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Panthea
Nay, let us walk from fire unto fire,From passionate pain to deadlier delight,I am too young to live without desire,Too young art thou to waste this summer nightAsking those idle questions which of oldMan sought of seer and oracle, and no reply was told.For, sweet, to feel is better than to know,And wisdom is a childless heritage,One pulse of passion youth's first fiery glow,Are worth the hoarded proverbs of the sage:Vex not thy soul with dead philosophy,Have we not lips to kiss with, hearts to love and eyes to see!Dost thou not hear the murmuring nightingale,Like water bubbling from a silver jar,So soft she sings the envious moon is pale,That high in heaven she is hung so farShe cannot hear that love-enraptured tune,Mark how ...
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
Follow Your Saint
Follow your saint, follow with accents sweet;Haste you, sad notes, fall at her flying feet.There, wrapp'd in cloud of sorrow, pity move,And tell the ravisher of my soul I perish for her love:But if she scorns my never-ceasing pain,Then burst with sighing in her sight and ne'er return again.All that I sung still to her praise did tend,Still she was first; still she my songs did end;Yet she my love and music both doth fly,The music that her echo is and beauty's sympathy.Then let my notes pursue her scornful flight:It shall suffice that they were breath'd and died for her delight.
Thomas Campion
Moonlight
It will not hurt me when I am old,A running tide where moonlight burnedWill not sting me like silver snakes;The years will make me sad and cold,It is the happy heart that breaks.The heart asks more than life can give,When that is learned, then all is learned;The waves break fold on jewelled fold,But beauty itself is fugitive,It will not hurt me when I am old.
Sara Teasdale
The Law Of Death.
The song of Kilvani: fairest sheIn all the land of Savatthi.She had one child, as sweet and gayAnd dear to her as the light of day.She was so young, and he so fair,The same bright eyes and the same dark hair;To see them by the blossomy way,They seemed two children at their play.There came a death-dart from the sky,Kilvani saw her darling die.The glimmering shade his eyes invades,Out of his cheek the red bloom fades;His warm heart feels the icy chill,The round limbs shudder, and are still.And yet Kilvani held him fastLong after life's last pulse was past,As if her kisses could restoreThe smile gone out for evermore.But when she saw her child was dead,She scattered ashes on her head,And seized the small corp...
John Hay
Past Days
I.Dead and gone, the days we had together,Shadow-stricken all the lights that shoneRound them, flown as flies the blown foam's feather,Dead and gone.Where we went, we twain, in time foregone,Forth by land and sea, and cared not whether,If I go again, I go alone.Bound am I with time as with a tether;Thee perchance death leads enfranchised on,Far from deathlike life and changeful weather,Dead and gone.II.Above the sea and sea-washed town we dwelt,We twain together, two brief summers, freeFrom heed of hours as light as clouds that meltAbove the sea.Free from all heed of aught at all were we,Save chance of change that clouds or sunbeams dealtAnd gleam of heaven to windward or to lee....
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Lamentin' An Repentin'.
Awst be better when spring comes, aw think,But aw feel varry sickly an waik,Awve noa relish for mait nor for drink,An awm ommost too weary to laik.What's to come on us all aw can't tell,For we havn't a shillin put by;Ther's nowt left to pop nor to sell,An aw cannot get trust if aw try.My wife has to turn aght to wark,An th' little uns all do a share;An they're tewin throo dayleet to dark,To keep me sittin here i' mi chair.It doesn't luk long sin that dayWhen Bessy wor stood bi mi side;An shoo promised to love an obey,An me to protect an provide.Shoo wor th' bonniest lass i' all th' taan,An fowk sed as they saw us that day,When we coom aght o' th' church, arm i' arm,Shoo wor throwin' hersen reight away.<...
