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Wasted Love
What shall be done for sorrowWith love whose race is run?Where help is none to borrow,What shall be done?In vain his hands have spunThe web, or drawn the furrow:No rest their toil hath won.His task is all gone thorough,And fruit thereof is none:And who dare say to-morrowWhat shall be done?
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Fount Of Tears
All hot and grimy from the road,Dust gray from arduous years,I sat me down and eased my loadBeside the Fount of Tears.The waters sparkled to my eye,Calm, crystal-like, and cool,And breathing there a restful sigh,I bent me to the pool.When, lo! a voice cried: "Pilgrim, rise,Harsh tho' the sentence be,And on to other lands and skies--This fount is not for thee."Pass on, but calm thy needless fears,Some may not love or sin,An angel guards the Fount of Tears;All may not bathe therein."Then with my burden on my backI turned to gaze awhile,First at the uninviting track,Then at the water's smile.And so I go upon my way,Thro'out the sultry years,But pause no more, by night, by day,...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Sonnet XXVIII.
Solo e pensoso i più deserti campi.HE SEEKS SOLITUDE, BUT LOVE FOLLOWS HIM EVERYWHERE. Alone, and lost in thought, the desert gladeMeasuring I roam with ling'ring steps and slow;And still a watchful glance around me throw,Anxious to shun the print of human tread:No other means I find, no surer aidFrom the world's prying eye to hide my woe:So well my wild disorder'd gestures show,And love lorn looks, the fire within me bred,That well I deem each mountain, wood and plain,And river knows, what I from man conceal,What dreary hues my life's fond prospects dim.Yet whate'er wild or savage paths I've ta'en,Where'er I wander, love attends me still,Soft whisp'ring to my soul, and I to him.ANON., OX., 1795.
Francesco Petrarca
The Revisitation
As I lay awake at night-timeIn an ancient country barrack known to ancient cannoneers,And recalled the hopes that heralded each seeming brave and bright timeOf my primal purple years,Much it haunted me that, nigh there,I had borne my bitterest loss - when One who went, came not again;In a joyless hour of discord, in a joyless-hued July there -A July just such as then.And as thus I brooded longer,With my faint eyes on the feeble square of wan-lit window frame,A quick conviction sprung within me, grew, and grew yet stronger,That the month-night was the same,Too, as that which saw her leave meOn the rugged ridge of Waterstone, the peewits plaining round;And a lapsing twenty years had ruled that - as it were to grieve me -I should near ...
Thomas Hardy
Faithless
The words you said grow faint;The lamp you lit burns dim;Yet, still be near your faithless friendTo urge and counsel him.Still with returning feetTo where life's shadows brood,With steadfast eyes made clear in deathHaunt his vague solitude.So he, beguiled with earth,Yet with its vain things vexed,Keep even to his own heart unknownYour memory unperplexed.
Walter De La Mare
Sonnet XVIII.
Indefinite space, which, by co-substance night,In one black mystery two void mysteries blends;The stray stars, whose innumerable lightRepeats one mystery till conjecture ends;The stream of time, known by birth-bursting bubbles;The gulf of silence, empty even of nought;Thought's high-walled maze, which the outed owner troublesBecause the string's lost and the plan forgot:When I think on this and that here I stand,The thinker of these thoughts, emptily wise,Holding up to my thinking my thing-handAnd looking at it with thought-alien eyes, The prayer of my wonder looketh past The universal darkness lone and vast.
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
Song.
1.Rarely, rarely, comest thou,Spirit of Delight!Wherefore hast thou left me nowMany a day and night?Many a weary night and day'Tis since thou art fled away.2.How shall ever one like meWin thee back again?With the joyous and the freeThou wilt scoff at pain.Spirit false! thou hast forgotAll but those who need thee not.3.As a lizard with the shadeOf a trembling leaf,Thou with sorrow art dismayed;Even the sighs of griefReproach thee, that thou art not near,And reproach thou wilt not hear.4.Let me set my mournful dittyTo a merry measure;Thou wilt never come for pity,Thou wilt come for pleasure;Pity then will cut awayThose cruel wings, and thou wilt stay.5...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The House Of Dust: Part 03: 09: Cabaret
We sit together and talk, or smoke in silence.You say (but use no words) this night is passingAs other nights when we are dead will pass . . .Perhaps I misconstrue you: you mean only,How deathly pale my face looks in that glass . . .You say: We sit and talk, of things important . . .How many others like ourselves, this instant,Mark the pendulum swinging against the wall?How many others, laughing, sip their coffee,Or stare at mirrors, and do not talk at all? . . .This is the moment (so you would say, in silence)When suddenly we have had too much of laughter:And a freezing stillness falls, no word to say.Our mouths feel foolish . . . For all the days hereafterWhat have we saved, what news, what tune, what play?We see each othe...
Conrad Aiken
The Unknowable.
O! Sun, resplendent in the smiling morn, As thou dost view the wastes of earth and sky,Canst thou behold the realms of the Unborn, Canst thou behold the realms of those who die?Where dwells the spirit e'er its mortal birth, E'er yet it sufferethThe pain and sorrow incident to earth? Where after death?The Sun gave answer, with refulgent glow:Child of a fleeting hour, thou too must die to know.Canst tell, thou jeweled canopy of space, Bewildering, and boundless to the eyes,Knowest thou the unborn spirits' dwelling place? Knowest thou the distant regions of the skiesWhere rest the spirits freed from mundane strife, From mortal grief and care?Knowest thou the secret of the future life? Canst thou ...
Alfred Castner King
Burdened.
