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The Road That Has No End
Hast ever tramped along the roadThat has no end?The far brown winding road, your oneFast friendA tattered weather-beaten swag,A silent mateTo sendHis dumb warm comfort to the heart,A fount where dreams ascend.Theres wondrous freedom on the roadThat has no end;A mans heart glows, his spirit leapsTo blendIts joy of life with fierce winds gustUpon his face:To lendIts cry to Natures tumult, fullAnd shrill, as twilight shades descend.The flowers bloom along the roadThat has no endCool breezes blow, the gum trees swayAnd bend;The wild doves woo, and softly cooTheir soothing notes,And mendHearts throbbing pain to sweet content,And peace lights on the minds sad trend
Joseph Burrows
Moonlight Reveries.
The moon from solemn azure sky Looked down on earth below,And coldly her wan light fell alike On scenes of joy and woe:A stately palace reared its dome, Within reigned warmth and lightAnd festive mirth - the moon's faint rays Soft kissed its marble white.A little farther was the home Of toil, alas! and want,That spectre grim that countless hearths Seems ceaselessly to haunt;And yet, as if in mocking mirth, She smiled on that drear spot,Silvering brightly the ruined eaves And roof of that poor cot.And then, with curious gaze, she looked Within a curtained loom,Where sat a girl of gentle mien In young life's early bloom;Her glitt'ring light made still more bright The veil ...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Jewls
If I should see your eyes again,I know how far their look would goBack to a morning in the parkWith sapphire shadows on the snow.Or back to oak trees in the springWhen you unloosed my hair and kissedThe head that lay against your kneesIn the leaf shadow's amethyst.And still another shining placeWe would remember, how the dunWild mountain held us on its crestOne diamond morning white with sun.But I will turn my eyes from youAs women turn to put awayThe jewels they have worn at nightAnd cannot wear in sober day.
Sara Teasdale
Autumn
I dwell alone - I dwell alone, alone, Whilst full my river flows down to the sea,Gilded with flashing boats That bring no friend to me:O love-songs, gurgling from a hundred throats, O love-pangs, let me be.Fair fall the freighted boats which gold and stone And spices bear to sea:Slim, gleaming maidens swell their mellow notes, Love-promising, entreating - Ah! sweet, but fleeting - Beneath the shivering, snow-white sails. Hush! the wind flags and fails -Hush! they will lie becalmed in sight of strand - Sight of my strand, where I do dwell alone;Their songs wake singing echoes in my land - They cannot hear me moan. One latest, solitary swallow flies Across the sea, rough autumn-tempest t...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Through Dim Eyes
Is it the world, or my eyes, that are sadder?I see not the grace that I used to seeIn the meadow-brook whose song was so glad, orIn the boughs of the willow tree.The brook runs slower - its song seems lowerAnd not the song that it sang of old;And the tree I admired looks weary and tiredOf the changeless story of heat and cold.When the sun goes up, and the stars go under,In that supreme hour of the breaking day,Is it my eyes, or the dawn, I wonder,That finds less of the gold, and more of the grayI see not the splendour, the tints so tender,The rose-hued glory I used to see;And I often borrow a vague half-sorrowThat another morning has dawned for me.When the royal smile of that welcome comerBeams on the meadow and burns in the s...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Wherefore?
Deep languor overcometh mind and frame:A listless, drowsy, utter weariness,A trance wherein no thought finds speech or name,The overstrained spirit doth possess.She sinks with drooping wing - poor unfledged bird,That fain had flown! - in fluttering breathlessness.To what end those high hopes that wildly stirredThe beating heart with aspirations vain?Why proffer prayers unanswered and unheardTo blank, deaf heavens that will not heed her pain?Where lead these lofty, soaring tendencies,That leap and fly and poise, to fall again,Yet seem to link her with the utmost skies?What mean these clinging loves that bind to earth,And claim her with beseeching, wistful eyes?This little resting-place 'twixt...
