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To Cara, After An Interval Of Absence.
Concealed within the shady wood A mother left her sleeping child,And flew, to cull her rustic food, The fruitage of the forest wild.But storms upon her pathway rise, The mother roams, astray and weeping;Far from the weak appealing cries Of him she left so sweetly sleeping.She hopes, she fears; a light is seen, And gentler blows the night wind's breath;Yet no--'tis gone--the storms are keen, The infant may be chilled to death!Perhaps, even now, in darkness shrouded, His little eyes lie cold and still;--And yet, perhaps, they are not clouded, Life and love may light them still.Thus, Cara, at our last farewell, When, fearful even thy hand to touch,I mutely asked those eyes to tell
Thomas Moore
Love.
Oh Love! how fondly, tenderly enshrinedIn human hearts, how with our being twined!Immortal principle, in mercy given,The brightest mirror of the joys of heaven.Child of Eternity's unclouded clime,Too fair for earth, too infinite for time:A seraph watching o'er Death's sullen shroud,A sunbeam streaming through a stormy cloud;An angel hovering o'er the paths of life,But sought in vain amidst its cares and strife;Claimed by the many--known but to the fewWho keep thy great Original in view;Who, void of passion's dross, behold in theeA glorious attribute of Deity!
Susanna Moodie
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...
Sara Teasdale
The Knight Of St. John
Ere down yon blue Carpathian hillsThe sun shall sink again,Farewell to life and all its ills,Farewell to cell and chain!These prison shades are dark and cold,But, darker far than they,The shadow of a sorrow oldIs on my heart alway.For since the day when Warkworth woodClosed o'er my steed, and I,An alien from my name and blood,A weed cast out to die,When, looking back in sunset light,I saw her turret gleam,And from its casement, far and white,Her sign of farewell stream,Like one who, from some desert shore,Doth home's green isles descry,And, vainly longing, gazes o'erThe waste of wave and sky;So from the desert of my fateI gaze across the past;Forever on life's dial-plateThe...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Edge
I thought to die that night in the solitude where they would never find me...But there was time...And I lay quietly on the drawn knees of the mountain, staring into the abyss...I do not know how long...I could not count the hours, they ran so fastLike little bare-foot urchins - shaking my hands away...But I rememberSomewhere water trickled like a thin severed vein...And a wind came out of the grass,Touching me gently, tentatively, like a paw.As the night grewThe gray cloud that had covered the sky like sackclothFell in ashen folds about the hills,Like hooded virgins, pulling their cloaks about them...There must have been a spent moon,For the Tall One's veil held a shimmer of silver...That too I remember...And the tenderly rock...
Lola Ridge
Aedh Hears The Cry Of The Sedge
I Wander by the edgeOf this desolate lakeWhere wind cries in the sedgeUntil the axle breakThat keeps the stars in their roundAnd hands hurl in the deepThe banners of East and WestAnd the girdle of light is unbound,Your breast will not lie by the breastOf your beloved in sleep.
William Butler Yeats
Bring The Bright Garlands Hither.
Bring the bright garlands hither, Ere yet a leaf is dying;If so soon they must wither. Ours be their last sweet sighing.Hark, that low dismal chime!'Tis the dreary voice of Time.Oh, bring beauty, bring roses, Bring all that yet is ours;Let life's day, as it closes, Shine to the last thro' flowers.Haste, ere the bowl's declining, Drink of it now or never;Now, while Beauty is shining, Love, or she's lost for ever.Hark! again that dull chime,'Tis the dreary voice of Time.Oh, if life be a torrent, Down to oblivion going,Like this cup be its current, Bright to the last drop flowing!
The Vision Of Life.
Death and I, On a hill so high,Stood side by side: And we saw below, Running to and fro,All things that be in the world so wide. Ten thousand cries From the gulf did rise,With a wild discordant sound; Laughter and wailing, Prayer and railing,As the ball spun round and round. And over all Hung a floating pallOf dark and gory veils: 'Tis the blood of years, And the sighs and tears,Which this noisome marsh exhales. All this did seem Like a fearful dream,Till Death cried with a joyful cry: "Look down! look down! It is all mine own,Here comes life's pageant by!"Like to a masque in ancient revelries,With mingling sound of tho...
Frances Anne Kemble
A Boy's Hopes.
Dear mother, dry those flowing tears, They grieve me much to see;And calm, oh! calm thine anxious fears - What dost thou dread for me?'Tis true that tempests wild oft ride Above the stormy main,But, then, in Him I will confide Who doth their bounds ordain.I go to win renown and fame Upon the glorious sea;But still my heart will be the same - I'll ever turn to thee!See, yonder wait our gallant crew, So, weep not, mother dear;My father was a sailor too - What hast thou then to fear?Is it not better I should seek To win the name he bore,Than waste my youth in pastimes weak Upon the tiresome shore?Then, look not thus so sad and wan,For yet your son you'll seeReturn with w...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Sonnet CXX.
