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Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part I. - XXII - Continued
Methinks that to some vacant hermitage'My' feet would rather turn to some dry nookScooped out of living rock, and near a brookHurled down a mountain-cove from stage to stage,Yet tempering, for my sight, its bustling rageIn the soft heaven of a translucent pool;Thence creeping under sylvan arches cool,Fit haunt of shapes whose glorious equipageWould elevate my dreams. A beechen bowl,A maple dish, my furniture should be;Crisp, yellow leaves my bed; the hooting owlMy night-watch: nor should e'er the crested fowlFrom thorp or vill his matins sound for me,Tired of the world and all its industry.
William Wordsworth
Sunshine
I Flat as a drum-head stretch the haggard snows; The mighty skies are palisades of light; The stars are blurred; the silence grows and grows; Vaster and vaster vaults the icy night. Here in my sleeping-bag I cower and pray: "Silence and night, have pity! stoop and slay." I have not slept for many, many days. I close my eyes with weariness - that's all. I still have strength to feed the drift-wood blaze, That flickers weirdly on the icy wall. I still have strength to pray: "God rest her soul, Here in the awful shadow of the Pole." There in the cabin's alcove low she lies, Still candles gleaming at her head and feet; All snow-drop white, ash-cold, with closed eyes, Lips smiling...
Robert William Service
Wood-Folk Lore. To T. B. M.
For every oneBeneath the sun,Where Autumn walks with quiet eyes,There is a word,Just overheardWhen hill to purple hill replies.This afternoon,As warm as June,With the red apples on the bough,I set my earTo hark and hearThe wood-folk talking, you know how.There comes a "Hush!"And then a "Tush,"As tree to scarlet tree responds,"Babble away!He'll not betrayThe secrets of us vagabonds."Are we not all,Both great and small,Cousins and kindred in a joyNo school can teach,No worldling reach,Nor any wreck of chance destroy?"And so we are,However farWe journey ere the journey ends,One brotherhoodWith leaf and budAnd everything that wakes or wends.<...
Bliss Carman
Nine O'Clock.
I.Nine of the clock, oh! Wake my lazy head!Your shoes of red morocco, Your silk bed-gown:Rouse, rouse, speck-eyed Mary In your high bed!A yawn, a smile, sleepy-starey, Mary climbs down."Good-morning to my brothers, Good-day to the Sun,Halloo, halloo to the lily-white sheep That up the mountain run." II.Good-night to the meadow, farewell to the nine o'clock Sun,"He loves me not, loves me, he loves me not" (O jealous one!)"He loves me, he loves me not, loves me", O soft nights of June,A bird sang for love on the cherry-bough: up swam the Moon.
Robert von Ranke Graves
Eclogue, Summer
DAVID.My task is done; no further will I mow;I faint with hunger, and with heat I glow.Well, Giles, what cheer? how far behind you lag!Badly your practice answers to your brag. GILES.Deuce take the scythe! no wonder I am last;The wonder is I work'd my way so fast;Sure such another never yet was made;It's maker must have been a duller blade;The bungling fool, might I his fault chastise,Should use it for a razor till he dies. DAVID.Ha, ha, well said, young jester; though bereftOf strength and patience, yet your wit is left.But come, good friend, to dinner let us go;Tired are my limbs, my wasted spirits low. GILES.Poor David! age is weak, soon jaded out;I feel, as when beginn...
