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To One in Paradise
Thou wast that all to me, love,For which my soul did pine,A green isle in the sea, love,A fountain and a shrine,All wreathed with fairy fruits and flowers,And all the flowers were mine.Ah, dream too bright to last!Ah, starry Hope! that didst ariseBut to be overcast!A voice from out the Future cries,"On! on!", but o'er the Past(Dim gulf!) my spirit hovering liesMute, motionless, aghast!For, alas! alas! with meThe light of Life is o'er!"No more, no more, no more",(Such language holds the solemn seaTo the sands upon the shore)Shall bloom the thunder-blasted tree,Or the stricken eagle soar!And all my days are trances,And all my nightly dreamsAre where thy dark eye glances,And where thy foo...
Edgar Allan Poe
Sonnets IX
Let you not say of me when I am old, In pretty worship of my withered hands Forgetting who I am, and how the sands Of such a life as mine run red and gold Even to the ultimate sifting dust, "Behold, Here walketh passionless age!"--for there expands A curious superstition in these lands, And by its leave some weightless tales are told. In me no lenten wicks watch out the night; I am the booth where Folly holds her fair; Impious no less in ruin than in strength, When I lie crumbled to the earth at length, Let you not say, "Upon this reverend site The righteous groaned and beat their breasts in prayer."
Edna St. Vincent Millay
The Enemy
My youth was nothing but a black stormCrossed now and then by brilliant suns.The thunder and the rain so ravage the shoresNothing's left of the fruit my garden held once.I should employ the rake and the plow,Having reached the autumn of ideas,To restore this inundated groundWhere the deep grooves of water form tombs in the lees.And who knows if the new flowers you dreamedWill find in a soil stripped and cleanedThe mystic nourishment that fortifies?O Sorrow O Sorrow Time consumes Life,And the obscure enemy that gnaws at my heartUses the blood that I lose to play my part.
Charles Baudelaire
Dedication
Love owes tribute unto Death,Being but a flower of breath,Ev'n as thy fair body isMoment's figure of the blissDwelling in the mind of GodWhen He called thee from the sod,Like a crocus up to start,Gray-eyed with a golden heart,Out of earth, and point our sightTo thy eternal home of light.Here on earth is all we know:To let our love as steadfast blow,Open-hearted to the sun,Folded down when our day's done,As thy flower that bids it beFlower of thy charity.'Tis not ours to boast or prayBreath from us shall outlive clay;'Tis not thine, thou Pitiful,Set me task beyond my rule.Yet as young men carve on treesLovely names, and find in theseSolace in the after time,So to have hid thee in my rhyme
Maurice Henry Hewlett
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XXIX
So were mine eyes inebriate with viewOf the vast multitude, whom various woundsDisfigur'd, that they long'd to stay and weep.But Virgil rous'd me: "What yet gazest on?Wherefore doth fasten yet thy sight belowAmong the maim'd and miserable shades?Thou hast not shewn in any chasm besideThis weakness. Know, if thou wouldst number themThat two and twenty miles the valley windsIts circuit, and already is the moonBeneath our feet: the time permitted nowIs short, and more not seen remains to see.""If thou," I straight replied, "hadst weigh'd the causeFor which I look'd, thou hadst perchance excus'dThe tarrying still." My leader part pursu'dHis way, the while I follow'd, answering him,And adding thus: "Within that cave I deem,Whereon ...
Dante Alighieri
The Old Men
Old and alone, sit we,Caged, riddle-rid men;Lost to Earth's "Listen!" and "See!"Thought's "Wherefore?" and "When?"Only far memories strayOf a past once lovely, but nowWasted and faded away,Like green leaves from the bough.Vast broods the silence of night,The ruinous moonLifts on our faces her light,Whence all dreaming is gone.We speak not; trembles each head;In their sockets our eyes are still;Desire as cold as the dead;Without wonder or will.And One, with a lanthorn, draws near,At clash with the moon in our eyes:"Where art thou?" he asks: "I am here,"One by one we arise.And none lifts a hand to withholdA friend from the touch of that foe:Heart cries unto heart, "Thou art old!"Ye...