Ite, caldi sospiri, al freddo core.HE IMPLORES MERCY OR DEATH. Go, my warm sighs, go to that frozen breast,Burst the firm ice, that charity denies;And, if a mortal prayer can reach the skies,Let death or pity give my sorrows rest!Go, softest thoughts! Be all you know express'dOf that unnoticed by her lovely eyes,Though fate and cruelty against me rise,Error at least and hope shall be repress'd.Tell her, though fully you can never tell,That, while her days calm and serenely flow,In darkness and anxiety I dwell;Love guides your flight, my thoughts securely go,Fortune may change, and all may yet be well;If my sun's aspect not deceives my woe.CHARLEMONT. Go, burning sighs, to her cold bosom go,...
Francesco Petrarca
The Thief Of Beauty.
The mind is Beauty's thief, the poet takes The golden spendthrift's trail among the blooms Where she stands tossing silver in the lakes, And twisting bright swift threads on airy looms. Her ring the poppy snatches, and the rose With laughter plunders all her gusty plumes. He steals behind her, gathering, as she goes Heedless of summer's end certain and soon, - Of winter rattling at the door of June. When Beauty lies hand-folded, pale and still, Forsaken of her lovers and her lords, And winter keeps cold watch upon the hill Then he lets fall his bale of coloured words. At frosty midnight June shall rise in flame, Move at his magic with her bells and birds; The rose will redden as he speaks her nam...
Muriel Stuart
Ellen Ray
A quiet song for EllenThe patient Ellen Ray,A dreamer in the nightfall,A watcher in the day.The wedded of the sailorWho keeps so far away:A shadow on his foreheadFor patient Ellen Ray.When autumn winds were drivingAcross the chafing bay,He said the words of angerThat wasted Ellen Ray:He said the words of angerAnd went his bitter way:Her dower was the darknessThe patient Ellen Ray.Your comfort is a phantom,My patient Ellen Ray;You house it in the night-time,It fronts you in the day;And when the moon is very lowAnd when the lights are grey,You sit and hug a sorry hope,My patient Ellen Ray!You sit and hug a sorry hopeYet who will dare to say,The sweetness of October
Henry Kendall
Impromptu,
Written among the ruins of the Sonnenberg.Thou who within thyself dost not beholdRuins as great as these, though not as old,Can'st scarce through life have travelled many a year,Or lack'st the spirit of a pilgrim here.Youth hath its walls of strength, its towers of pride;Love, its warm hearth-stones; Hope, its prospects wide;Life's fortress in thee, held these one, and all,And they have fallen to ruin, or shall fall.
Canzone I.
Nel dolce tempo della prima etade.HIS SUFFERINGS SINCE HE BECAME THE SLAVE OF LOVE. In the sweet season when my life was new,Which saw the birth, and still the being seesOf the fierce passion for my ill that grew,Fain would I sing--my sorrow to appease--How then I lived, in liberty, at ease,While o'er my heart held slighted Love no sway;And how, at length, by too high scorn, for aye,I sank his slave, and what befell me then,Whereby to all a warning I remain;Although my sharpest painBe elsewhere written, so that many a penIs tired already, and, in every vale,The echo of my heavy sighs is rife,Some credence forcing of my anguish'd life;And, as her wont, if here my memory fail,Be my long martyrdom its saving plea,...
To Some Birds Flown Away.
("Enfants! Oh! revenez!")[XXII, April, 1837]Children, come back - come back, I say -You whom my folly chased awayA moment since, from this my room,With bristling wrath and words of doom!What had you done, you bandits small,With lips as red as roses all?What crime? - what wild and hapless deed?What porcelain vase by you was splitTo thousand pieces? Did you needFor pastime, as you handled it,Some Gothic missal to enrichWith your designs fantastical?Or did your tearing fingers fallOn some old picture? Which, oh, whichYour dreadful fault? Not one of these;Only when left yourselves to pleaseThis morning but a moment here'Mid papers tinted by my mindYou took some embryo verses near -Half formed, ...
Victor-Marie Hugo
The Dying Need But Little, Dear,
The dying need but little, dear, --A glass of water's all,A flower's unobtrusive faceTo punctuate the wall,A fan, perhaps, a friend's regret,And certainly that oneNo color in the rainbowPerceives when you are gone.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
King David
King David was a sorrowful man:No cause for his sorrow had he;And he called for the music of a hundred harps,To ease his melancholy.They played till they all fell silent:Played-and play sweet did they;But the sorrow that haunted the heart of King DavidThey could not charm away.He rose; and in his gardenWalked by the moon alone,A nightingale hidden in a cypress-treeJargoned on and on.King David lifted his sad eyesInto the dark-boughed tree-''Tell me, thou little bird that singest,Who taught my grief to thee?'But the bird in no wise heededAnd the king in the cool of the moonHearkened to the nightingale's sorrowfulness,Till all his own was gone.
Walter De La Mare
At Home
When I was dead, my spirit turned To seek the much-frequented house:I passed the door, and saw my friends Feasting beneath green orange boughs;From hand to hand they pushed the wine, They sucked the pulp of plum and peach;They sang, they jested, and they laughed, For each was loved of each.I listened to their honest chat: Said one: 'To-morrow we shall bePlod plod along the featureless sands, And coasting miles and miles of sea.'Said one: 'Before the turn of tide We will achieve the eyrie-seat.'Said one: 'To-morrow shall be like To-day, but much more sweet.''To-morrow,' said they, strong with hope, And dwelt upon the pleasant way:'To-morrow,' cried they, one and all, While no one spoke ...
Christina Georgina Rossetti