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Experience
The lords of life, the lords of life,--I saw them passIn their own guise,Like and unlike,Portly and grim,--Use and Surprise,Surface and Dream,Succession swift and spectral Wrong,Temperament without a tongue,And the inventor of the gameOmnipresent without name;--Some to see, some to be guessed,They marched from east to west:Little man, least of all,Among the legs of his guardians tall,Walked about with puzzled look.Him by the hand dear Nature took,Dearest Nature, strong and kind,Whispered, 'Darling, never mind!To-morrow they will wear another face,The founder thou; these are thy race!'
Ralph Waldo Emerson
magic
I love a still conservatoryThat's full of giant, breathless palms,Azaleas, clematis and vines,Whose quietness great Trees becalmsFilling the air with foliage,A curved and dreamy statuary.I like to hear a cold, pure rillOf water trickling low, afarWith sudden little jerks and purlsInto a tank or stoneware jar,The song of a tiny sleeping birdHeld like a shadow in its trill.I love the mossy quietnessThat grows upon the great stone flags,The dark tree-ferns, the staghorn ferns,The prehistoric, antlered stagsThat carven stand and stare amongThe silent, ferny wilderness.And are they birds or souls that flitAmong the trees so silently,And are they fish or ghosts that hauntThe still pools of the rockery! ...
W.J. Turner
The Kitten And Falling Leaves
That way look, my Infant, lo!What a pretty baby-show!See the kitten on the wall,Sporting with the leaves that fall,Withered leaves, one, two, and threeFrom the lofty elder-tree!Through the calm and frosty airOf this morning bright and fair,Eddying round and round they sinkSoftly, slowly: one might think,From the motions that are made,Every little leaf conveyedSylph or Faery hither tending,To this lower world descending,Each invisible and mute,In his wavering parachute.But the Kitten, how she starts,Crouches, stretches, paws, and darts!First at one, and then its fellowJust as light and just as yellow;There are many now, now oneNow they stop and there are noneWhat intenseness of desireIn her upward eye of...
William Wordsworth
Nursery Rhyme. DXXV. Natural History.
Hickety, pickety, my black hen, She lays eggs for gentlemen; Gentlemen come every day To see what my black hen doth lay.
Unknown
The Real
The leaf is faded, and decayed the flower,The birds have ceased to sing in wayside bower,The babbling brook is silenced by the cold,And hill and vale the frost and snow enfold.The life we see seems hasting to the tombNor sun, nor star, relieves the dismal gloom;The good man suffers with the base and vile,And honesty and truth give place to guile.Things are not always as they seem to be;The outer surface only man may see.The summer sleeps beneath the quilt of snow,Behind the clouds is hid the solar glow,The babbling brook will burst its icy bands,And birds will sing, and trees will clap their hands.The fallen leaf has left a bud behind,And flowers will bloom of brightest hue and kind;For when we look beneath the outward crustWi...
Joseph Horatio Chant
The Passing Strange
Out of the earth to rest or rangePerpetual in perpetual change,The unknown passing through the strange.Water and saltness held togetherTo tread the dust and stand the weather,And plough the field and stretch the tether,To pass the wine-cup and be witty,Water the sands and build the city,Slaughter like devils and have pity,Be red with rage and pale with lust,Make beauty come, make peace, make trust,Water and saltness mixed with dust;Drive over earth, swim under sea,Fly in the eagles secrecy,Guess where the hidden comets be;Know all the deathy seeds that stillQueen Helens beauty, Caesars will,And slay them even as they kill;Fashion an altar for a rood,Defile a continent with blood,And...
John Masefield
Native Moments
Native moments! when you come upon me - Ah you are here now!Give me now libidinous joys only!Give me the drench of my passions!Give me life coarse and rank! To-day,I go consort with nature's darlings - to-night too;I am for those who believe in loose delights - I share the midnight orgies of young men;I dance with the dancers, and drink with the drinkers;The echoes ring with our indecent calls;I take for my love some prostitute - I pick out some low person for my dearest friend,He shall be lawless, rude, illiterate - he shall be one condemn'd by others for deeds done;I will play a part no longer - Why should I exile myself from my companions?O you shunn'd persons! I at least do not shun you, I come forthwith in your midst - I will be your poet,I will be more to you th...
Walt Whitman
Summer-Evening, A
Come, my dear Love, and let us climb yon hill,The prospect, from its height, will well rewardThe toil of climbing; thence we shall commandThe various beauties of the landscape round.Now we have reached the top. O! what a sceneOpens upon the sight, and swallows upThe admiring soul! She feels as if from earthUplifted into heaven. Scarce can she yetCollect herself, and exercise her powers.While o'er heaven's lofty, wide-extended arch,And round the vast horizon, the bold eyeShoots forth her view, with what sublime delightThe bosom swells! See, where the God of day,Who through the cloudless ether long has ridOn his bright, fiery car, amidst a blazeOf dazzling glory, and in wrath shot roundHis burning arrows, with tyrannic powerOppressing Natur...
Thomas Oldham
Fragments On Nature And Life - Life
A train of gay and clouded daysDappled with joy and grief and praise,Beauty to fire us, saints to save,Escort us to a little grave.No fate, save by the victim's fault, is low,For God hath writ all dooms magnificent,So guilt not traverses his tender will.Around the man who seeks a noble end,Not angels but divinities attend.From high to higher forcesThe scale of power uprears,The heroes on their horses,The gods upon their spheres.This shining moment is an edificeWhich the Omnipotent cannot rebuild.Roomy EternityCasts her schemes rarely,And an aeon allowsFor each quality and partOf the multitudinousAnd many-chambered heart....