Walter De La Mare
Lines On The Death Of Joseph Atkinson, Esq., Of Dublin.
If ever life was prosperously cast, If ever life was like the lengthened flowOf some sweet music, sweetness to the last, 'Twas his who, mourned by many, sleeps below.The sunny temper, bright where all is strife. The simple heart above all worldly wiles;Light wit that plays along the calm of life, And stirs its languid surface into smiles;Pure charity that comes not in a shower, Sudden and loud, oppressing what it feeds,But, like the dew, with gradual silent power, Felt in the bloom it leaves along the meads;The happy grateful spirit, that improves And brightens every gift by fortune given;That, wander where it will with those it loves, Makes every place a home, and home a heaven:All these were his...
Thomas Moore
On The Death Of Richard Doyle
A light of blameless laughter, fancy-bred,Soft-souled and glad and kind as love or sleep,Fades, and sweet mirths own eyes are fain to weepBecause her blithe and gentlest bird is dead.Weep, elves and fairies all, that never shedTear yet for mortal mourning: you that keepThe doors of dreams whence nought of ill may creep,Mourn once for one whose lips your honey fed.Let waters of the Golden River steepThe rose-roots whence his grave blooms rosy-redAnd murmuring of Hyblæan hives be deepAbout the summer silence of its bed,And nought less gracious than a violet peepBetween the grass grown greener round his head.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Babes In The Wood.
Come, list to my story,More sorry, by far,To her who must tell it,And you who will hear it,Than all others are!'Tis the darling of each, whoHas spirit so mildAs to grieve for the Human--The sad man or woman,Or desolate child!Of eyes, my dear children,Yours are not the first,Through whose teary lashes,In soft, pitying splashes,The warm drops have burstAt hearing it. Many,For hundreds of years,Have in the same fashionTheir heartfelt compassionShown thus--with their tears!A dying father in his armsTwo children did enfold.The eldest one, a little boy,Was only three years old;Even less than that had served to tintThe baby's head with gold.The mother, too,...
Clara Doty Bates
Macdonough's Song
"As easy as A B C" A Diversity of Creatures"Whether the State can loose and bindIn Heaven as well as on Earth:If it be wiser to kill mankindBefore or after the birthThese are matters of high concernWhere State-kept schoolmen are;But Holy State (we have lived to learn)Endeth in Holy War.Whether The People be led by The Lord,Or lured by the loudest throat:If it be quicker to die by the swordOr cheaper to die by voteThese are things we have dealt with once,(And they will not rise from their grave)For Holy People, however it runs,Endeth in wholly Slave.Whatsoever, for any cause,Seeketh to take or givePower above or beyond the Laws,Suffer it not to live!Holy State or Holy KingOr Holy People...
Rudyard
Dogtown
Far as the eye can see the land is grey,And desolation sits among the stonesLooking on ruin who, from rocks like bones,Stares with a dead face at the dying day.Mounds, where the barberry and bay hold sway,Show where homes rose once; where the village cronesGossiped, and man, with many sighs and groans,Laboured and loved and went its daily way.Only the crow now, like a hag returned,Croaks on the common that its hoarse voice mocks.Meseems that here the sorrow of the earthHas lost herself, and, with the past concerned,Sits with the ghosts of dreams that haunt these rocks,And old despairs to which man's soul gave birth.
Madison Julius Cawein
Earth's Answer
Earth raised up her headFrom the darkness dread and drear,Her light fled,Stony, dread,And her locks covered with grey despair."Prisoned on watery shore,Starry jealousy does keep my denCold and hoar;Weeping o'er,I hear the father of the ancient men."Selfish father of men!Cruel, jealous, selfish fear!Can delight,Chained in night,The virgins of youth and morning bear?"Does spring hide its joy,When buds and blossoms grow?Does the sowerSow by night,Or the plowman in darkness plough?"Break this heavy chain,That does freeze my bones around!Selfish, vain,Eternal bane,That free love with bondage bound."
