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Sonnet--My Heart Shall Be Thy Garden
My heart shall be thy garden. Come, my own, Into thy garden; thine be happy hours Among my fairest thoughts, my tallest flowers,From root to crowning petal, thine alone.Thine is the place from where the seeds are sown Up to the sky enclosed, with all its showers. But ah, the birds, the birds! Who shall build bowersTo keep these thine? O friend, the birds have flown.For as these come and go, and quit our pine To follow the sweet season, or, new-comers, Sing one song only from our alder-trees.My heart has thoughts, which, though thine eyes hold mine, Flit to the silent world and other summers, With wings that dip beyond the silver seas.
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
Sonnet LXIX.
Erano i capei d' oro all' aura sparsi.HE PAINTS THE BEAUTIES OF LAURA, PROTESTING HIS UNALTERABLE LOVE. Loose to the breeze her golden tresses flow'dWildly in thousand mazy ringlets blown,And from her eyes unconquer'd glances shone,Those glances now so sparingly bestow'd.And true or false, meseem'd some signs she show'dAs o'er her cheek soft pity's hue was thrown;I, whose whole breast with love's soft food was sown,What wonder if at once my bosom glow'd?Graceful she moved, with more than mortal mien,In form an angel: and her accents wonUpon the ear with more than human sound.A spirit heavenly pure, a living sun,Was what I saw; and if no more 'twere seen,T' unbend the bow will never heal the wound.ANON., OX., 17...
Francesco Petrarca
Song From Heine
I scanned her picture dreaming,Till each dear line and hueWas imaged, to my seeming,As if it lived anew.Her lips began to borrowTheir former wondrous smile;Her fair eyes, faint with sorrow,Grew sparkling as erstwhile.Such tears as often ran notRan then, my love, for thee;And O, believe I cannotThat thou are lost to me!
Thomas Hardy
A Memory Of The Players In A Mirror At Midnight
They mouth love's language. GnashThe thirteen teethYour lean jaws grin with. LashYour itch and quailing, nude greed of the flesh.Love's breath in you is stale, worded or sung,As sour as cat's breath,Harsh of tongue.This grey that staresLies not, stark skin and bone.Leave greasy lips their kissing. NoneWill choose her what you see to mouth upon.Dire hunger holds his hour.Pluck forth your heart, saltblood, a fruit of tears.Pluck and devour!
James Joyce
A Poet To His Beloved
I Bring you with reverent handsThe books of my numberless dreams,White woman that passion has wornAs the tide wears the dove-grey sands,And with heart more old than the hornThat is brimmed from the pale fire of time:White woman with numberless dreams,I bring you my passionate rhyme.
William Butler Yeats
Christmas Fancies
When Christmas bells are swinging above the fields of snow,We hear sweet voices ringing from lands of long ago, And etched on vacant places Are half-forgotten facesOf friends we used to cherish, and loves we used to know -When Christmas bells are swinging above the fields of snow.Uprising from the ocean of the present surging near,We see, with strange emotion, that is not free from fear, That continent Elysian Long vanished from our vision,Youth's lovely lost Atlantis, so mourned for and so dear,Uprising from the ocean of the present surging near.When gloomy, gray Decembers are roused to Christmas mirth,The dullest life remembers there once was joy on earth, And draws from youth's recesses Some memory it possesses,...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Clock's Song.
Eileen of four,Eileen of smiles;Eileen of five,Eileen of tears;Eileen of ten, of fifteen years,Eileen of youthAnd woman's wiles;Eileen of twenty,In love's land,Eileen all tenderIn her bliss,Untouched by sorrow's treacherous kiss,And the sly weapon in life's hand, -Eileen aroused to share all fate,Eileen a wife,Pale, beautiful,Eileen most graveAnd dutiful,Mourning her dreams in queenly state.Eileen! Eileen!....
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Marriage Song
ICome up, dear chosen morning, come,Blessing the air with light,And bid the sky repent of being dark:Let all the spaces round the world be white,And give the earth her green again.Into new hours of beautiful delight,Out of the shadow where she has lain,Bring the earth awake for glee,Shining with dews as fresh and clearAs my beloved's voice upon the air.For now, O morning chosen of all days, on theeA wondrous duty lies:There was an evening that did loveliness foretell;Thence upon thee, O chosen morn, it fellTo fashion into perfect destinyThe radiant prophecy.For in an evening of young moon, that wentFilling the moist air with a rosy fire,I and my beloved knew our love;And knew that thou, O morning, wouldst arise
Lascelles Abercrombie
The Purple Valleys
Far in the purple valleys of illusionI see her waiting, like the soul of music,With deep eyes, lovelier than cerulean pansies,Shadow and fire, yet merciless as poison;With red lips, sweeter than Arabian storax,Yet bitterer than myrrh.--O tears and kisses!O eyes and lips, that haunt my soul forever!Again Spring walks transcendent on the mountains:The woods are hushed: the vales are blue with shadows:Above the heights, steeped in a thousand splendors,Like some vast canvas of the gods, hangs burningThe sunset's wild sciography: and slowlyThe moon treads heaven's proscenium,--night's statelyWhite queen of love and tragedy and madness.Again I know forgotten dreams and longings;Ideals lost; desires dead and buriedBeside the altar sacrific...