Upon Seeing A Coloured Drawing Of The Bird Of Paradise In An Album
Who rashly strove thy Image to portray?Thou buoyant minion of the tropic air;How could he think of the live creature gayWith a divinity of colours, drestIn all her brightness, from the dancing crestFar as the last gleam of the filmy trainExtended and extending to sustainThe motions that it graces and forbearTo drop his pencil! Flowers of every climeDepicted on these pages smile at time;And gorgeous insects copied with nice careAre here, and likenesses of many a shellTossed ashore by restless waves,Or in the diver's grasp fetched up from cavesWhere sea-nymphs might be proud to dwell:But whose rash hand (again I ask) could dare,'Mid casual tokens and promiscuous shows,To circumscribe this Shape in fixed repose;Could imitate for indole...
Art.
Artist, fashion! talk not long!Be a breath thine only song!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
October, 1803
One might believe that natural miseriesHad blasted France, and made of it a landUnfit for men; and that in one great bandHer sons were bursting forth, to dwell at ease.But 'tis a chosen soil, where sun and breezeShed gentle favours: rural works are there,And ordinary business without care;Spot rich in all things that can soothe and please!How piteous then that there should be such dearthOf knowledge; that whole myriads should uniteTo work against themselves such fell despite:Should come in phrensy and in drunken mirth,Impatient to put out the only lightOf Liberty that yet remains on earth!
A Pleasant Grove
Unto a pleasant grove or such like place,Where here the curious cutting of a hedge:There, by a pond, the trimming of the sedge:Here the fine setting of well-shading trees:The walks there mounting up by small degrees,The gravel and the green so equal lie,It, with the rest, draws on your ling'ring eye:Here the sweet smells that do perfume the air,Arising from the infinite repairOf odoriferous buds and herbs of price,(As if it were another Paradise)So please the smelling sense, that you are fainWhere last you walk'd to turn and walk again.There the small birds with their harmonious notesSing to a spring that smileth as she floats:For in her face a many dimples show,And often skips as it did dancing go:Here further down an over-arched alley,<...
William Browne
To An Infant Daughter.
Sweet gem of infant fairy-flowers!Thy smiles on life' unclosing hours,Like sunbeams lost in summer showers,They wake my fears;When reason knows its sweets and sours,They'll change to tears.God help thee, little senseless thing!Thou, daisy-like of early spring,Of ambush'd winter's hornet stingHast yet to tell;Thou know'st not what to-morrows bring:I wish thee well.But thou art come, and soon or late'Tis thine to meet the frowns of fate,The harpy grin of envy's hate,And mermaid-smilesOf worldly folly's luring bait,That youth beguiles.And much I wish, whate'er may beThe lot, my child, that falls to thee,Nature may never let thee seeHer glass betimes,But keep thee from my failings free,--N...
John Clare
June On The Merrimac
O dwellers in the stately towns,What come ye out to see?This common earth, this common sky,This water flowing free?As gayly as these kalmia flowersYour door-yard blossoms spring;As sweetly as these wild-wood birdsYour caged minstrels sing.You find but common bloom and green,The rippling river's rune,The beauty which is everywhereBeneath the skies of June;The Hawkswood oaks, the storm-torn plumesOf old pine-forest kings,Beneath whose century-woven shadeDeer Island's mistress sings.And here are pictured Artichoke,And Curson's bowery mill;And Pleasant Valley smiles betweenThe river and the hill.You know full well these banks of bloom,The upland's wavy line,And how the sunshine tips ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Antinomies On A Railway Station
As I stand waiting in the rain For the foggy hoot of the London train, Gazing at silent wall and lamp And post and rail and platform damp, What is this power that comes to my sight That I see a night without the night, That I see them clear, yet look them through, The silvery things and the darkly blue, That the solid wall seems soft as death, A wavering and unanchored wraith, And rails that shine and stones that stream Unsubstantial as a dream? What sudden door has opened so, What hand has passed, that I should know This moving vision not a trance That melts the globe of circumstance, This sight that marks not least or most And makes a stone a passing ghost? Is it that a yea...
John Collings Squire, Sir
A Prayer For My Daughter
Once more the storm is howling, and half hidUnder this cradle-hood and coverlidMy child sleeps on. There is no obstacleBut Gregory's wood and one bare hillWhereby the haystack- and roof-levelling wind.Bred on the Atlantic, can be stayed;And for an hour I have walked and prayedBecause of the great gloom that is in my mind.I have walked and prayed for this young child an hourAnd heard the sea-wind scream upon the tower,And-under the arches of the bridge, and screamIn the elms above the flooded stream;Imagining in excited reverieThat the future years had come,Dancing to a frenzied drum,Out of the murderous innocence of the sea.May she be granted beauty and yet notBeauty to make a stranger's eye distraught,Or hers before a looking-glass...
William Butler Yeats
Premature Spring.
Days full of rapture,Are ye renew'd ?Smile in the sunlightMountain and wood?Streams richer ladenFlow through the dale,Are these the meadows?Is this the vale?Coolness cerulean!Heaven and height!Fish crowd the ocean,Golden and bright.Birds of gay plumageSport in the grove,Heavenly numbersSinging above.Under the verdure'sVigorous bloom,Bees, softly bumming,Juices consume.Gentle disturbanceQuivers in air,Sleep-causing fragrance,Motion so fair.Soon with more powerRises the breeze,Then in a momentDies in the trees.But to the bosomComes it again...