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The Missionary. Canto Second.
Argument.The Second Day.Night, Spirit of the Andes, Valdivia, Lautaro, Missionary, TheHermitage.The night was still and clear, when, o'er the snows,Andes! thy melancholy Spirit rose,A shadow stern and sad: he stood alone,Upon the topmost mountain's burning cone;And whilst his eyes shone dim, through surging smoke,Thus to the spirits of the fire he spoke:Ye, who tread the hidden deeps,Where the silent earthquake sleeps;Ye, who track the sulphurous tide,Or on hissing vapours ride, Spirits, come!From worlds of subterraneous night;From fiery realms of lurid light;From the ore's unfathomed bed;From the lava's whirlpools red,Spirits, co...
William Lisle Bowles
Good-Bye
Sounds of the seas grow fainter, Sounds of the sands have sped;The sweep of gales,The far white sails, Are silent, spent and dead.Sounds of the days of summer Murmur and die away,And distance hidesThe long, low tides, As night shuts out the day.
Emily Pauline Johnson
After the Verdict
France, cloven in twain by fire of hell and hate,Shamed with the shame of men her meanest born,Soldier and judge whose names, inscribed for scorn,Stand vilest on the record writ of fate,Lies yet not wholly vile who stood so great,Sees yet not all her praise of old outworn.Not yet is all her scroll of glory torn,Or left for utter shame to desecrate.High souls and constant hearts of faithful menSustain her perfect praise with tongue and penIndomitable as honour. Storms may tossAnd soil her standard ere her bark win home:But shame falls full upon the Christless crossWhose brandmark signs the holy hounds of Rome.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Hope of My Heart
"Delicta juventutis et ignorantius ejus, quoesumus ne memineris, Domine." I left, to earth, a little maiden fair, With locks of gold, and eyes that shamed the light; I prayed that God might have her in His care And sight. Earth's love was false; her voice, a siren's song; (Sweet mother-earth was but a lying name) The path she showed was but the path of wrong And shame. "Cast her not out!" I cry. God's kind words come -- "Her future is with Me, as was her past; It shall be My good will to bring her home At last."
John McCrae
Cupid Slain
I come from a burial;Hush! let me be:I have put away my love,Fair exceedingly.Ah! the little gold curlsSoft about his face;Now my heart is sorrowfulFor his sleeping-place.But he would pursue me,Never let me rest;Till I turned and slew him,Knowing it were best.Laid his bow beside him,Shovelled in the clay;To-morrow Ill forget him;Let me weep to-day.
Dora Sigerson Shorter
The Woman
With her fair face she made my heaven,Beneath whose stars and moon and sunI worshiped, praying, having striven,For wealth through which she might be won.And yet she had no soul: A womanAs fair and cruel as a god;Who played with hearts as nothing human,And tossed them by and on them trod.She killed a soul; she did it nightly;Luring it forth from peace and prayer,To strangle it, and laughing lightly,Cast it into the gutter there.And yet, not for a purer visionWould I exchange; or ParadisePossess instead of Hell, my prison,Where burns the passion of her eyes.
Madison Julius Cawein
Astræa Victrix
England, elect of time,By freedom sealed sublime,And constant as the sun that saw thy dawnOutshine upon the seaHis own in heaven, to beA light that night nor day should see withdrawn,If song may speak not now thy praise,Fame writes it higher than song may soar or faith may gaze.Dark months of months beheldHope thwarted, crossed, and quelled,And heard the heartless hounds of hatred bayAloud against thee, gladAs now their souls are sadWho see their hope in hatred pass awayAnd wither into shame and fearAnd shudder down to darkness, loth to see or hear.Nought now they hear or seeThat speaks or shows not theeTriumphant; not as empires reared of yore,The imperial commonwealThat bears thy sovereign sealAnd signs thine ori...
Song.
Once as the aureole Day left the earth, Faded, a twilight soul, Memory, had birth:Young were her sister souls, Sorrow and Mirth. Dark mirrors are her eyes: Wherein who gaze See wan effulgencies Flicker and blaze -Lorn fleeting shadows of beautiful days. Scan those deep mirrors well After long years: Lo! what aforetime fell In rain of tears,In radiant glamour-mist now reappears. See old wild gladness Tamed now and coy; Grief that was madness Turned into joy.Fate cannot harr...
Thomas Runciman
The Glove
PETER RONSARD loquitur.Heigho! yawned one day King Francis,Distance all value enhances!When a mans busy, why, leisureStrikes him as wonderful pleasure,Faith, and at leisure once is he?Straightway he wants to be busy.Here weve got peace; and aghast ImCaught thinking war the true pastime!Is there a reason in metre?Give us your speech, master Peter!I who, if mortal dare say so,Neer am at loss with my Naso,Sire, I replied, joys prove cloudlets:Men are the merest Ixions,Here the King whistled aloud, Lets . . Heigho . . go look at our lions!Such are the sorrowful chancesIf you talk fine to King Francis.And so, to the courtyard proceeding,Our company, Francis was leading,...
Robert Browning
To Mary Shelley.
My dearest Mary, wherefore hast thou gone,And left me in this dreary world alone?Thy form is here indeed - a lovely one -But thou art fled, gone down the dreary road,That leads to Sorrow's most obscure abode;Thou sittest on the hearth of pale despair,WhereFor thine own sake I cannot follow thee.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Sonnet CXXXV.