William Blake
Heriot's Ford
"What's that that hirples at my side?"The foe that you must fight, my lord."That rides as fast as I can ride?"The shadow of your might, my lord."Then wheel my horse against the foe!"He's down and overpast, my lord.You war against the sunset-glow,The judgment follows fast, my lord!"Oh, who will stay the sun's descent?"King Joshua he is dead, my lord."I need an hour to repent!"'Tis what our sister said, my lord."Oh, do not slay me in my sins!"You're safe awhile with us, my lord."Nay, kill me ere my fear begins!"We would not serve you thus, my lord."Where is the doom that I must face? "Three little leagues away, my lord."Then mend the horses' laggard pace!"We need them for next day, my lord."Ne...
The Spirits Of Light And Darkness.
[VOICES SINGING.]FIRST CHORUS.Ere the birth of Death and of Time,Ere the birth of Hell and its torments,Ere the orbs of heat and of rimeAnd the winds to the heavens were as garments,Worm-like in the womb of Space,Worm-like from her monster womb,We sprung, a myriad raceOf thunder and tempest and gloom.SECOND CHORUS.As from the evil goodSprings like a fire,As bland beatitudeWells from the dire,So was the Chaos broodOf us the sire.FIRST CHORUS.We had lain for gaunt ages asleep'Neath her breast in a bulk of torpor,When down through the vasts of the deepClove a sound like the notes of a harper;Clove a sound, and the horrors grewTumultuous with turbulent n...
Upon A Child That Died
Here she lies, a pretty bud,Lately made of flesh and blood;Who as soon fell fast asleep,As her little eyes did peep.Give her strewings, but not stirThe earth, that lightly covers her.
Robert Herrick
George Rolleston
Dead art thou? No more dead than was the maid Over whose couch the saving God did stand-- "She is not dead but sleepeth," said, And took her by the hand! Thee knowledge never from Life's pathway wiled, But following still where life's great father led, He turned, and taking up his child, Raised thee too from the dead, O living, thou hast passed thy second birth, Found all things new, and some things lovely strange; But thou wilt not forget the earth, Or in thy loving change!
George MacDonald
Jacob
My sons, and ye the children of my sons,Jacob your father goes upon his way,His pilgrimage is being accomplished.Come near and hear him ere his words are oer.Not as my fathers or his fathers days,As Isaacs days or Abrahams, have been mine;Not as the days of those that in the fieldWalked at the eventide to meditate,And haply, to the tent returning, foundAngels at nightfall waiting at their door.They communed, Israel wrestled with the Lord.No, not as Abrahams or as Isaacs days,My sons, have been Jacob your fathers days,Evil and few, attaining not to theirsIn number, and in worth inferior much.As a man with his friend, walked they with God,In His abiding presence they abode,And all their acts were open to His face.But I have ha...
Arthur Hugh Clough
On The Dark Height Of Jura.
1.Ghosts of the dead! have I not heard your yellingRise on the night-rolling breath of the blast,When o'er the dark aether the tempest is swelling,And on eddying whirlwind the thunder-peal passed?2.For oft have I stood on the dark height of Jura,Which frowns on the valley that opens beneath;Oft have I braved the chill night-tempest's fury,Whilst around me, I thought, echoed murmurs of death.3.And now, whilst the winds of the mountain are howling,O father! thy voice seems to strike on mine ear;In air whilst the tide of the night-storm is rolling,It breaks on the pause of the elements' jar.4.On the wing of the whirlwind which roars o'er the mountainPerhaps rides the ghost of my sire who is dead:On the mist of the tem...
Percy Bysshe Shelley