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Faded Leaves
ITHE RIVERStill glides the stream, slow drops the boatUnder the rustling poplars shade;Silent the swans beside us floatNone speaks, none heeds, ah, turn thy head.Let those arch eyes now softly shine,That mocking mouth grow sweetly bland:Ah, let them rest, those eyes, on mine;On mine let rest that lovely hand.My pent-up tears oppress my brain,My heart is swoln with love unsaid:Ah, let me weep, and tell my pain,And on thy shoulder rest my head.Before I die, before the soul,Which now is mine, must re-attainImmunity from my control,And wander round the world again:Before this teasd oerlabourd heartFor ever leaves its vain employ,Dead to its deep habitual smart,And dead to hopes o...
Matthew Arnold
From Life Without Freedom.
From life without freedom, say, who would not fly?For one day of freedom, oh! who would not die?Hark!--hark! 'tis the trumpet! the call of the brave,The death-song of tyrants, the dirge of the slave.Our country lies bleeding--haste, haste to her aid;One arm that defends is worth hosts that invade.In death's kindly bosom our last hope remains--The dead fear no tyrants, the grave has no chains.On, on to the combat! the heroes that bleedFor virtue and mankind are heroes indeed.And oh, even if Freedom from this world be driven,Despair not--at least we shall find her in heaven.
Thomas Moore
The Rose And The Grave.
("La tombe dit à la rose.")[XXXI., June 3, 1837]The Grave said to the rose"What of the dews of dawn,Love's flower, what end is theirs?""And what of spirits flown,The souls whereon doth closeThe tomb's mouth unawares?"The Rose said to the Grave.The Rose said: "In the shadeFrom the dawn's tears is madeA perfume faint and strange,Amber and honey sweet.""And all the spirits fleetDo suffer a sky-change,More strangely than the dew,To God's own angels new,"The Grave said to the Rose.A. LANG.
Victor-Marie Hugo
Charles Sumner
Garlands upon his grave, And flowers upon his hearse,And to the tender heart and brave The tribute of this verse. His was the troubled life, The conflict and the pain,The grief, the bitterness of strife, The honor without stain. Like Winkelried, he took Into his manly breastThe sheaf of hostile spears, and broke A path for the oppressed. Then from the fatal field Upon a nation's heartBorne like a warrior on his shield!-- So should the brave depart. Death takes us by surprise, And stays our hurrying feet;The great design unfinished lies, Our lives are incomplete. But in the dark unknown Perfect their circles seem,Even as a bridge...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Last Words.
"Dear Charlie," breathed a soldier,"O comrade true and tried,Who in the heat of battlePressed closely to my side;I feel that I am stricken,My life is ebbing fast;I fain would have you with me,Dear Charlie, till the last."It seems so sudden, Charlie,To think to-morrow's sunWill look upon me lifeless,And I not twenty-one!I little dreamed this morning,Twould bring my last campaign;God's ways are not as our ways,And I will not complain."There's one at home, dear Charlie,Will mourn for me when dead,Whose heart--it is a mother's--Can scarce be comforted.You'll write and tell her, Charlie,With my dear love, that IFought bravely as a soldier should,And died as he should die."And you will...
Horatio Alger, Jr.
To - .
1.I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden,Thou needest not fear mine;My spirit is too deeply ladenEver to burthen thine.2.I fear thy mien, thy tones, thy motion,Thou needest not fear mine;Innocent is the heart's devotionWith which I worship thine.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Haunted Room.
Its casements' diamond disks of glassStare myriad on a terrace old,Where urns, unkempt with ragged grass,Foam o'er with frothy cold.The snow rounds o'er each stair of stone;The frozen fount is hooped with pearl;Down desolate walks, like phantoms lone,Thin, powd'ry snow-wreaths whirl.And to each rose-tree's stem that bendsWith silver snow-combs, glued with frost,It seems each summer rosebud sendsIts airy, scentless ghost.The stiff Elizabethan pileChatters with cold thro' all its panes,And rumbling down each chimney fileThe mad wind shakes his reins.* * * * * * *Lone in the Northern angle, dimWith immemorial dust, it lay,Where each gaunt casement's stony rimStared lidless to the day.
