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Sonnet CLXIX.
D' un bel, chiaro, polito e vivo ghiaccio.THOUGH RACKED BY AGONY, HE DOES NOT COMPLAIN OF HER. The flames that ever on my bosom preyFrom living ice or cold fair marble pour,And so exhaust my veins and waste my core,Almost insensibly I melt away.Death, his stern arm already rear'd to slay,As thunders angry heaven or lions roar,Pursues my life that vainly flies before,While I with terror shake, and mute obey.And yet, were Love and Pity friends, they mightA double column for my succour throwBetween my worn soul and the mortal blow:It may not be; such feelings in the sightOf my loved foe and mistress never stir;The fault is in my fortune, not in her.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXXIII.
Valle che d' lamenti miei se' piena.ON HIS RETURN TO VAUCLUSE AFTER LAURA'S DEATH. Valley, which long hast echoed with my cries;Stream, which my flowing tears have often fed;Beasts, fluttering birds, and ye who in the bedOf Cabrieres' wave display your speckled dyes;Air, hush'd to rest and soften'd by my sighs;Dear path, whose mazes lone and sad I tread;Hill of delight--though now delight is fled--To rove whose haunts Love still my foot decoys;Well I retain your old unchanging face!Myself how changed! in whom, for joy's light throng,Infinite woes their constant mansion find!Here bloom'd my bliss: and I your tracks retrace,To mark whence upward to her heaven she sprung,Leaving her beauteous spoil, her robe of flesh behind!<...
The Litany of Nations
CHORUSIf with voice of words or prayers thy sons may reach thee,We thy latter sons, the men thine after-birth,We the children of thy grey-grown age, O Earth,O our mother everlasting, we beseech thee,By the sealed and secret ages of thy life;By the darkness wherein grew thy sacred forces;By the songs of stars thy sisters in their courses;By thine own song hoarse and hollow and shrill with strife;By thy voice distuned and marred of modulation;By the discord of thy measures march with theirs;By the beauties of thy bosom, and the cares;By thy glory of growth, and splendour of thy station;By the shame of men thy children, and the pride;By the pale-cheeked hope that sleeps and weeps and passes,As the grey dew from the morning mountain-grasses;...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Honour's Martyr.
The moon is full this winter night;The stars are clear, though few;And every window glistens brightWith leaves of frozen dew.The sweet moon through your lattice gleams,And lights your room like day;And there you pass, in happy dreams,The peaceful hours away!While I, with effort hardly quellingThe anguish in my breast,Wander about the silent dwelling,And cannot think of rest.The old clock in the gloomy hallTicks on, from hour to hour;And every time its measured callSeems lingering slow and slower:And, oh, how slow that keen-eyed starHas tracked the chilly gray!What, watching yet! how very farThe morning lies away!Without your chamber door I stand;Love, are you slumbering still?My ...
Emily Bronte
Drowned at Sea
Gloomy cliffs, so worn and wasted with the washing of the waves,Are ye not like giant tombstones round those lonely ocean graves?Are ye not the sad memorials, telling of a mighty griefDark with records ground and lettered into caverned rock and reef?Oh! ye show them, and I know them, and my thoughts in mourning goDown amongst your sunless chasms, deep into the surf below!Oh! ye bear them, and declare them, and oer every cleft and scar,I have wept for dear dead brothers perished in the lost Dunbar!Ye smitten ye battered,And splintered and shatteredCliffs of the Sea!Restless waves, so dim with dreams of sudden storms and gusty surge,Roaring like a gathered whirlwind reeling round a mountain verge,Were ye not like loosened maniacs, in the night when Beauty p...
Henry Kendall
Excuse
I too have sufferd: yet I knowShe is not cold, though she seems so:She is not cold, she is not light;But our ignoble souls lack might.She smiles and smiles, and will not sigh,While we for hopeless passion die;Yet she could love, those eyes declare,Were but men nobler than they are.Eagerly once her gracious kenWas turnd upon the sons of men.But light the serious visage grew,She lookd, and smiled, and saw them through.Our petty souls, our strutting wits,Our labourd puny passion-fits,Ah, may she scorn them still, till weScorn them as bitterly as she!Yet oh, that Fate would let her seeOne of some worthier race than we;One for whose sake she once might proveHow deeply she who scorns can love....
Matthew Arnold
No Peace But A Right Peace
An inconclusive peace!--A peace that would be no peace--Naught but a treacherous truce for breedingOf a later, greater, baser-still betrayal!--"No!" ...The spirits of our myriad valiant dead,Who died to make peace sure and life secure,Thunder one mighty cry of righteous indignation,--One vast imperative, unanswerable "No!" ..."Not for that, not for that, did we die!"--They cry;--"--To give fresh life to godless knavery!--To forge again the chains of slaverySuch as humanity has never known!We gave our lives to set Life free,Loyally, willingly gave we,Lest on our children, and on theirs,Should come like misery.And now, from our souls' heights and depths,We cry to you,--"Beware,Lest you defraud us of one smallest atom of th...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
My Friends
The man above was a murderer, the man below was a thief;And I lay there in the bunk between, ailing beyond belief;A weary armful of skin and bone, wasted with pain and grief.My feet were froze, and the lifeless toes were purple and green and gray;The little flesh that clung to my bones, you could punch it in holes like clay;The skin on my gums was a sullen black, and slowly peeling away.I was sure enough in a direful fix, and often I wondered whyThey did not take the chance that was left and leave me alone to die,Or finish me off with a dose of dope - so utterly lost was I.But no; they brewed me the green-spruce tea, and nursed me there like a child;And the homicide he was good to me, and bathed my sores and smiled;And the thief he starved that I might be ...
