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Impromptu,
On The Reception Of A Letter.I would love to have thee near me, But when I think how drearIs each hope that used to cheer me, I cease to wish thee here.I know that thou, wouldst not shrink from The storms that burst on me,But the bitter chalice I drink from, I will not pass to thee.I would share the world with thee, were it With all its pleasures mine,But the sorrows which I inherit, I never will make thine!
George W. Sands
The Father And Jupiter.
A man to Jupiter preferred Prayers for a wife: his prayer was heard. Jove smiled to see the man caressing The granted prayer and doubtful blessing. Again he troubled Jove with prayers: Fraught with a wife, he wanted heirs: They came, to be annoys or joys - One girl and two big bouncing boys. And, a third time, he prayed his prayer For grace unto his son and heir - That he, who should his name inherit, Might be replete with worth and merit. Then begged his second might aspire, With strong ambition, martial fire; That Fortune he might break or bend, And on her neck to heights ascend. Last, for the daughter, prayed that gra...
John Gay
Coronation Poem And Prayer
The world has crowned a thousand kings: But destiny has keptHer weightiest hour of kingly power To offer England's son.The rising bell of Progress rings; And Truths which long have slept,Like prophets strange, predicting change, Before Time's chariot run.The greatest Empire of the Earth. Old England proudly stands.Like arteries her Colonies Reach out from sea to sea.She clasps all races in her girth; Her gaze the world commands;And far and wide where strong ships ride, The British Flag floats free.Oh, never since the stars began Their round of Cosmic law,And souls evolved in ways unsolved, And kingdoms reached their primeHas Destiny held out to Man A gift so full of awe,...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Pine Planters (Marty South's Reverie)
IWe work here togetherIn blast and breeze;He fills the earth in,I hold the trees.He does not noticeThat what I doKeeps me from movingAnd chills me through.He has seen one fairerI feel by his eye,Which skims me as thoughI were not by.And since she passed hereHe scarce has knownBut that the woodlandHolds him alone.I have worked here with himSince morning shine,He busy with his thoughtsAnd I with mine.I have helped him so many,So many days,But never win anySmall word of praise!Shall I not sigh to himThat I work onGlad to be nigh to himThough hope is gone?Nay, though he neverKnew love like mine,I'll bear it ever<...
Thomas Hardy
The Hut
Dear little Hut by the rice-fields circled,That cocoa-nuts shade above.I hear the voices of children singing,And that means love.When shall the traveller's march be over,When shall his wandering cease?This little homestead is bare and simple,And that means peace.Nay! to the road I am not unfaithful;In tents let my dwelling be!I am not longing for Peace or PassionFrom any one else but thee,My Krishna,Any one else but thee!
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Come Unto Me.
Weary soul, by care oppressed,Wouldst thou find a place of rest?Listen, Jesus calls to thee,Come, and find thy rest in me!Hungry soul, why pine and dieWith exhaustless stores so nigh?Lo, the board is spread for thee,Come, and feast to-day with me!Thirsty soul, earth's sweetest rillMocks thee with its promise still;Hark, the Saviour calls to thee,Here is water, come to me!Homeless soul, thy path is drear,Angry tempests gather near,Night is darkening over thee,Here is shelter, come to me!Heavenly bread and heavenly wine,Living waters, all are mine! -Mine they are, and thine may be,Weary wand'rer, come to me!
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
The Land Between
Between the little Here and larger Yonder, There is a realm (or so one day I read)Where faithful spirits love-enchained may wander, Till some remembering soul from earth has fled.Then, reunited, they go forth afar,From sphere to sphere, where wondrous angels are.Not many spirits in that realm are waiting; Not many pause upon its shores to rest;For only love, intense and unabating, Can hold them from the longer, higher quest.And after grief has wept itself to sleep,Few hearts on earth their vital memories keep.Should I pass on, across the mystic border, Let thy love link me to that pallid land;I would not seek the heavens of finer order Until thy barque had left this coarser strand.How desolate such journeyings woul...
Iceland First Seen
Lo from our loitering shipa new land at last to be seen;Toothed rocks down the side of the firthon the east guard a weary wide lea,And black slope the hill-sides above,striped adown with their desolate green:And a peak rises up on the westfrom the meeting of cloud and of sea,Foursquare from base unto pointlike the building of Gods that have been,The last of that waste of the mountainsall cloud-wreathed and snow-flecked and grey,And bright with the dawn that beganjust now at the ending of day.Ah! what came we forth for to seethat our hearts are so hot with desire?Is it enough for our rest,the sight of this desolate strand,And the mountain-waste voiceless as deathbut for winds that may sleep not nor tire?Why do we lo...
William Morris
Is There Any reward?
Is there any reward?I'm beginning to doubt it.I am broken and bored,Is there any rewardReassure me, Good Lord,And inform me about it.Is there any reward?I'm beginning to doubt it.
Hilaire Belloc
The Visionary
Silent is the house: all are laid asleep:One alone looks out oer the snow-wreaths deep,Watching every cloud, dreading every breezeThat whirls the wildering drift, and bends the groaning trees.Cheerful is the hearth, soft the matted floor;Not one shivering gust creeps through pane or door;The little lamp burns straight, its rays shoot strong and far:I trim it well, to be the wanderers guiding-star.Frown, my haughty sire! chide, my angry dame!Set your slaves to spy; threaten me with shame:But neither sire nor dame nor prying serf shall know,What angel nightly tracks that waste of frozen snow.What I love shall come like visitant of air,Safe in secret power from lurking human snare;What loves me, no word of mine shall eer betray,Thou...
