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Dead And Gone.
II wot well o' his goingTo think in flowers fair; -His a right kind heart, my dear,To give the grass such hair.II.I wot well o' his lyingSuch nights out in the cold, -To list the cricket's crick, my sweet,To see the glow-worm's gold.III.An mine eyes be laughterful,Well may they laugh, I trow, -Since two dead eyes a yesternightGazed in them sad enow.IV.An my heart make moan and ache,Well may it dree, I'm sure; -He is dead and gone, my love,And it is beggar poor.
Madison Julius Cawein
A Phylactery.
Wise men I hold those rakes of old Who, as we read in antique story,When lyres were struck and wine was poured,Set the white Death's Head on the board - Memento mori.Love well! love truly! and love fast! True love evades the dilatory.Life's bloom flares like a meteor past;A joy so dazzling cannot last - Memento mori.Stop not to pluck the leaves of bay That greenly deck the path of glory,The wreath will wither if you stay,So pass along your earnest way - Memento mori.Hear but not heed, though wild and shrill, The cries of faction transitory;Cleave to YOUR good, eschew YOUR ill,A Hundred Years and all is still - Memento mori.When Old Age comes with muffled dru...
John Hay
Ode: Intimations Of Immortality From Recollections Of Early Childhood
The child is father of the man;And I could wish my days to beBound each to each by natural piety.(Wordsworth, My Heart Leaps Up)There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream,The earth, and every common sight,To me did seemApparelled in celestial light,The glory and the freshness of a dream.It is not now as it hath been of yore;Turn wheresoeer I may,By night or day.The things which I have seen I now can see no more.The Rainbow comes and goes,And lovely is the Rose,The Moon doth with delightLook round her when the heavens are bare,Waters on a starry nightAre beautiful and fair;The sunshine is a glorious birth;But yet I know, whereer I go,That there hath past away a glory from the earth.N...
William Wordsworth
Sleep Is A Spirit.
Sleep is a spirit, who beside us sits,Or through our frames like some dim glamour flits;From out her form a pearly light is shed,As from a lily, in a lily-bed,A firefly's gleam. Her face is pale as stone,And languid as a cloud that drifts aloneIn starry heav'n. And her diaphanous feetAre easy as the dew or opaline heatOf summer.Lo! with ears aurora pinkAs Dawn's she leans and listens on the brinkOf being, dark with dreadfulness and doubt,Wherein vague lights and shadows move about,And palpitations beat like some huge heartOf Earth the surging pulse of which we're part.One hand, that hollows her divining eyes,Glows like the curved moon over twilight skies;And with her gaze she fathoms life and deathGulfs, where man's cons...
Affected Indifference - To The Same; Ode IV
Yes; you contemn the perjur'd maidWho all your favorite hopes betray'd:Nor, though her heart should home return,Her tuneful tongue it's falsehood mourn,Her winning eyes your faith implore,Would you her hand receive again,Or once dissemble your disdain,Or listen to the syren's theme,Or stoop to love: since now esteemAnd confidence, and friendship, is no more.Yet tell me, Phaedra, tell me why,When summoning your pride you tryTo meet her looks with cool neglect,Or cross her walk with slight respect,(For so is falsehood best repaid)Whence do your cheeks indignant glow?Why is your struggling tongue so slow?What means that darkness on your brow?As if with all her broken vowYou meant the fair apostate to upbraid?
Mark Akenside
While I May
Wind and hail and veering rain,Driven mist that veils the day,Soul's distress and body's pain,I would bear you while I may.I would love you if I might,For so soon my life will beBuried in a lasting night,Even pain denied to me.