Madison Julius Cawein
Mrs. Effingham's Swan Song.
I am growing old: I have kept youth too long, But I dare not let them know it now. I have done the heart of youth a grievous wrong, Danced it to dust and drugged it with the rose, Forced its reluctant lips to one more vow. I have denied the lawful grey, So kind, so wise, to settle in my hair; I belong no more to April, but September has not taught me her repose. I wish I had let myself grow old in the quiet way That is so gracious.... I wish I did not care. My faded mouth will never flower again, Under the paint the wrinkles fret my eyes, My hair is dull beneath its henna stain, I have come to the last ramparts of disguise. And now the day draws on of my defeat. I shall not meet The swift, ...
Muriel Stuart
Friar Yves
Said Friar Yves: "God will blessSaint Louis' other-worldliness.Whatever the fate be, still I fareTo fight for the Holy Sepulcher.If I survive, I shall returnWith precious things from Palestine -Gold for my purse, spices and wine,Glory to wear among my kin.Fame as a warrior I shall win.But, otherwise, if I am slainIn Jesus' cause, my soul shall earnImmortal life washed white from sin."Said Friar Yves: "Come what will -Riches and glory, death and woe -At dawn to Palestine I go.Whether I live or die, I gainTo fly the tepid good and illOf daily living in Champagne,Where those who reach salvation loseThe treasures, raptures of the earth,Captured, possessed, and made to serveThe gospel love of Jesus' birth,Sa...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Sonnets LXXI - No longer mourn for me when I am dead
No longer mourn for me when I am deadThan you shall hear the surly sullen bellGive warning to the world that I am fledFrom this vile world with vilest worms to dwell:Nay, if you read this line, remember notThe hand that writ it, for I love you so,That I in your sweet thoughts would be forgot,If thinking on me then should make you woe.O! if, I say you look upon this verse,When I perhaps compounded am with clay,Do not so much as my poor name rehearse;But let your love even with my life decay;Lest the wise world should look into your moan,And mock you with me after I am gone.
William Shakespeare
Dirge For A Soldier
In the east the morning comes,Hear the rollin' of the drumsOn the hill.But the heart that beat as they beatIn the battle's raging day heatLieth still.Unto him the night has come,Though they roll the morning drum.What is in the bugle's blast?It is: "Victory at last!Now for rest."But, my comrades, come behold him,Where our colors now enfold him,And his breastBares no more to meet the blade,But lies covered in the shade.What a stir there is to-day!They are laying him awayWhere he fell.There the flag goes draped before him;Now they pile the grave sod o'er himWith a knell.And he answers to his nameIn the higher ranks of fame.There's a woman left to mournFor the child that she ha...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Buccaneers.
Oh, not for us the easy mirthOf men that never roam!The crackling of the narrow hearth,The cabined joys of home!Keep your tame, regulated glee,O pale protected State!Our dwelling-place is on the sea,Our joy the joy of Fate!No long caresses give us ease,No lazy languors warm,We seize our mates as the sea-gulls seize,And leave them to the storm.But in the bridal halls of gloomThe couch is stern and strait;For us the marriage rite of Doom,The nuptial joy of Fate.Wine for the weaklings of the town,Their lucky toasts to drain!Our skoal for them whose star goes down,Our drink the drink of men!No Bacchic ivy for our brows!Like vikings, we awaitThe grim, ungarlanded carouseWe keep to-night with Fate...