"Genius, a man's weapon, a woman's burden." - Lamartine.Dear God! there is no sadder fate in life, Than to be burdened so that you can not Sit down contented with the common lotOf happy mother and devoted wife.To feel your brain wild and your bosom rife With all the sea's commotion; to be fraught With fires and frenzies which you have not sought,And weighed down with the wide world's weary strife.To feel a fever alway in your breast, To lean and hear half in affright, half shame. A loud-voiced public boldly mouth your name,To reap your hard-sown harvest in unrest, And know, however great your meed of fame,You are but a weak woman at the best.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
One of the Least of These.
'Twas on a day of cold and sleet,A little nomad of the streetWith tattered garments, shoeless feet, And face with hunger wan,Great wonder-eyes, though beautiful,Hedged in by features pinched and dull,Betraying lines so pitiful By sorrow sharply drawn;Ere yet the service half was o'er,Approached the great cathedral doorAs choir and organ joined to pour Their sweetness on the air;Then, sudden, bold, impelled to glideWith fleetness to the altar's side,Her trembling form she sought to hide Amid the shadows there,Half fearful lest some worshiper,Enveloped close in robes of fur,Had cast a scornful glance at her As she had stolen by,But soon the swelling anthem, fraughtWith reverence, her spirit...
Hattie Howard
The Exile.
Night waneth fast, the morning star Saddens with light the glimmering sea,Whose waves shall soon to realms afar Waft me from hope, from love, and thee.Coldly the beam from yonder sky Looks o'er the waves that onward stray;But colder still the stranger's eye To him whose home is far awayOh, not at hour so chill and bleak, Let thoughts of me come o'er thy breast;But of the lost one think and speak, When summer suns sink calm to rest.So, as I wander, Fancy's dream Shall bring me o'er the sunset seas,Thy look in every melting beam, Thy whisper in each dying breeze.
Thomas Moore
Fragments Of Ancient Poetry, Fragment X
It is night; and I am alone, forlornon the hill of storms. The wind isheard in the mountain. The torrentshrieks down the rock. No hut receivesme from the rain; forlorn on the hill ofwinds.Rise, moon! from behind thyclouds; stars of the night, appear!Lead me, some light, to the place wheremy love rests from the toil of the chase!his bow near him, unstrung; his dogspanting around him. But here I mustsit alone, by the rock of the mossystream. The stream and the windroar; nor can I hear the voice of mylove.Why delayeth my Shalgar, why theson of the hill, his promise? Here isthe rock; and the tree; and here theroaring stream. Thou promisedst withnight to be here. Ah! whither is myShalgar gone? With thee I wo...
James Macpherson
Self-Unconscious
Along the way He walked that day,Watching shapes that reveries limn, And seldom he Had eyes to seeThe moment that encompassed him. Bright yellowhammers Made mirthful clamours,And billed long straws with a bustling air, And bearing their load Flew up the roadThat he followed, alone, without interest there. From bank to ground And over and roundThey sidled along the adjoining hedge; Sometimes to the gutter Their yellow flutterWould dip from the nearest slatestone ledge. The smooth sea-line With a metal shine,And flashes of white, and a sail thereon, He would also descry With a half-wrapt eyeBetween the projects he mused upon. ...
Sonnet IX
Well, seeing I have no hope, then let us part;Having long taught my flesh to master fear,I should have learned by now to rule my heart,Although, Heaven knows, 'tis not so easy near.Oh, you were made to make men miserableAnd torture those who would have joy in you,But I, who could have loved you, dear, so well,Take pride in being a good loser too;And it has not been wholly unsuccess,For I have rescued from forgetfulnessSome moments of this precious time that flies,Adding to my past wealth of memoryThe pretty way you once looked up at me,Your low, sweet voice, your smile, and your dear eyes.
Alan Seeger
The Oldest Song
"These were never your true love's eyes.Why do you feign that you love them?You that broke from their constancies,And the wide calm brows above them!This was never your true love's speech.Why do you thrill when you hear it?You that have ridden out of its reachThe width of the world or near it!This was never your true love's hair,You that chafed when it bound youScreened from knowledge or shame or care,In the night that it made around you!""All these things I know, I know.And that's why my heart is breaking!""Then what do you gain by pretending so?""The joy of an old wound waking."
Rudyard
The Three Urgandas.
Cast on sleep there came to meThree Urgandas; and the seaIn lost lands of BriogneSounded moaning, moaning:Cloudy clad in awful white;And each face a lucid lightRayed and blossomed out of night, -And a wind was groaning.In my sleep I saw them rest,Each a long hand at her breast,A soft flame that lulls the West; -And the sea was moaning, moaning; -Hair like hoarded ingots rolledDown white shoulders glossy gold,Streaks of molten moonlight cold, -And a wind was groaning.Rosy 'round each high brow bentFour-fold starry gold that sentBarbs of fire redolent; -And the sea was moaning, moaning; -'Neath their burning crowns their eyesBurned like southern stars the skiesRock in shattered storm that flies, -
Madison Julius Cawein
To Mr. and Mrs. A. M. T.
Just when the gentle hand of springCame fringing the trees with bud and leaf,And when the blades the warm suns bringWere given glad promise of golden sheaf;Just when the birds began to singJoy hymns after their winter's grief,I wandered weary to a place;Tired of toil, I sought for rest,Where Nature wore her mildest grace --I went where I was more than guest.Strange, tall trees rose as if they fainWould wear as crowns the clouds of skies;The sad winds swept with low refrainThrough branches breathing softest sighs;And o'er the field and down the laneSweet flowers, the dreams of Paradise,Bloomed up into this world of pain,Where all that's fairest soonest dies;And 'neath the trees a little streamWent winding slowly round and round...
Abram Joseph Ryan