Emma Lazarus
Delilah.
In the midnight of darkness and terror, When I would grope nearer to God, With my back to a record of error And the highway of sin I have trod, There come to me shapes I would banish - The shapes of the deeds I have done; And I pray and I plead till they vanish - All vanish and leave me, save one. That one with a smile like the splendor Of the sun in the middle-day skies - That one with a spell that is tender - That one with a dream in her eyes - Cometh close, in her rare Southern beauty, Her languor, her indolent grace; And my soul turns its back on its duty, To live in the light of her face. She touches my cheek, and I quiver - I tremb...
To ----
1.When I hear you express an affection so warm,Ne'er think, my belov'd, that I do not believe,For your lip, would the soul of suspicion disarm,And your eye beams a ray, which can never deceive.2.Yet still, this fond bosom regrets whilst adoring,That love like the leaf, must fall into the sear,That age will come on, when remembrance deploring,Contemplates the scenes of her youth, with a tear.3.That the time must arrive, when no longer retainingTheir auburn, these locks must wave thin to the breeze.When a few silver hairs of those tresses remaining,Prove nature a prey to decay, and disease.4.'Tis this, my belov'd, which spreads gloom o'er my featuresTho' I ne'er shall presume to arraign the decree;<...
George Gordon Byron
Another
This little vault, this narrow room,Of Love and Beauty is the tomb;The dawning beam, that 'gan to clearOur clouded sky, lies darken'd here,For ever set to us: by DeathSent to enflame the World Beneath.'Twas but a bud, yet did containMore sweetness than shall spring again;A budding Star, that might have grownInto a Sun when it had blown.This hopeful Beauty did createNew life in Love's declining state;But now his empire ends, and weFrom fire and wounding darts are free;His brand, his bow, let no man fear:The flames, the arrows, all lie here.
Thomas Carew
The Old Whim Horse
He's an old grey horse, with his head bowed sadly,And with dim old eyes and a queer roll aft,With the off-fore sprung and the hind screwed badlyAnd he bears all over the brands of graft;And he lifts his head from the grass to wonderWhy by night and day now the whim is still,Why the silence is, and the stampers' thunderSounds forth no more from the shattered mill.In that whim he worked when the night winds bellowedOn the riven summit of Giant's Hand,And by day when prodigal Spring had yellowedAll the wide, long sweep of enchanted land;And he knew his shift, and the whistle's warning,And he knew the calls of the boys below;Through the years, unbidden, at night or morning,He had taken his stand by the old whim bow.But the whim stands s...
Edward
August Moonrise
The sun was gone, and the moon was comingOver the blue Connecticut hills;The west was rosy, the east was flushed,And over my head the swallows rushedThis way and that, with changeful wills.I heard them twitter and watched them dartNow together and now apartLike dark petals blown from a tree;The maples stamped against the westWere black and stately and full of rest,And the hazy orange moon grew upAnd slowly changed to yellow goldWhile the hills were darkened, fold on foldTo a deeper blue than a flower could hold.Down the hill I went, and thenI forgot the ways of men,For night-scents, heady, and damp and coolWakened ecstasy in meOn the brink of a shining pool.O Beauty, out of many a cupYou have made...
A Reminiscence
The rose to the wind has yielded: all its leavesLie strewn on the graveyard grass, and all their lightAnd colour and fragrance leave our sense and sightBereft as a man whom bitter time bereavesOf blossom at once and hope of garnered sheaves,Of April at once and August. Day to nightCalls wailing, and life to death, and depth to height,And soul upon soul of man that hears and grieves.Who knows, though he see the snow-cold blossom shed,If haply the heart that burned within the rose,The spirit in sense, the life of life be dead?If haply the wind that slays with storming snowsBe one with the wind that quickens? Bow thine head,O Sorrow, and commune with thine heart: who knows?