John Hartley
Nowhere, Everywhere
Flesh and blood, bone and skin,Are the house that beauty lives in.Formed in darkness, grown in lightAre they the substance of delight.Who could have dreamed the things he seesIn these strong lovely presences--In cheeks of children, thews of men,Women's bodies beloved of men?Who could have dreamed a thing so wiseAs that clear look of the child's eyes?Who the thin texture of her handBut with a hand's touch understand?Shaped in eternity were theseBody's miracles, where the seasTheir continuous rhythm learned,And the stars in their bright order burned.From stars and seas was motion caughtWhen flesh, blood, bone and skin were wroughtInto swift lovely liveliness.Oh, but beauty less and lessThan beauty grows. The cheeks fall in...
John Frederick Freeman
Obermann
In front the awful Alpine trackCrawls up its rocky stair;The autumn storm-winds drive the rackClose oer it, in the air.Behind are the abandond bathsMute in their meadows lone;The leaves are on the valley paths;The mists are on the Rhone,The white mists rolling like a sea.I hear the torrents roar.Yes, Obermann, all speaks of thee!I feel thee near once more.I turn thy leaves: I feel their breathOnce more upon me roll;That air of languor, cold, and death,Which brooded oer thy soul.Fly hence, poor Wretch, whoeer thou art,Condemnd to cast about,All shipwreck in thy own weak heart,For comfort from without:A fever in these pages burnsBeneath the calm they feign;A wounded human spir...
Matthew Arnold
Dirge
What shall her silence keepUnder the sun?Here, where the willows weepAnd waters run;Here, where she lies asleep,And all is done.Lights, when the tree-top swings;Scents that are sown;Sounds of the wood-bird's wings;And the bee's drone:These be her comfortingsUnder the stone.What shall watch o'er her hereWhen day is fled?Here, when the night is nearAnd skies are red;Here, where she lieth dearAnd young and dead.Shadows, and winds that spillDew; and the tuneOf the wild whippoorwill;And the white moon;These be the watchers stillOver her stone.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Answer
A Rose, in tatters on the garden path,Cried out to God and murmured 'gainst His Wrath,Because a sudden wind at twilight's hushHad snapped her stem alone of all the bush.And God, Who hears both sun-dried dust and sun,Had pity, whispering to that luckless one,"Sister, in that thou sayest We did not well,What voices heardst thou when thy petals fell?"And the Rose answered, "In that evil hourA voice said, `Father, wherefore falls the flower?For lo, the very gossamers are still.'And a voice answered, `Son, by Allah's will!'"Then softly as a rain-mist on the sward,Came to the Rose the Answer of the Lord:"Sister, before We smote the Dark in twain,Ere yet the stars saw one another plain,Time, Tide, and Space, We bound unto the taskThat thou...
Rudyard
A Bronze Head
Here at right of the entrance this bronze head,Human, superhuman, a bird's round eye,Everything else withered and mummy-dead.What great tomb-haunter sweeps the distant sky(Something may linger there though all else die;)And finds there nothing to make its tetror lessi{Hysterica passio} of its own emptiness?No dark tomb-haunter once; her form all fullAs though with magnanimity of light,Yet a most gentle woman; who can tellWhich of her forms has shown her substance right?Or maybe substance can be composite,profound McTaggart thought so, and in a breathA mouthful held the extreme of life and death.But even at the starting-post, all sleek and new,I saw the wildness in her and I thoughtA vision of terror that it must live throughHa...
William Butler Yeats
Mazelli - Canto II.
I.He stood where the mountain moss outspread Its smoothness beneath his dusky foot;The chestnut boughs above his head, Hung motionless and mute.There came not a voice from the wooded hill, Nor a sound from the shadowy glen,Save the plaintive song of the whip-poor-will,[2] And the waterfall's dash, and now and then, The night-bird's mournful cry.Deep silence hung round him; the misty lightOf the young moon silvered the brow of Night, Whose quiet spirit had flung her spellO'er the valley's depth, and the mountain's height, And breathed on the air, till its gentle swellArose on the ear like some loved one's call;And the wide blue sky spread over all Its starry canopy.And he seemed as the spirit of ...
George W. Sands
The Time Of Truce
Two young lads from childhood upDrank together friendship's cup:Joe was glad with Bill at play,Bill was home to Joe alway.On their friendship came the blightOf a little thoughtless fight;Then, alas! each passing dayFarther bore these friends away.There was grief in either heart,Bleeding deep from sorrow's dart,When in thoughtfulness againEach beheld the other's pain.But the shades of night are furledWhen the morning takes the world,And the Christmas days of peaceMake our little quarrels cease.Bill and Joe on Christmas DayMet as in the olden way;Bill put out his hand to Joe,--It was Christmas Day, you know.Bill and Joe are friends again,And to them long years remain;Time may take ...
Michael Earls
Love, Hope, Desire, And Fear.
And many there were hurt by that strong boy,His name, they said, was Pleasure,And near him stood, glorious beyond measureFour Ladies who possess all emperyIn earth and air and sea,Nothing that lives from their award is free.Their names will I declare to thee,Love, Hope, Desire, and Fear,And they the regents areOf the four elements that frame the heart,And each diversely exercised her artBy force or circumstance or sleightTo prove her dreadful mightUpon that poor domain.Desire presented her [false] glass, and thenThe spirit dwelling thereWas spellbound to embrace what seemed so fairWithin that magic mirror,And dazed by that bright error,It would have scorned the [shafts] of the avengerAnd death, and penitence, and danger,...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Explorer
IDearest, when I left your side,I stood a moment, hesitating,And plunged. The boiling tideOf darkness took me, and down I wentSwift as a bird with folded wing,And upward sentThe bubbles of my vital breathThat shuddered from my secret deepsTo freedom and light;Then, dimly, on my sightOpened the still abode of living death.Amid the mire,In which invisibly sightless horror creeps,Sat, each intent on his own woe,The host that burns with inward fire,Crowded like monuments of memorial stoneBeneath a pitchy skyWhere even the flash of tempest dare not show,Yet each of them alone;And each was I.IIBreathless I struggled up,As if the gloom had arms to clutch at meAnd drag and hold,Unt...
John Le Gay Brereton
Love-Doubt.
Yearning upon the faint rose-curves that flitAbout her child-sweet mouth and innocent cheek,And in her eyes watching with eyes all meekThe light and shadow of laughter, I would sitMute, knowing our two souls might never knit;As if a pale proud lily-flower should seekThe love of some red rose, but could not speakOne word of her blithe tongue to tell of it.For oh, my Love was sunny-lipped and stirredWith all swift light and sound and gloom not longRetained; I, with dreams weighed, that ever heardSad burdens echoing through the loudest throngShe, the wild song of some May-merry bird;I, but the listening maker of a song.
Archibald Lampman
The Lost Leader
I.Just for a handful of silver he left us,Just for a riband to stick in his coatFound the one gift of which fortune bereft us,Lost all the others she lets us devote;They, with the gold to give, doled him out silver,So much was theirs who so little allowed:How all our copper had gone for his service!Rags were they purple, his heart had been proud!We that had loved him so, followed him, honoured him,Lived in his mild and magnificent eye,Learned his great language, caught his clear accents,Made him our pattern to live and to die!Shakespeare was of us, Milton was for us,Burns, Shelley, were with us, they watch from their graves!He alone breaks from the van and the free-men,He alone sinks to the rear and the slaves!II.W...
Robert Browning
Nocturne ["I Sit To-Night By The Firelight,"]
I sit to-night by the firelight,And I look at the glowing flame,And I see in the bright red flashesA Heart, a Face, and a Name.How often have I seen picturesFramed in the firelight's blaze,Of hearts, of names, and of faces,And scenes of remembered days!How often have I found poemsIn the crimson of the coals,And the swaying flames of the firelightUnrolled such golden scrolls.And my eyes, they were proud to read them,In letters of living flame,But to-night, in the fire, I see onlyOne Heart, one Face, and one Name.But where are the olden pictures?And where are the olden dreams?Has a change come over my vision?Or over the fire's bright gleams?Not over my vision, surely;My eyes -- they are ...
Abram Joseph Ryan