Amor mi manda quel dolce pensero.LIFE WILL FAIL HIM BEFORE HOPE. Love to my mind recalling that sweet thought,The ancient confidant our lives between,Well comforts me, and says I ne'er have beenSo near as now to what I hoped and sought.I, who at times with dangerous falsehood fraught,At times with partial truth, his words have seen,Live in suspense, still missing the just mean,'Twixt yea and nay a constant battle fought.Meanwhile the years pass on: and I beholdIn my true glass the adverse time draw nearHer promise and my hope which limits here.So let it be: alone I grow not old;Changes not e'en with age my loving troth;My fear is this--the short life left us both.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Three Souls
Three Souls there were that reached the Heavenly Gate,And gained permission of the Guard to wait.Barred from the bliss of Paradise by sin,They did not ask or hope to enter in.'We loved one woman (thus their story ran);We lost her, for she chose another man.So great our love, it brought us to this door;We only ask to see her face once more.Then will we go to realms where we belong,And pay our penalty for doing wrong.''And wert thou friends on earth?' (The Guard spake thus.)'Nay, we were foes; but Death made friends of us.The dominating thought within each SoulBrought us together, comrades, to this goal,To see her face, and in its radiance baskFor one great moment - that is all we ask.And, having seen her, we must journey backThe p...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Time's Defeat
Time has made conquest of so many thingsThat once were mine. Swift-footed, eager youthThat ran to meet the years; bold brigand health,That broke all laws of reason unafraid,And laughed at talk of punishment.Close ties of blood and friendship, joy of life,Which reads its music in the major keyAnd will not listen to a minor strain -These things and many more are spoils of time.Yet as a conqueror who only stormsThe outposts of a town, and finds the fortToo strong to be assailed, so time retreatsAnd knows his impotence. He cannot takeMy three great jewels from the crown of life:Love, sympathy, and faith; and year on yearHe sees them grow in lustre and in worth,And glowers by me, plucking at his beard,And dragging, as h...
The Weary Wedding
O daughter, why do ye laugh and weep,One with another?For woe to wake and for will to sleep,Mother, my mother.But weep ye winna the day ye wed,One with another.For tears are dry when the springs are dead,Mother, my mother.Too long have your tears run down like rain,One with another.For a long love lost and a sweet love slain,Mother, my mother.Too long have your tears dripped down like dew,One with another.For a knight that my sire and my brethren slew,Mother, my mother.Let past things perish and dead griefs lie,One with another.O fain would I weep not, and fain would I die,Mother, my mother.Fair gifts we give ye, to laugh and live,One with another.But sair and strange are the gifts I give,Mother, my mot...
Sonnet.
Oh weary, weary world! how full thou art Of sin, of sorrow, and all evil things!In thy fierce turmoil, where shall the sad heart, Released from pain, fold its unrested wings?Peace hath no dwelling here, but evermoreLoud discord, strife, and envy, fill the earthWith fearful riot, whilst unhallowed mirthShrieks frantic laughter forth, leading along,Whirling in dizzy trance the eager throng,Who bear aloft the overflowing cup,With tears, forbidden joys, and blood filled up,Quaffing long draughts of death; in lawless might,Drunk with soft harmonies, and dazzling light,So rush they down to the eternal night.
Frances Anne Kemble
One Life
Oh, I am hurt to death, my Love;The shafts of Fate have pierced my striving heart,And I am sick and weary ofThe endless pain and smart.My soul is weary of the strife,And chafes at life, and chafes at life.Time mocks me with fair promises;A blooming future grows a barren past,Like rain my fair full-blossomed treesUnburden in the blast.The harvest fails on grain and tree,Nor comes to me, nor comes to me.The stream that bears my hopes abreastTurns ever from my way its pregnant tide.My laden boat, torn from its rest,Drifts to the other side.So all my hopes are set astray,And drift away, and drift away.The lark sings to me at the morn,And near me wings her skyward-soaring flight;But pleasure dies as soon as ...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Fragments Of Ancient Poetry, Fragment XII
RYNO, ALPIN.RYNOThe wind and the rain are over:calm is the noon of day. Theclouds are divided in heaven. Overthe green hills flies the inconstant sun.Red through the stony vale comesdown the stream of the hill. Sweet arethy murmurs, O stream! but moresweet is the voice I hear. It is the voiceof Alpin the son of the song, mourningfor the dead. Bent is his head of age,and red his tearful eye. Alpin, thouson of the song, why alone on the silenthill? why complainest thou, as ablast in the wood; as a wave on thelonely shore?ALPIN.My tears, O Ryno! are for the dead;my voice, for the inhabitants of thegrave. Tall thou art on the hill; fairamong the sons of the plain. But thoushalt fall like M...
James Macpherson
Aedh Wishes His Beloved Were Dead
Were you but lying cold and dead,And lights were paling out of the West,You would come hither, and bend your head,And I would lay my head on your breast;And you would murmur tender words,Forgiving me, because you were dead:Nor would you rise and hasten away,Though you have the will of the wild birds,But know your hair was bound and woundAbout the stars and moon and sun:O would beloved that you layUnder the dock-leaves in the ground,While lights were paling one by one.
William Butler Yeats