious, beneath the boughs, Like two enchanted shapes, they are,Whom Love hath builded them a house Of little leaf and star, And the brown evening jar.So lovely and so strange a thing Each is to each to look upon,They dare not hearken a bird sing, Or from the other one Take eyes - lest they be gone.So still - the watching woodland peers And pecks about them, butterfliesLight on her hand - a flower; eve hears Two questions, two replies - O love that never dies!
Richard Le Gallienne
Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms.
Believe me, if all those endearing young charms, Which I gaze on so fondly today,Were to change by to-morrow, and fleet in my arms, Like fairy-gifts fading away,Thou wouldst still be adored, as this moment thou art. Let thy loveliness fade as it will.And around the dear ruin each wish of my heart Would entwine itself verdantly still.It is not while beauty and youth are thine own, And thy cheeks unprofaned by a tear,That the fervor and faith of a soul can be known, To which time will but make thee more dear;No, the heart that has truly loved never forgets, But as truly loves on to the close,As the sun-flower turns on her god, when he sets, The same look which she turned when he rose.
The Poet
IRight upward on the road of fameWith sounding steps the poet came;Born and nourished in miracles,His feet were shod with golden bells,Or where he stepped the soil did pealAs if the dust were glass and steel.The gallant child where'er he cameThrew to each fact a tuneful name.The things whereon he cast his eyesCould not the nations rebaptize,Nor Time's snows hide the names he set,Nor last posterity forget.Yet every scroll whereon he wroteIn latent fire his secret thought,Fell unregarded to the ground,Unseen by such as stood around.The pious wind took it away,The reverent darkness hid the lay.Methought like water-haunting birdsDivers or dippers were his words,And idle clowns beside the mereAt the new visi...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Overseas
Non numero horas nisi serenasWhen Fall drowns morns in mist, it seemsIn soul I am a part of it;A portion of its humid beams,A form of fog, I seem to flitFrom dreams to dreams....An old château sleeps 'mid the hillsOf France: an avenue of sorbsConceals it: drifts of daffodilsBloom by a 'scutcheoned gate with barbsLike iron bills.I pass the gate unquestioned; yet,I feel, announced. Broad holm-oaks makeDark pools of restless violet.Between high bramble banks a lake, -As in a netThe tangled scales twist silver, - shines....Gray, mossy turrets swell aboveA sea of leaves. And where the pinesShade ivied walls, there lies my love,My heart divines.I know her window, slimly seenFrom...
Madison Julius Cawein