Emily Bronte
God Is Love.
Come blest Spirit from above,Come and fill my heart with love;Love to God, and love to man,Love to do the good I can;Love to high, and love to low,Love to friend, and love to foe.Love to rich, and love to poor,Love to beggar at my door.Love to young, and love to old,Love to hardened heart and cold.Love, true love, my heart withinFor the sinner, not the sin;Love to holy Sabbath day,Love to meditate and pray,Love for love, for hatred even;Love like this, is born of Heaven.
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
Symbolism
Now when the spirit in us wakes and broods,Filled with home yearnings, drowsily it flingsFrom its deep heart high dreams and mystic moods,Mixed with the memory of the loved earth things;Clothing the vast with a familiar face;Reaching its right hand forth to greet the starry race.Wondrously near and clear the great warm firesStare from the blue; so shows the cottage lightTo the field labourer whose heart desiresThe old folk by the nook, the welcome brightFrom the house-wife long parted from at dawn--So the star villages in God's great depths withdrawn.Nearer to Thee, not by delusion led,Though there no house fires burn nor bright eyes gaze,We rise, but by the symbol charioted,Through loved things rising up to Love's own waysBy these ...
George William Russell
Fortune And The Boy.
[1]Beside a well, uncurb'd and deep,A schoolboy laid him down to sleep:(Such rogues can do so anywhere.)If some kind man had seen him there,He would have leap'd as if distracted;But Fortune much more wisely acted;For, passing by, she softly waked the child,Thus whispering in accents mild:'I save your life, my little dear,And beg you not to venture hereAgain, for had you fallen in,I should have had to bear the sin;But I demand, in reason's name,If for your rashness I'm to blame?'With this the goddess went her way.I like her logic, I must say.There takes place nothing on this planet,But Fortune ends, whoe'er began it.In all adventures good or ill,We look to her to foot the bill.Has one a stupid, empt...
Jean de La Fontaine
Three Songs From Paracelsus
II hear a voice, perchance I heardLong ago, but all too low,So that scarce a care it stirredIf the voice was real or no:I heard it in my youth when firstThe waters of my life outburst:But now their stream ebbs faint, I hearThat voice, still low but fatal-clearAs if all Poets, God ever meantShould save the world, and therefore lentGreat gifts to, but who, proud, refusedTo do His work, or lightly usedThose gifts, or failed through weak endeavour,So, mourn cast off by Him for ever,As if these leaned in airy ringTo take me; this the song they sing.Lost, lost! yet come,With our wan troop make thy home.Come, come! for weWill not breathe, so much as breatheReproach to thee!Knowing what thou sinkst bene...
Robert Browning
Pairing Time Anticipated. A Fable.
I shall not ask Jean Jaques Rousseau[1]If birds confabulate or no;Tis clear, that they were always ableTo hold discourse, at least in fable;And een the child who knows no betterThan to interpret, by the letter,A story of a cock and bull,Must have a most uncommon skull.It chanced then on a winters day,But warm, and bright, and calm as May,The birds, conceiving a designTo forestall sweet St. Valentine,In many an orchard, copse, and grove,Assembled on affairs of love,And with much twitter and much chatterBegan to agitate the matter.At length a Bullfinch, who could boastMore years and wisdom than the most,Entreated, opening wide his beak,A moments liberty to speak;And, silence publicly enjoind,Deliverd...
William Cowper
Helen All Alone
There was darkness under HeavenFor an hour's space,Darkness that we knew was givenUs for special grace.Sun and moon and stars were hid,God had left His Throne,When Helen came to me, she did,Helen all alone!Side by side (because our fateDamned us ere our birth)We stole out of Limbo GateLooking for the Earth.Hand in pulling hand amidFear no dreams have known,Helen ran with me, she did,Helen all alone!When the Horror passing speechHunted us along,Each laid hold on each, and eachFound the other strong.In the teeth of Things forbidAnd Reason overthrown,Helen stood by me, she did,Helen all alone!When, at last, we heard those FiresDull and die away,When, at last, our linked ...
Rudyard
The Convent Threshold
There's blood between us, love, my love,There's father's blood, there's brother's blood;And blood's a bar I cannot pass:I choose the stairs that mount above,Stair after golden skyward stair,To city and to sea of glass.My lily feet are soiled with mud,With scarlet mud which tells a taleOf hope that was, of guilt that was,Of love that shall not yet avail;Alas, my heart, if I could bareMy heart, this selfsame stain is there:I seek the sea of glass and fireTo wash the spot, to burn the snare;Lo, stairs are meant to lift us higher:Mount with me, mount the kindled stair. Your eyes look earthward, mine look up.I see the far-off city grand,Beyond the hills a watered land,Beyond the gulf a gleaming strandOf mansions wher...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Gif A Lassie Spurn A Laddie.
Gif a lassie spurn a laddieWi' her needless Nays,Thraves will pet the hapless plaidieWi' their loving ways;So if Kirsty blaw him cauldlyAs a winter day,Bess and Belle will bless him bauldlyWi' the breath of May.Prudery still affects the valley,Shady and alane,Meeting souls that loveward sally,Icy as a stane.On the mountain true Love singeth,Liberty is there;Dalliance wingeth, Pleasure springeth,From her waving hair.On the peaks abide the pleasures,Young and sweet and free,Yoked with Youth's immortal treasures,Love and Liberty;So, the hilltops seek while soaring,Eaglet of Love's sky;Light adorned and Light adoring,Bask, and burn and die.
A. H. Laidlaw