Sara Teasdale
At Moonrise
Pale faces looked up at me, up from the earth, like flowers;Pale hands reached down to me, out of the air, like stars,As over the hills, robed on with the twilight, the Hours,The Day's last Hours, departed, and Dusk put up her bars.Pale fingers beckoned me on; pale fingers, like starlit mist;Dim voices called to me, dim as the wind's dim rune,As up from the night, like a nymph from the amethystOf her waters, as silver as foam, rose the round, white breast of the moon.And I followed the pearly waving and beckon of hands,The luring glitter and dancing glimmer of feet,And the sibilant whisper of silence, that summoned to landsRemoter than legend or faery, where Myth and Tradition meet.And I came to a place where the shadow of ancient NightBrooded ...
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XLII.
Zefiro torna, e 'l bel tempo rimena.RETURNING SPRING BRINGS TO HIM ONLY INCREASE OF GRIEF. Zephyr returns; and in his jocund trainBrings verdure, flowers, and days serenely clear;Brings Progne's twitter, Philomel's lorn strain,With every bloom that paints the vernal year;Cloudless the skies, and smiling every plain;With joyance flush'd, Jove views his daughter dear;Love's genial power pervades earth, air, and main;All beings join'd in fond accord appear.But nought to me returns save sorrowing sighs,Forced from my inmost heart by her who boreThose keys which govern'd it unto the skies:The blossom'd meads, the choristers of air,Sweet courteous damsels can delight no more;Each face looks savage, and each prospect drear....
Francesco Petrarca
A Faded Letter.
I.O what memories sweet entwineAround each word and faded line!Yellow and dim with the touch of years,And soiled with the marks of tears--A sacred treasure of the heartWhich death alone can from him part--A letter--cherished as no other--And ending with the name of--Mother!II.Writ it was to a wayward boy,When life to him seemed full of joy--Pleading with him so to liveThat he her heart no grief would give--That after years might ne'er be fraughtWith sorrow that himself had wrought:--"May guardian angels 'round you hover,"She wrote--and signed the name of--Mother!III.The paper has the taint of must--The hand that traced the lines is dust,And silvery hair is on the head...
George W. Doneghy
Lament XVIII
We are thy thankless children, gracious Lord.The good thou dost affordLightly do we employ,All careless of the one who giveth joy.We heed not him from whom delights do flow.Until they fade and goWe take no thought to renderThat gratitude we owe the bounteous sender.Yet keep us in thy care. Let not our prideCause thee, dear God, to hideThe glory of thy beauty:Chasten us till we shall recall our duty.Yet punish us as with a father's hand.We mites, cannot withstandThine anger; we are snow,Thy wrath, the sun that melts us in its glow.Make us not perish thus, eternal God,From thy too heavy rod.Recall that thy disdainAlone doth give thy children bitter pain.Yet I do know thy mercy doth abound
Jan Kochanowski
Oh, For A Home Of Rest!
Oh, for a home of rest!Time lags alone so slow, so wearily;Couldst thou but smile on me, I should be blest.Alas, alas! that never more may be.Oh, for the sky-lark's wing to soar to thee!This earth I would forsakeFor starry realms whose sky's forever fair;There, tears are shed not, hearts will cease to ache,And sorrow's plaintive voice shall never breakThe heavenly stillness that is reigning there.Life's every charm has fled,The world is all a wilderness to me;"For thou art numbered with the silent dead."Oh, how my heart o'er this dark thought has bled!How I have longed for wings to follow thee!In visions of the nightWith angel smile thou beckon'st me away,Pointing to worlds where hope is free from blight;And...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
Ode To A Nightingale
1.My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness painsMy sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk,Or emptied some dull opiate to the drainsOne minute past, and Lethe-wards had sunk:'Tis not through envy of thy happy lot,But being too happy in thy happiness,That thou, light-winged Dryad of the trees,In some melodious plotOf beechen green, and shadows numberless,Singest of summer in full-throated ease.2.O for a draught of vintage, that hath beenCooled a long age in the deep-delved earth,Tasting of Flora and the country green,Dance, and Provencal song, and sun-burnt mirth!O for a beaker full of the warm South,Full of the true, the blushful Hippocrene,With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,And purple-stained mouth;T...