Bliss Carman
An Old English Oak
Silence is the voice of mighty things.In silence dropped the acorn in the rain;In silence slept till sun-touched. Wondrous lifePeeped from the mold and oped its eyes on morn.Up-grew in silence through a thousand yearsThe Titan-armed, gnarl-jointed, rugged oak,Rock-rooted. Through his beard and shaggy locksSoft breezes sung and tempests roared: the rainA thousand summers trickled down his beard;A thousand winters whitened on his head;Yet spake he not. He, from his coigne of hills,Beheld the rise and fall of empire, sawThe pageantry and perjury of kings,The feudal barons and the slavish churls,The peace of peasants; heard the merry songOf mowers singing to the swing of scythes,The solemn-voiced, low-wailing funeral dirgeWinding slow-paced w...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Daniel Wheeler
O Dearly loved!And worthy of our love! No moreThy aged form shall rise beforeThe bushed and waiting worshiper,In meek obedience utterance givingTo words of truth, so fresh and living,That, even to the inward sense,They bore unquestioned evidenceOf an anointed Messenger!Or, bowing down thy silver hairIn reverent awfulness of prayer,The world, its time and sense, shut outThe brightness of Faith's holy tranceGathered upon thy countenance,As if each lingering cloud of doubt,The cold, dark shadows resting hereIn Time's unluminous atmosphere,Were lifted by an angel's hand,And through them on thy spiritual eyeShone down the blessedness on high,The glory of the Better Land!The oak has fallen!While, meet for no ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Her Last Letter
Sitting alone by the window, Watching the moonlit street,Bending my head to listen To the well-known sound of your feet,I have been wondering, darling, How I can bear the pain,When I watch, with sighs and tear-wet eyes, And wait for your coming in vain.For I know that a day approaches When your heart will tire of me;When by door and gate I may watch and wait For a form I shall not see;When the love that is now my heaven, The kisses that make my life,You will bestow on another, And that other will be - your wife.You will grow weary of sinning (Though you do not call it so),You will long for a love that is purer Than the love that we two know.God knows I have loved you dearly,
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Requiescat.
The roses mourn for her who sleepsWithin the tomb;For her each lily-flower weepsDew and perfume.In each neglected flower-bedEach blossom droops its lovely head,They miss her touch, they miss her tread,Her face of bloom,Of happy bloom.The very breezes grieve for her,A lonely grief;For her each tree is sorrower,Each blade and leaf.The foliage rocks itself and sighs,And to its woe the wind replies,They miss her girlish laugh and cries,Whose life was brief,Was very brief.The sunlight, too, seems pale with care,Or sick with woe;The memory haunts it of her hair,Its golden glow.No more within the bramble-brakeThe sleepy bloom is kissed awakeThe sun is sad for her dear sake,<...
The Dream Of Roderick
Below, the tawny Tagus sweptPast royal gardens, breathing balm;Upon his couch the monarch slept;The world was still; the night was calm.Gray, Gothic-gated, in the rayOf moonrise, tower-and castle-crowned,The city of Toledo layBeneath the terraced palace-ground.Again, he dreamed, in kingly sportHe sought the tree-sequestered path,And watched the ladies of his CourtWithin the marble-basined bath.Its porphyry stairs and fountained baseShone, houried with voluptuous forms,Where Andalusia vied in graceWith old Castile, in female charms.And laughter, song, and water-splashRang round the place, with stone arcaded,As here a breast or limb would flashWhere beauty swam or beauty waded.And then, like V...
On Dante's Monument, 1818.
(THEN UNFINISHED.) Though all the nations now Peace gathers under her white wings, The minds of Italy will ne'er be free From the restraints of their old lethargy, Till our ill-fated land cling fast Unto the glorious memories of the Past. Oh, lay it to thy heart, my Italy, Fit honor to thy dead to pay; For, ah, their like walk not thy streets to-day! Nor is there one whom thou canst reverence! Turn, turn, my country, and behold That noble band of heroes old, And weep, and on thyself thy anger vent, For without anger, grief is impotent: Oh, turn, and rouse thyself for shame, Blush at the thought of sires so great, Of children so degenerate! Alien in mien, in geni...
Giacomo Leopardi