Robert William Service
Hallowmas
All hushed of glee,The last chill beeClings wearilyTo the dying aster.The leaves drop faster:And all around, red as disaster,The forest crimsons with tree on tree.A butterfly,The last to die,Wings heavily by,Weighed down with torpor.The air grows sharper;And the wind in the trees, like some sad harper,Sits and sorrows with sigh on sigh.The far crows call;The acorns fall;And over allThe Autumn raisesDun mists and hazes,Through which her soul, it seemeth, gazesOn ghosts and dreams in carnival.The end is near;The dying YearLeans low to hearHer own heart breaking,And Beauty takingHer flight, and all my dreams forsakingMy soul, bowed down 'mid the sad and...
Madison Julius Cawein
Epitaph Extempore
Nobles and Heralds, by your leave,Here lies what once was Matthew Prior,The son of Adam and of Eve;Can Stuart or Nassau claim higher.
Matthew Prior
France.
Not dead,--oh no,--she cannot die!Only a swoon, from loss of blood!Levite England passes her by,Help, Samaritan! None is nigh;Who shall stanch me this sanguine flood?Range the brown hair, it blinds her eyne,Dash cold water over her face!Drowned in her blood, she makes no sign,Give her a draught of generous wine.None heed, none hear, to do this grace.Head of the human column, thusEver in swoon wilt thou remain?Thought, Freedom, Truth, quenched ominous,Whence then shall Hope arise for us,Plunged in the darkness all again!No, she stirs!--There's a fire in her glance,Ware, oh ware of that broken sword!What, dare ye for an hour's mischance,Gather around her, jeering France,Attila's own exultant horde?L...
Toru Dutt
A Fragment. [1]
When, to their airy hall, my Fathers' voiceShall call my spirit, joyful in their choice;When, pois'd upon the gale, my form shall ride,Or, dark in mist, descend the mountain's side;Oh! may my shade behold no sculptur'd urns,To mark the spot where earth to earth returns!No lengthen'd scroll, no praise-encumber'd stone;My epitaph shall be my name alone: [2]If that with honour fail to crown my clay,Oh! may no other fame my deeds repay!That, only that, shall single out the spot;By that remember'd, or with that forgot.
George Gordon Byron
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XL.
Quella per cui con Sorga ho cangiat' Arno.HE ATTEMPTS TO PAINT HER BEAUTIES, BUT NOT HER VIRTUES. She, for whose sake fair Arno I resign,And for free poverty court-affluence spurn,Has known to sour the precious sweets to turnOn which I lived, for which I burn and pine.Though since, the vain attempt has oft been mineThat future ages from my song should learnHer heavenly beauties, and like me should burn,My poor verse fails her sweet face to define.The gifts, though all her own, which others share,Which were but stars her bright sky scatter'd o'er,Haply of these to sing e'en I might dare;But when to the diviner part I soar,To the dull world a brief and brilliant light,Courage and wit and art are baffled quite.MAC...
Lost Faith.
To lose one's faith surpassesThe loss of an estate,Because estates can beReplenished, -- faith cannot.Inherited with life,Belief but once can be;Annihilate a single clause,And Being's beggary.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
The Two Shakespeare Tercentenaries: Of Birth, 1864: Of Death, 1916.
TO SHAKESPEARE Longer than thine, than thine, Is now my time of life; and thus thy years Seem to be clasped and harboured within mine. O how ignoble this my clasp appears! Thy unprophetic birth, Thy darkling death: living I might have seen That cradle, marked those labours, closed that earth. O first, O last, O infinite between! Now that my life has shared Thy dedicated date, O mortal, twice, To what all-vain embrace shall be compared My lean enclosure of thy paradise? To ignorant arms that fold A poet to a foolish breast? The Line, That is not, with the world within its hold? So, days with days,...
Alice Meynell
Fear
Surely I must have ailedOn that dark night,Or my childish courage failedBecause there was no light;Or terror must have comeWith his chill wing,And made my angel dumb,Or found him slumbering.Because I could not sleepTerror began to wake,Close at my side to creepAnd sting me like a snake.And I was afraid of death,But when I thought of pain--O, language no word hathTo recall that thought again!Into my heart fear crawledAnd wreathed close around,Mortal, convulsive, cold,And I lay bound.Fear set before my eyesUnimaginable pain;Approaching agoniesSprang nimbly into my brain.Just as a thrilling windPlucks every mournful wire,So terror on my wild mindFingered, with ice and fire.O, ...
John Frederick Freeman
Dejection
O Father, I am in the dark, My soul is heavy-bowed:I send my prayer up like a lark, Up through my vapoury shroud, To find thee, And remind theeI am thy child, and thou my father,Though round me death itself should gather.Lay thy loved hand upon my head, Let thy heart beat in mine;One thought from thee, when all seems dead, Will make the darkness shine About me And throughout me!And should again the dull night gather,I'll cry again, Thou art my father.
George MacDonald
The Deserted Homestead
Past a dull, grey plain where a world-old grief seems to brood oer the silent land,When the orbéd moon turns her tense, white face on the ominous waste of sand,And the wind that steals by the dreamer feels like the touch of a phantom hand,Through the tall, still trees and the tangled scrub that has sprung on the old bush track,In a clearing wide, where a willow broods and the cowering bush shrinks backs,Stands a house alone that no dwellers own, yet unharmed by the storms attack.Tis a strange, sad place. On the shingle roof mosses gather and corn-blades spring,And a stillness reigns in the air unstirred by the beat of a wild birds wing.He who sees believes that the old house grieves with the grief of a sentient thing.From the charmed gums that about the land in a ...
Edward