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Martyr
Not only on cross and gibbet,By sword, and fire, and flood,Have perished the worlds sad martyrsWhose names are writ in blood.A woman lay in a hovel,Mean, dismal, gasping for breath;One friend alone was beside her,The name of him was, Death.For the sake of her orphan children,For money to buy them food,She had slaved in the dismal hovelAnd wasted her womanhood.Winter and Spring and SummerCame each with a load of cares;And Autumn to her brought onlyA harvest of gray hairs.Far out in the blessèd country,Beyond the smoky town,The winds of God were blowingEvermore up and down;The trees were waving signalsOf joy from the bush beyond;The gum its blue-green banner,The fern its dar...
Victor James Daley
Old Stone Chimney
The rising moon on the peaks was blendingHer silver light with the sunset glow,When a swagman came as the day was endingAlong a path that he seemed to know.But all the fences were gone or going,The hand of ruin was everywhere;The creek unchecked in its course was flowing,For none of the old clay dam was there.Here Time had been with his swiftest changes,And husbandry had westward flown;The cattle tracks in the rugged rangesWere long ago with the scrub oergrown.It must have needed long years to softenThe road, that as hard as rock had been;The mountain path he had trod so oftenLay hidden now with a carpet green.He thought at times from the mountain coursesHe heard the sound of a bullock bell,The distant gallop of stockme...
Henry Lawson
The Wind Witch
The wind that met her in the park,Came hurrying to my sideIt ran to me, it leapt to me,And nowhere would abide.It whispered in my ear a word,So sweet a word, I swear,It smelt of honey and the kissIt'd stolen from her hair.Then shouted me the flowery wayWhereon she walked with dreams,And bade me wait and watch her passAmong the glooms and gleams.It ran to meet her as she cameAnd clasped her to its breast;It kissed her throat, her chin, her mouth,And laughed its merriest.Then to my side it leapt again,And took me by surprise:The kiss it'd stolen from her lipsIt blew into my eyes.Since then, it seems, I have grown blindTo every face but hers:It haunts me sleeping or awake,And ...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Messenger
She rose up in the early dawn, And white and silently she movedAbout the house. Four men had gone To battle for the land they loved,And she, the mother and the wife,Waited for tidings from the strife.How still the house seemed! and her treadWas like the footsteps of the dead.The long day passed, the dark night came; She had not seen a human face.Some voice spoke suddenly her name. How loud it echoed in that placeWhere, day by day, no sound was heardBut her own footsteps! "Bring you word,"She cried to whom she could not see,"Word from the battle-plain to me?"A soldier entered at the door, And stood within the dim firelight:"I bring you tidings of the four," He said, "who left you for the figh...
A Last Confession
What lively lad most pleasured meOf all that with me lay?I answer that I gave my soulAnd loved in misery,But had great pleasure with a ladThat I loved bodily.Flinging from his arms I laughedTo think his passion suchHe fancied that I gave a soulDid but our bodies touch,And laughed upon his breast to thinkBeast gave beast as much.I gave what other women gaveThat stepped out of their clothes.But when this soul, its body off,Naked to naked goes,He it has found shall find thereinWhat none other knows,And give his own and take his ownAnd rule in his own right;And though it loved in miseryClose and cling so tight,Theres not a bird of day that dareExtinguish that delight.
William Butler Yeats
Launa Dee.
Weary, oh, so wearyWith it all!Sunny days or dreary--How they pall!Why should we be heroes,Launa Dee,Striving to no winning?Let the world be Zero's!As in the beginningLet it be!What good comes of toiling,When all's done?Frail green sprays for spoilingOf the sun;Laurel leaf or myrtle,Love or fame--Ah, what odds what spray, sweet?Time, that makes life fertile,Makes its blooms decay, sweet,As they came.Lie here with me dreaming,Cheek to cheek,Lithe limbs twined and gleaming,Brown and sleek;Like two serpents coilingIn their lair.Where's the good of wreathingSprays for Time's despoiling?Let me feel your breathingIn my hair.You and I together--...
Bliss Carman