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Tamerlane
Kind solace in a dying hour!Such, father, is not (now) my themeI will not madly deem that powerOf Earth may shrive me of the sinUnearthly pride hath revelled inI have no time to dote or dream:You call it hope that fire of fire!It is but agony of desire:If I can hope O God! I canIts fount is holier more divineI would not call thee fool, old man,But such is not a gift of thine.Know thou the secret of a spiritBowed from its wild pride into shameO yearning heart! I did inheritThy withering portion with the fame,The searing glory which hath shoneAmid the Jewels of my throne,Halo of Hell! and with a painNot Hell shall make me fear againO craving heart, for the lost flowersAnd sunshine of my summer hours!The u...
Edgar Allan Poe
What The Wind Said
'I muse to-day, in a listless way, In the gleam of a summer land;I close my eyes as a lover may At the touch of his sweetheart's hand,And I hear these things in the whisperings Of the zephyrs round me fanned': -I am the Wind, and I rule mankind, And I hold a sovereign reignOver the lands, as God designed, And the waters they contain:Lo! the bound of the wide world round Falleth in my domain!I was born on a stormy morn In a kingdom walled with snow,Whose crystal cities laugh to scorn The proudest the world can show;And the daylight's glare is frozen there In the breath of the blasts that blow.Life to me was a jubilee From the first of my youthful days:Clinking my icy toys wi...
James Whitcomb Riley
The Three Strangers
Far are those tranquil hills,Dyed with fair evening's rose;On urgent, secret errand bent,A traveller goes.Approach him strangers three,Barefooted, cowled; their eyesScan the lone, hastening solitaryWith dumb surmise.One instant in close speechWith them he doth confer:God-sped, he hasteneth on,That anxious traveller ...I was that man - in a dream:And each world's night in vainI patient wait on sleep to unveilThose vivid hills again.Would that they three could knowHow yet burns on in meLove - from one lost in Paradise -For their grave courtesy.
Walter De La Mare
In Spring And Summer Winds May Blow
In spring and summer winds may blow,And rains fall after, hard and fast;The tender leaves, if beaten low,Shine but the more for shower and blastBut when their fated hour arrives,When reapers long have left the field,When maidens rifle turn'd-up hives,And their last juice fresh apples yield,A leaf perhaps may still remainUpon some solitary tree,Spite of the wind and of the rain . . .A thing you heed not if you see.At last it falls. Who cares? Not one:And yet no power on earth can everReplace the fallen leaf uponIts spray, so easy to dissever.If such be love, I dare not say.Friendship is such, too well I know:I have enjoyed my summer day;'Tis past; my leaf now lies below.
Walter Savage Landor
For All The Grief
For all the grief I have given with wordsMay now a few clear flowers blow,In the dust, and the heat, and the silence of birds, Where the lonely go.For the thing unsaid that heart asked of meBe a dark, cool water calling - callingTo the footsore, benighted, solitary, When the shadows are falling.O, be beauty for all my blindness,A moon in the air where the weary wend,And dews burdened with loving-kindness In the dark of the end.
The Logger
In the moonless, misty night, with my little pipe alight, I am sitting by the camp-fire's fading cheer; Oh, the dew is falling chill on the dim, deer-haunted hill, And the breakers in the bay are moaning drear. The toilful hours are sped, the boys are long abed, And I alone a weary vigil keep; In the sightless, sullen sky I can hear the night-hawk cry, And the frogs in frenzied chorus from the creek. And somehow the embers' glow brings me back the long ago, The days of merry laughter and light song; When I sped the hours away with the gayest of the gay In the giddy whirl of fashion's festal throng. Oh, I ran a grilling race and I little recked the pace, For the lust of youth ran riot in my blood; But at l...
Robert William Service
Robert Gould Shaw
Why was it that the thunder voice of FateShould call thee, studious, from the classic groves,Where calm-eyed Pallas with still footstep roves,And charge thee seek the turmoil of the state?What bade thee hear the voice and rise elate,Leave home and kindred and thy spicy loaves,To lead th' unlettered and despised drovesTo manhood's home and thunder at the gate?Far better the slow blaze of Learning's light,The cool and quiet of her dearer fane,Than this hot terror of a hopeless fight,This cold endurance of the final pain,--Since thou and those who with thee died for rightHave died, the Present teaches, but in vain!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Old Farm
Dormered and verandaed, cool,Locust-girdled, on the hill;Stained with weather-wear, and dull-Streak'd with lichens; every sillThresholding the beautiful;I can see it standing there,Brown above the woodland deep,Wrapped in lights of lavender,By the warm wind rocked asleep,Violet shadows everywhere.I remember how the Spring,Liberal-lapped, bewildered itsAcred orchards, murmuring,Kissed to blossom; budded bitsWhere the wood-thrush came to sing.Barefoot Spring, at first who trod,Like a beggermaid, adownThe wet woodland; where the god,With the bright sun for a crownAnd the firmament for rod,Met her; clothed her; wedded her;Her Cophetua: when, lo!All the hill, one breathing blur,Burst ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Oh Thou Of Little Faith!
Sad-hearted, be at peace: the snowdrop lies Buried in sepulchre of ghastly snow; But spring is floating up the southern skies, And darkling the pale snowdrop waits below. Let me persuade: in dull December's day We scarce believe there is a month of June; But up the stairs of April and of May The hot sun climbeth to the summer's noon. Yet hear me: I love God, and half I rest. O better! God loves thee, so all rest thou. He is our summer, our dim-visioned Best;-- And in his heart thy prayer is resting now.
George MacDonald
The Poet, The Oyster, And Sensitive Plant.