Madison Julius Cawein
Sonnet. To A.M.D.
Methinks I see thee, lying calm and low, Silent and dark within thy earthy bed; Thy mighty hands, in which I trusted, dead,Resting, with thy long arms, from work or blow;And the night-robe, around thy tall form, flow Down from the kingly face, and from the head, Save by its thick dark curls, uncovered--My brother, dear from childhood, lying so!Not often since thou went'st, I think of thee, (With inward cares and questionings oppressed); And yet, ere long, I seek thee in thy rest,And bring thee home my heart, as full, as free,As sure that thou wilt take me tenderly, As then when youth and nature made us blest.
George MacDonald
A Question
A voice said, Look me in the starsAnd tell me truly, men of earth,If all the soul-and-body scarsWere not too much to pay for birth.
Robert Lee Frost
A Forest Idyl
I.Beneath an old beech-treeThey sat together,Fair as a flower was sheOf summer weather.They spoke of life and love,While, through the boughs above,The sunlight, like a dove,Dropped many a feather.II.And there the violet,The bluet near it,Made blurs of azure wetAs if some spirit,Or woodland dream, had goneSprinkling the earth with dawn,When only Fay and FaunCould see or hear it.III.She with her young, sweet faceAnd eyes gray-beaming,Made of that forest placeA spot for dreaming:A spot for OreadsTo smooth their nut-brown braids,For Dryads of the gladesTo dance in, gleaming.IV.So dim the place, so blest,One had not wonderedH...
She Gave Me A Rose
She gave a rose,And I kissed it and pressed it.I love her, she knows,And my action confessed it.She gave me a rose,And I kissed it and pressed it.Ah, how my heart glows,Could I ever have guessed it?It is fair to supposeThat I might have repressed it:She gave me a rose,And I kissed it and pressed it.'T was a rhyme in life's proseThat uplifted and blest it.Man's nature, who knowsUntil love comes to test it?She gave me a rose,And I kissed it and pressed it.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Love Perfumes All Parts.
If I kiss Anthea's breast,There I smell the ph[oe]nix nest:If her lip, the most sincereAltar of incense I smell there -Hands, and thighs, and legs are allRichly aromatical.Goddess Isis can't transferMusks and ambers more from her:Nor can Juno sweeter be,When she lies with Jove, than she.
Robert Herrick
REPLY: To A Friend In The City, From Her Friend In The Country. Which I Am Grateful For Permission To Insert.
Dear Madam,Many thanks for your missive so charming in verse,So kind and descriptive, so friendly and terse;It came opportune on a cold stormy day,And scattered ennui and "blue devils" away;For though in the city, where "all's on the go,"We often aver we feel only "so so,"And sigh for a change - then here comes a letter!What could I desire more welcome and better?But how to reply? I'm lost in dismay,I cannot in rhyme my feelings portray.The nine they discard me, I'm not of their train,They entreatingly beg, "I'll ne'er woo them again;"But I'll brave their displeasure, and e'en write to youA few lines of doggrel, then rhyming adieu.My errors do "wink at," for hosts you'll descry,And spare all rebuff, and the keen crit...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
Every Time I Kiss You
Every time I kiss youAfter a long separationI feelI am putting a hurried love letterIn a red mailbox.
Nizar Qabbani
Odes From Horace. - [1]To Mæcenas. Book The Second, Ode The Twelfth.
Mæcenas, I conjure thee cease To wake my harp's enamour'd stringsTo tones, that fright recumbent Peace, That Pleasure flies on rapid wings!Slow conquest on Numantia's plain, Or Hannibal, that dauntless stood,Tho' thrice he saw Ausonia's main Redden with Carthaginian blood;The Lapithæ's remorseless pride, Hylæus' wild inebriate hours;The Giants, who the Gods defied, And shook old Saturn's splendid towers;These, dear Mæcenas, thou should'st paint, Each glory of thy Cæsar's reign,In eloquence, that scorns restraint, And sweeter than the Poet's strain;Show captive Kings, who from the fight Drag at his wheels their galling chain,And the pale lip indignant bite With mutter...
Anna Seward
Longing
If you could sit with me beside the sea to-day,And whisper with me sweetest dreamings o'er and o'er;I think I should not find the clouds so dim and gray,And not so loud the waves complaining at the shore.If you could sit with me upon the shore to-day,And hold my hand in yours as in the days of old,I think I should not mind the chill baptismal spray,Nor find my hand and heart and all the world so cold.If you could walk with me upon the strand to-day,And tell me that my longing love had won your own,I think all my sad thoughts would then be put away,And I could give back laughter for the Ocean's moan!