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The Hermit's Sacrifice.
From Rome's palaces and villas Gaily issued forth a throng;From her humbler habitations Moved a human tide along.Haughty dames and blooming maidens, Men who knew not mercy's sway,Thronged into the Coliseum On that Roman holiday.From the lonely wilds of Asia, From her jungles far away,From the distant torrid regions, Rome had gathered beasts of prey.Lions restless, roaring, rampant, Tigers with their stealthy tread,Leopards bright, and fierce, and fiery, Met in conflict wild and dread.Fierce and fearful was the carnage Of the maddened beasts of prey,As they fought and rent each other Urged by men more fierce than they.Till like muffled thunders breaking ...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Period
The deserted streets flow in gleaming lightThrough my dull head. And hurt me.I clearly feel that I shall soon slip away -Thorny roses of my skin, don't prick like that.The night grows moldy. The poison light of the lamppostsHas smeared it with green muck.My heart is like a bag. My blood freezes.The world is dying. My eyes collapse.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Satan: 1920
I read there is a man who sits apart,A sort of human spider in his den,Who meditates upon a fearful art -The swiftest way to slay his fellow men.Behind a mask of glass he dreams his hell:With chemic skill, to pack so fierce a dustWithin the thunderbolt of one small shell -Sating in vivid thought his shuddering lust -Whole cities in one gasp of flame shall die,Swept with an all-obliterating rainOf sudden fire and poison from the sky;Nothing that breathes be left to breathe again -And only gloating eyes from out the airWatching the twisting fires, and ears attentFor children's cries and woman's shrill despair,The crash of shrines and towers in ruin rent.High in the sun the sneering airmen glide,Glance at wrist-watches: scarce a minute...
Richard Le Gallienne
The Family Burying-Ground.
A wall of crumbling stones doth keepWatch o'er long barrows where they sleep,Old chronicled grave-stones of its dead,On which oblivious mosses creepAnd lichens gray as lead.Warm days the lost cows as they passRest here and browse the juicy grassThat springs about its sun-scorched stones;Afar one hears their bells' deep brassWaft melancholy tones.Here the wild morning-glory goesA-rambling as the myrtle grows,Wild morning-glories pale as pain,With holy urns, that hint at woes,The night hath filled with rain.Here are blackberries largest seen,Rich, winey dark, whereon the leanBlack hornet sucks, noons sick with heat,That bend not to the shadowed greenThe heavy bearded wheat.At dark, for its forgotten...
Madison Julius Cawein
Anton Sosnowski
Anton Sosnowski, from the Shakspeare School Where he assists the janitor, sweeps and dusts, The day now done, sits by a smeared up table Munching coarse bread and drinking beer; before him The evening paper spread, held down or turned By claw-like hands, covered with shiny scars. He broods upon the war news, and his fate Which keeps him from the war, looks up and sees His scarred face in the mirror over the wainscot; His lashless eyes and browless brows and head With patches of thin hair. And then he mutters Hot curses to himself and turns the paper And curses Germany, and asks revenge For Poland's wrongs. And what is this he sees? The picture of his ruin and his hate, Wert Rufus Fox...
Edgar Lee Masters
Rutland Gate
His back is bent and his lips are blue,Shivering out in the wet:"Here's a florin, my man, for you,Go and get drunk and forget!"Right in the midst of a Christian land,Rotted with wealth and ease,Broken and draggled they let him standTill his feet on the pavement freeze.God leaves His poor in His vicars' care,For He hears the church-bells ring,His ears are buzzing with constant prayerAnd the hymns His people sing.Can His pity picture the anguish here,Can He see, through a London fog,The man who has worked "nigh seventy year"To die the death of a dog?No one heeds him, the crowds pass on.Why does he want to live?"Take this florin, and get you gone,Go and get drunk, - and forgive!"
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Spring Dirge
A child came singing through the dusty townA song so sweet that all men stayed to hear,Forgetting for a space their ancient fearOf evil days and death and fortunes frown.She sang of Winter dead and Spring new-bornIn the green fields beyond the far hills bound;And how this fair Spring, coming blossom-crowned,Would cross the citys threshold on the morn.And each caged bird in every house anigh,Even as she sang, caught up the glad refrainOf Love and Hope and fair days come again,Till all who heard forgot they had to die.And all the ghosts of buried woes were laidThat heard the song of this sweet sorceress;The Past grew to a dream of old distress,And merry were the hearts of man and maid.So, at the first faint blush of ten...
Victor James Daley
Keeping Tryst
Who is the maid with silken hair By clear Maine Water roaming?For the fairy Queen is not so fair As she in the lonely gloamingIt is sweet Mysie of Bellee, John Millar's lovely daughter;She is waiting where the old elm tree Droops over the sweet Maine Water."The trysting time has come and past, The day is fast declining;Oh my true love, are you coming fast, For the star of love is shining?""The moon is bright, the ford is safe, The market folks crossed over;Oh, come to me, it is wearing late, And I wait for thee, my lover."I fear me there will be a storm, The clouds, with murky fingers,Are muffling the stars o'er far Galgorm, Where my own true lover lingers."She ...
Nora Pembroke
Fragment Of A Satire On Satire.