John Keats
Tempus Fugit.
Lovely Spring,A brief sweet thing,Is swift on the wing;Gracious Summer,A slow sweet comer,Hastens past;Autumn while sweetIs all incompleteWith a moaning blast, -Nothing can last,Can be cleaved unto,Can be dwelt upon;It is hurried through,It is come and gone,Undone it cannot be done,It is ever to do,Ever old, ever new,Ever waxing oldAnd lapsing to Winter cold.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Hendecasyllabics
In the month of the long decline of rosesI, beholding the summer dead before me,Set my face to the sea and journeyed silent,Gazing eagerly where above the sea-markFlame as fierce as the fervid eyes of lionsHalf divided the eyelids of the sunset;Till I heard as it were a noise of watersMoving tremulous under feet of angelsMultitudinous, out of all the heavens;Knew the fluttering wind, the fluttered foliage,Shaken fitfully, full of sound and shadow;And saw, trodden upon by noiseless angels,Long mysterious reaches fed with moonlight,Sweet sad straits in a soft subsiding channel,Blown about by the lips of winds I knew not,Winds not born in the north nor any quarter,Winds not warm with the south nor any sunshine;Heard between them a voice of e...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Lotos-Eaters
Courage! he said, and pointed toward the land,This mounting wave will roll us shoreward soon.In the afternoon they came unto a landIn which it seemed always afternoon.All round the coast the languid air did swoon,Breathing like one that hath a weary dream.Full-faced above the valley stood the moon;And like a downward smoke, the slender streamAlong the cliff to fall and pause and fall did seem.A land of streams! some, like a downward smoke,Slow-dropping veils of thinnest lawn, did go;And some thro wavering lights and shadows broke,Rolling a slumbrous sheet of foam below.They saw the gleaming river seaward flowFrom the inner land: far off, three mountain-tops,Three silent pinnacles of aged snow,Stood sunset-flushd: and, dewd with sho...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Autumnal Sonnet
Now Autumn's fire burns slowly along the woods,And day by day the dead leaves fall and melt,And night by night the monitory blastWails in the key-hold, telling how it pass'dO'er empty fields, or upland solitudes,Or grim wide wave; and now the power is feltOf melancholy, tenderer in its moodsThan any joy indulgent summer dealt.Dear friends, together in the glimmering eve,Pensive and glad, with tones that recogniseThe soft invisible dew in each one's eyes,It may be, somewhat thus we shall have leaveTo walk with memory, when distant liesPoor Earth, where we were wont to live and grieve
William Allingham
Little Minnie.
Is it well with the child? and she answered, it is well.If earth's weariness for rest is changed, Rest on the far off shore,If earth's sighing's changed for singing Psalms of praise for evermore.And the bed of pain for roaming free, Beneath the living trees,Whose leaves of healing wither not In any earthly breeze.And to mix with those who, robed and crowned, Walk by the crystal sea;To gather with the other lambs Beside the Saviour's knee.We will keenly miss our absent child; Lonely tears our loss will tell,But His voice says, "It is well with her, We answer, "It is well."It is well to know that safely home Is this our dearest one;To know she's with the children fai...
Nora Pembroke
From Faust. Dedication.
Ye shadowy forms, again ye're drawing near,So wont of yore to meet my troubled gaze!Were it in vain to seek to keep you here?Loves still my heart that dream of olden days?Oh, come then! and in pristine force appear,Parting the vapor mist that round me plays!My bosom finds its youthful strength again,Feeling the magic breeze that marks your train.Ye bring the forms of happy days of yore,And many a shadow loved attends you too;Like some old lay, whose dream was well nigh o'er,First-love appears again, and friendship true;Upon life's labyrinthine path once moreIs heard the sigh, and grief revives anew;The friends are told, who, in their hour of pride,Deceived by fortune, vanish'd from my side.No long...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe