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To His Saviour. The New-Year's Gift.
That little pretty bleeding partOf foreskin send to me:And I'll return a bleeding heartFor New-Year's gift to Thee.Rich is the gem that Thou did'st send,Mine's faulty too and small;But yet this gift Thou wilt commendBecause I send Thee all.
Robert Herrick
To Isadore
IBeneath the vine-clad eaves,Whose shadows fall beforeThy lowly cottage door,Under the lilac's tremulous leaves,Within thy snowy clasped handThe purple flowers it bore.Last eve in dreams, I saw thee stand,Like queenly nymph from Fairy-land,Enchantress of the flowery wand,Most beauteous Isadore!IIAnd when I bade the dreamUpon thy spirit flee,Thy violet eyes to meUpturned, did overflowing seemWith the deep, untold delightOf Love's serenity;Thy classic brow, like lilies whiteAnd pale as the Imperial NightUpon her throne, with stars bedight,Enthralled my soul to thee!IIIAh! ever I beholdThy dreamy, passionate eyes,Blue as the languid skiesHung with...
Edgar Allan Poe
Lines Written Upon A Watch-String, Made And Presented To The Author By Miss ---- .
Say, lovely Charlotte! will you let me proveWhat diff'rent thoughts thy taste and beauty move?This woven chain, which graceful skill displays,Leads me to think of time, and heave a sigh;But when on thee and on thy charms I gaze,Time unremember'd moves, or seems to die.
John Carr
Christening
To-day I saw a little, calm-eyed child, -Where soft lights rippled and the shadows tarriedWithin a church's shelter arched and aisled, -Peacefully wondering, to the altar carried;White-robed and sweet, in semblance of a flower;White as the daisies that adorned the chancel;Borne like a gift, the young wife's natural dower,Offered to God as her most precious hansel.Then ceased the music, and the little oneWas silent, with the multitude assembledHearkening; and when of Father and of SonHe spoke, the pastor's deep voice broke and trembled.But she, the child, knew not the solemn words,And suddenly yielded to a troublous wailing,As helpless as the cry of frightened birdsWhose untried wings for flight are unavailing.How much th...
George Parsons Lathrop
I Have Never Loved You Yet
I have never loved you yet, if now I love.If Love was born in that bright April skyAnd ran unheeding when the sun was high,And slept as the moon sleeps through Autumn nightsWhile those dear steady stars burn in their heights:If Love so lived and ran and slept and wokeAnd ran in beauty when each morning broke,Love yet was boylike, fervid and unstable,Teased with romance, not knowing truth from fable.But Winter after Autumn comes and stillsThe petulant waters and the wild mind fillsWith silence; and the dark and cold are bitter,O, bitter to remember past days sweeter.Then Spring with one warm cloudy finger breaksThe frost and the heart's airless black soil shakes;Love grown a man uprises, serious, brightWith mind rememberi...
John Frederick Freeman
To Mrs. Bl----.
WRITTEN IN HER ALBUM.They say that Love had once a book (The urchin likes to copy you),Where, all who came, the pencil took, And wrote, like us, a line or two.'Twas Innocence, the maid divine, Who kept this volume bright and fair.And saw that no unhallowed line Or thought profane should enter there;And daily did the pages fill With fond device and loving lore,And every leaf she turned was still More bright than that she turned before.Beneath the touch of Hope, how soft, How light the magic pencil ran!Till Fear would come, alas, as oft, And trembling close what Hope began.A tear or two had dropt from Grief, And Jealousy would, now and then,Ruffle in haste some snow-...
Thomas Moore
Promise
In countless upward-striving wavesThe moon-drawn tide-wave strives;In thousand far-transplanted graftsThe parent fruit survives;So, in the new-born millions,The perfect Adam lives.Not less are summer mornings dearTo every child they wake,And each with novel life his sphereFills for his proper sake.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Looking Back.
I've been sitting reviewing the past, dear wife,From the time when a toddling child, -Through my boyish days with their joys and strife, -Through my youth with its passions wild.Through my manhood, with all its triumph and fret,To the present so tranquil and free;And the years of the past that I most regret,Are the years that I passed without thee.It was best we should meet as we did, dear wife, -It was best we had trouble to face;For it bound us more closely together through life,And it nerved us for running the race.We are nearing the end where the goal is set,And we fear not our destiny,And the only years that I now regret,Are the years that I passed without thee.'Twas thy beauty attracted my eye, dear wife,But thy goodness...
John Hartley
Margaretta.
When I was in my teens,I loved dear Margaretta:I know not what it means,I can not now forget her!That vision of the pastMy head is ever crazing;Yet, when I saw her last,I could not speak for gazing!Oh, lingering bud of May!Dear as when first I met her;Worn in my heart always,Life-cherished Margaretta!We parted near the stile,As morn was faintly breaking:For many a weary mileOh how my heart was aching!But distance, time, and change,Have lost me Margaretta;And yet 'tis sadly strangeThat I can not forget her!O queen of rural maids--My dark-eyed Magaretta--The heart the mind upbraidsThat struggles to forget her!My love, I know, will seemA wayward, boyish folly;But, ah! it was a...