An Oyster, cast upon the shore,Was heard, though never heard before,Complaining in a speech well worded,And worthy thus to be recorded:Ah, hapless wretch! condemnd to dwellFor ever in my native shell;Ordaind to move when others please,Not for my own content or ease;But tossd and buffeted about,Now in the water and now out.Twere better to be born a stone,Of ruder shape, and feeling none,Than with a tenderness like mine,And sensibilities so fine!I envy that unfeeling shrub,Fast rooted against every rub.The plant he meant grew not far off,And felt the sneer with scorn enough:Was hurt, disgusted, mortified,And with asperity replied(When, cry the botanists, and stare,Did plants calld sensitive grow there?No ...
William Cowper
Children Of Light
Our fathers wrung their bread from stocks and stonesAnd fenced their gardens with the Redmen's bones;Embarking from the Nether Land of Holland,Pilgrims unhouseled by Geneva's night,They planted here the Serpent's seeds of light;And here the pivoting searchlights probe to shockThe riotous glass houses built on rock,And candles gutter by an empty altar,And light is where the landless blood of CainIs burning, burning the unburied grain.
Robert Lowell
The Old Home
They've torn the old house down, that stood,Like some kind mother, in this place,Hugged by its orchard and its wood,Two sturdy children, strong of race.This formal place makes no appeal.I miss the old time happinessAnd peace, which often here did healThe cares of life, the heart's distress.The shrubs, which snowed their blossoms onThe walks, wide-stretching from the doorsLike friendly arms, are dead and gone,And over all a grand house soars.Within its front no welcome lies,But pride's aloofness; wealth, that staresFrom windows, cold as haughty eyes,The arrogance of new-made heirs.Its very flowers breathe of cast;And even the Springtide seems estranged,In that stiff garden, caught, held fast,All her wild...
To Charlotte Cushman.
Look where a three-point star shall weave his beamInto the slumb'rous tissue of some stream,Till his bright self o'er his bright copy seemFulfillment dropping on a come-true dream;So in this night of art thy soul doth showHer excellent double in the steadfast flowOf wishing love that through men's hearts doth go:At once thou shin'st above and shin'st below.E'en when thou strivest there within Art's sky(Each star must o'er a strenuous orbit fly),Full calm thine image in our love doth lie,A Motion glassed in a Tranquillity.So triple-rayed, thou mov'st, yet stay'st, serene -Art's artist, Love's dear woman, Fame's good queen!Baltimore, 1875.
Sidney Lanier
Burns.
We read his life of poverty and bane,From weakness, folly, error, not exempt,And turn aside with a depressing pain -Compassion tinged with something like contempt.We read his work, and see his human heart,His manly mind, his true, if thwarted, will,And all that's noblest in us takes his part,And shames our former verdict, will or nill.His was a fiery spirit that unboundMen's fetters, sometimes leading him astray;He was a seed that fell into the groundAnd brought forth fruit; he cast himself awayLike bread upon the waters, and was foundTo nourish worth in many an after day.
W. M. MacKeracher
Statio Sexta
Ha! snowUpon the crags!How slowThe winter lagsHa, little lamb upon the crags,How fearlessly you go!Take careUp there,You little woolly atom! On and onHe goes . . . tis steep . . . Hillo!My friend is gone,Friend orthodoxo-logical,He could not argue with a waterfall!And here it is, my Aber . . . Stay!Ill crossThis way:The mossUpon these stones is dripping with the spray,And now one turn, left hand,And I shall standBefore the very rock: not yet . . . not yet!O let me think ! No, no ! I dont forget(Forget!) but this is sacred . . . peace, then, peace!ReleaseFrom all dead things, that serve not to presentAt my souls grate the lovely innocent.He had heard some idle talkOf how his f...
Thomas Edward Brown
The Little Coat
Here's his ragged "roundabout";Turn the pockets inside out:See; his pen-knife, lost to use,Rusted shut with apple-juice;Here, with marbles, top and string,Is his deadly "devil-sling,"With its rubber, limp at lastAs the sparrows of the past!Beeswax - buckles - leather straps -Bullets, and a box of caps, -Not a thing of all, I guess,But betrays some waywardness -E'en these tickets, blue and red,For the Bible-verses said -Such as this his mem'ry kept - "Jesus wept."Here's a fishing hook-and-line,Tangled up with wire and twine,And dead angle-worms, and someSlugs of lead and chewing-gum,Blent with scents that can but comeFrom the oil of rhodium.Here - a soiled, yet dainty note,That s...
Cheerfulness Taught By Reason
I think we are too ready with complaintIn this fair world of God's. Had we no hopeIndeed beyond the zenith and the slopeOf yon gray blank of sky, we might grow faintTo muse upon eternity's constraintRound our aspirant souls; but since the scopeMust widen early, is it well to droop, For a few days consumed in loss and taint?O pusillanimous Heart, be comforted And, like a cheerful traveller, take the roadSinging beside the hedge. What if the breadBe bitter in thine inn, and thou unshodTo meet the flints? At least it may be said'Because the way is short, I thank thee, God.'
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Song.
Though here fair blooms the rose and the woodbine waves on high,And oak and elm and bracken frond enrich the rolling lea,And winds as if from Arcady breathe joy as they go by,Yet I yearn and I pine for my North Countrie.I leave the drowsing south and in dreams I northward fly,And walk the stretching moors that fringe the ever-calling sea;And am gladdened as the gales that are so bitter-sweet go by,While grey clouds sweetly darken o'er my North Countrie.For there's music in the storms, and there's colour in the shades,And there's joy e'en in the sorrow widely brooding o'er the sea;And larger thoughts have birth among the moors and lowly gladesAnd reedy mounds and sands of my North Countrie.
Thomas Runciman