If gibbets, axes, confiscations, chains,And racks of subtle torture, if the painsOf shame, of fiery Hell's tempestuous wave,Seen through the caverns of the shadowy grave,Hurling the damned into the murky airWhile the meek blest sit smiling; if DespairAnd Hate, the rapid bloodhounds with which TerrorHunts through the world the homeless steps of Error,Are the true secrets of the commonwealTo make men wise and just;...And not the sophisms of revenge and fear,Bloodier than is revenge...Then send the priests to every hearth and homeTo preach the burning wrath which is to come,In words like flakes of sulphur, such as thawThe frozen tears...If Satire's scourge could wake the slumbering houndsOf Conscience, or erase the deeper wounds,The le...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
By The Side Of The Grave Some Years After
Long time his pulse hath ceased to beatBut benefits, his gift, we trace,Expressed in every eye we meetRound this dear Vale, his native place.To stately Hall and Cottage rudeFlowed from his life what still they hold,Light pleasures, every day, renewed;And blessings half a century old.Oh true of heart, of spirit gay,Thy faults, where not already goneFrom memory, prolong their stayFor charity's sweet sake alone.Such solace find we for our loss;And what beyond this thought we craveComes in the promise from the Cross,Shining upon thy happy grave.
William Wordsworth
To His Dying Brother, Master William Herrick
Life of my life, take not so soon thy flight,But stay the time till we have bade good-night.Thou hast both wind and tide with thee; thy wayAs soon dispatch'd is by the night as day.Let us not then so rudely henceforth goTill we have wept, kiss'd, sigh'd, shook hands, or so.There's pain in parting, and a kind of hellWhen once true lovers take their last farewell.What? shall we two our endless leaves take hereWithout a sad look, or a solemn tear?He knows not love that hath not this truth proved,Love is most loth to leave the thing beloved.Pay we our vows and go; yet when we part,Then, even then, I will bequeath my heartInto thy loving hands; for I'll keep noneTo warm my breast, when thou, my pulse, art gone,No, here I'll last, and walk, a harmles...
Robert Herrick
The City Dead-House
By the City Dead-House, by the gate,As idly sauntering, wending my way from the clangor,I curious pause for lo! an outcast form, a poor dead prostitute brought;Her corpse they deposit unclaim'd it lies on the damp brick pavement;The divine woman, her body I see the Body I look on it alone,That house once full of passion and beauty all else I notice not;Nor stillness so cold, nor running water from faucet, nor odors morbific impress me;But the house alone that wondrous house that delicate fair house that ruin!That immortal house, more than all the rows of dwellings ever built!Or white-domed Capitol itself, with majestic figure surmounted or all the old high-spired cathedrals;That little house alone, more than them all poor, desperate house!Fair, fearful wreck! tenement of a ...
Walt Whitman
Theirs
I.Fate summoned, in gray-bearded age, to actA history stranger than his written fact,Him who portrayed the splendor and the gloomOf that great hour when throne and altar fellWith long death-groan which still is audible.He, when around the walls of Paris rungThe Prussian bugle like the blast of doom,And every ill which follows unblest warMaddened all France from Finistere to Var,The weight of fourscore from his shoulders flung,And guided Freedom in the path he sawLead out of chaos into light and law,Peace, not imperial, but republican,And order pledged to all the Rights of Man.II.Death called him from a need as imminentAs that from which the Silent William wentWhen powers of evil, like the smiting seasOn Holla...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Florence
The bells ring over the Anno,Midnight, the long, long chime;Here in the quivering darknessI am afraid of time.Oh, gray bells cease your tolling,Time takes too much from me,And yet to rock and riverHe gives eternity.
Sara Teasdale
Burial
Man may want land to live in; but for allNature finds out some place for burial.
Waking
Darkness had stretched its colour,Deep blue across the pane:No cloud to make night duller,No moon with its tarnish stain;But only here and there a star,One sharp point of frosty fire,Hanging infinitely farIn mockery of our life and deathAnd all our small desire.Now in this hour of wakingFrom under brows of stone,A new pale day is breakingAnd the deep night is gone.Sordid now, and mean and smallThe daylight world is seen again,With only the veils of mist that fallDeaf and muffling over allTo hide its ugliness and pain.But to-day this dawn of meannessShines in my eyes, as whenThe new world's brightness and cleannessBroke on the first of men.For the light that shows the huddled thingsOf this cl...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
The Flask
There are some powerful odours that can passOut of the stoppard flagon; even glassTo them is porous. Oft when some old boxBrought from the East is opened and the locksAnd hinges creak and cry; or in a pressIn some deserted house, where the sharp stressOf odours old and dusty fills the brain;An ancient flask is brought to light again,And forth the ghosts of long-dead odours creep.There, softly trembling in the shadows, sleepA thousand thoughts, funereal chrysalides,Phantoms of old the folding darkness hides,Who make faint flutterings as their wings unfold,Rose-washed and azure-tinted, shot with gold.A memory that brings languor flutters here:The fainting eyelids droop, and giddy FearThrusts with both hands the soul towards the pit
Charles Baudelaire
Life's Chequer-Board
"'Tis all a Chequer-Board of Nights and Days,Where Detiny with men for pieces plays,Hither and thither moves, and mates and slays,And one by one back in the Closet lays."Omar Khayyam.A Chequer-Board of mingled Light and Shade?And We the Pieces on it deftly laid?Moved and removed, without a word to say,By the Same Hand that Board and Pieces made?No Pieces we in any Fateful Game,Nor free to shift on Destiny the blame;Each Soul doth tend its own immortal flame,Fans it to Heaven, or smothers it in shame.
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)