George Pope Morris
Comparisons
Child, when they say that othersHave been or are like you,Babes fit to be your brothers,Sweet human drops of dew,Bright fruit of mortal mothers,What should one say or do?We know the thought is treason,We feel the dream absurd;A claim rebuked of reason,That withers at a word:For never shone the seasonThat bore so blithe a bird.Some smiles may seem as merry,Some glances gleam as wise,From lips as like a cherryAnd scarce less gracious eyes;Eyes browner than a berry,Lips red as mornings rise.But never yet rang laughterSo sweet in gladdened earsThrough wall and floor and rafterAs all this household hearsAnd rings response thereafterTill cloudiest weather clears.When those your ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Aristarchus (The Name Of The Mountain In The Moon)
It was long and long ago our love began; It is something all unmeasured by time's span:In an era and a spot, by the Modern World forgot, We were lovers, ere God named us, Maid and Man. Like the memory of music made by streams, All the beauty of that other love life seems;But I always thought it so, and at last I know, I know, We were lovers in the Land of Silver Dreams. When the moon was at the full, I found the place; Out and out, across the seas of shining space,On a quest that could not fail, I unfurled my memory's sail And cast anchor in the Bay of Love's First Grace. At the foot of Aristarchus lies this bay, (Oh! the wonder of that mountain far away!)And the Land of Silver Dreams all about it shines ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To Avis Keene
On receiving a basket of sea-mosses.Thanks for thy giftOf ocean flowers,Born where the golden driftOf the slant sunshine fallsDown the green, tremulous wallsOf water, to the cool, still coral bowers,Where, under rainbows of perpetual showers,God's gardens of the deepHis patient angels keep;Gladdening the dim, strange solitudeWith fairest forms and hues, and thusForever teaching usThe lesson which the many-colored skies,The flowers, and leaves, and painted butterflies,The deer's branched antlers, the gay bird that flingsThe tropic sunshine from its golden wings,The brightness of the human countenance,Its play of smiles, the magic of a glance,Forevermore repeat,In varied tones and sweet,That beauty...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Last of May
To the Children of Mary of the Cathedral of MobileIn the mystical dim of the temple,In the dream-haunted dim of the day,The sunlight spoke soft to the shadows,And said: "With my gold and your gray,Let us meet at the shrine of the Virgin,And ere her fair feast pass away,Let us weave there a mantle of glory,To deck the last evening of May."The tapers were lit on the altar,With garlands of lilies between;And the steps leading up to the statueFlashed bright with the roses' red sheen;The sun-gleams came down from the heavensLike angels, to hallow the scene,And they seemed to kneel down with the shadowsThat crept to the shrine of the Queen.The singers, their hearts in their voices,Had chanted the anthems of o...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Nocturne
Night of Mid-June, in heavy vapours dying,Like priestly hands thy holy touch is lyingUpon the world's wide brow;God-like and grand all nature is commandingThe "peace that passes human understanding";I, also, feel it now.What matters it to-night, if one life treasureI covet, is not mine! Am I to measureThe gifts of Heaven's decreeBy my desires? O! life for ever longingFor some far gift, where many gifts are thronging,God wills, it may not be.Am I to learn that longing, lifted higher,Perhaps will catch the gleam of sacred fireThat shows my cross is gold?That underneath this cross - however lowly,A jewel rests, white, beautiful and holy,Whose worth can not be told.Like to a scene I watched one day in wonder: -A ...
Emily Pauline Johnson
Madonna With Two Angels
Under the sky without a stainThe long, ripe, rippling of the grain;Light, broadcast from the golden oatsOver the blackberry fences floats.Madonna sits in a cedar chairTranquillized by the warm, still air;One of the angels asleep on her kneeUnder the shade of an apple tree.The other angel holds a doll,Covered warm in a tiny shawl;The toy is supposed to be fast asleepAs the sister angel: in dimples deepThe grave, sweet charm on the baby faceRepeats the look of maturer graceThat hovers about Madonna's eyes,One of the heavenly mysteriesFrom far ethereal latitudesWhere neither doubt nor trouble intrudes.Ponder here in the orchard nestOn the truth of life made manifest:The struggle and effort was all to proveThat the bes...
Duncan Campbell Scott
A Little Picture.
Oft when pacing thro' the long and dimDark gallery of the Past, I pause beforeA picture of which this is a copy -Wretched at best.How fair she look'd, standing a-tiptoe there,Pois'd daintily upon her little feet!The slanting sunset falling thro' the leavesIn golden glory on her smiling face,Upturn'd towards the blushing roses; whileThe breeze that came up from the river's brink,Shook all their clusters over her fair face;And sported with her robe, until methought,That she stood there clad wondrously indeed!In perfume and in music: for her dressMade a low, rippling sound, like little wavesThat break at midnight on the tawny sands -While all the evening air of roses whisper'd.Over her face a rich, warm blush spread slowly,And sh...
James Barron Hope
Unto Us A Son Is Given
Given, not lent, And not withdrawn--once sent--This Infant of mankind, this One,Is still the little welcome Son. New every year, New-born and newly dear,He comes with tidings and a song,The ages long, the ages long. Even as the cold Keen winter grows not old;As childhood is so fresh, foreseen,And spring in the familiar green; Sudden as sweet Come the expected feet.All joy is young, and new all art,And He, too, Whom we have by heart.
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
To My Cousin, Anne Bodham, On Receiving From Her A Network Purse Made By Herself.
My gentle Anne, whom heretofore,When I was young, and thou no moreThan plaything for a nurse,I danced and fondled on my knee,A kitten both in size and glee,I thank thee for my purse.Gold pays the worth of all things here;But not of love;that gems too dearFor richest rogues to win it;I, therefore, as a proof of love,Esteem thy present far aboveThe best things kept within it.
William Cowper