Thomas Oldham
Twins
Affectionately Inscribed to W.M.R. and L.R.April, on whose wingsRide all gracious things,Like the star that bringsAll things good to man,Ere his light, that yetMakes the month shine, set,And fair May forgetWhence her birth began,Brings, as heart would choose,Sound of golden news,Bright as kindling dewsWhen the dawn begins;Tidings clear as mirth,Sweet as air and earthNow that hail the birth,Twice thus blest, of twins.In the lovely landWhere with hand in handLovers wedded standOther joys beforeMade your mixed life sweet:Now, as Time sees meet,Three glad blossoms greetTwo glad blossoms more.Fed with sun and dew,While your joys were new,First aros...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Dickens in Camp
Above the pines the moon was slowly drifting,The river sang below;The dim Sierras, far beyond, upliftingTheir minarets of snow.The roaring camp-fire, with rude humor, paintedThe ruddy tints of healthOn haggard face and form that drooped and faintedIn the fierce race for wealth;Till one arose, and from his packs scant treasureA hoarded volume drew,And cards were dropped from hands of listless leisureTo hear the tale anew.And then, while round them shadows gathered faster,And as the firelight fell,He read aloud the book wherein the MasterHad writ of Little Nell.Perhaps twas boyish fancy, for the readerWas youngest of them all,But, as he read, from clustering pine and cedarA silence seemed to fall;
Bret Harte
The Epic
At Francis Allens on the Christmas-eve,The game of forfeits donethe girls all kissdBeneath the sacred bush and past awayThe parson Holmes, the poet Everard Hall,The host, and I sat round the wassail-bowl,Then half-way ebbd: and there we held a talk,How all the old honour had from Christmas gone,Or gone, or dwindled down to some odd gamesIn some odd nooks like this; till I, tired outWith cutting eights that day upon the pond,Where, three times slipping from the outer edge,I bumpd the ice into three several stars,Fell in a doze; and half-awake I heardThe parson taking wide and wider sweeps,Now harping on the church-commissionners,Now hawking at Geology and schism;Until I woke, and found him settled downUpon the general decay of faith...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Autumn Woods.
Ere, in the northern gale,The summer tresses of the trees are gone,The woods of Autumn, all around our vale,Have put their glory on.The mountains that infold,In their wide sweep, the coloured landscape round,Seem groups of giant kings, in purple and gold,That guard the enchanted ground.I roam the woods that crownThe upland, where the mingled splendours glow,Where the gay company of trees look downOn the green fields below.My steps are not aloneIn these bright walks; the sweet south-west, at play,Flies, rustling, where the painted leaves are strownAlong the winding way.And far in heaven, the while,The sun, that sends that gale to wander here,Pours out on the fair earth his quiet smile,The sweetest of the...
William Cullen Bryant
You Were The Sort That Men Forget
You were the sort that men forget; Though I - not yet! -Perhaps not ever. Your slighted weaknessAdds to the strength of my regret!You'd not the art - you never had For good or bad -To make men see how sweet your meaning,Which, visible, had charmed them glad.You would, by words inept let fall, Offend them all,Even if they saw your warm devotionWould hold your life's blood at their call.You lacked the eye to understand Those friends offhandWhose mode was crude, though whose dim purportOutpriced the courtesies of the bland.I am now the only being who Remembers youIt may be. What a waste that NatureGrudged soul so dear the art its due!
Thomas Hardy
The Butterfly
I O wonderful and wingèd flow'r, That hoverest in the garden-close, Finding in mazes of the rose, The beauty of a Summer hour! O symbol of Impermanence, Thou art a word of Beauty's tongue, A word that in her song is sung, Appealing to the inner sense! Of that great mystic harmony, All lovely things are notes and words - The trees, the flow'rs, the songful birds, The flame-white stars, the surging sea, The aureate light of sudden dawn, The sunset's crimson afterglow, The summer clouds, the dazzling snow, The brooks, the moonlight chaste and wan. Lacking (who knows?) a cloud, a tree, A streamlet's purl, the ocean's roar From Nature's multi...
Clark Ashton Smith
Poems From "A Shropshire Lad" - LX
Now hollow fires burn out to black,And lights are guttering low:Square your shoulders, lift your pack,And leave your friends and go.Oh never fear, man, nought's to dread,Look not left nor right:In all the endless road you treadThere's nothing but the night.
Alfred Edward Housman
The River Duddon - A Series Of Sonnets, 1820. - XX - The Plain Of Donnerdale
The old inventive Poets, had they seen,Or rather felt, the entrancement that detainsThy waters, Duddon! 'mid these flowery plainsThe still repose, the liquid lapse serene,Transferred to bowers imperishably green,Had beautified Elysium! But these chainsWill soon be broken; a rough course remains,Rough as the past; where Thou, of placid mien,Innocuous as a firstling of the flock,And countenanced like a soft cerulean sky,Shalt change thy temper; and, with many a shockGiven and received in mutual jeopardy,Dance, like a Bacchanal, from rock to rock,Tossing her frantic thyrsus wide and high!
The Wind Of Spring
The wind that breathes of columbinesAnd celandines that crowd the rocks;That shakes the balsam of the pinesWith laughter from his airy locks,Stops at my city door and knocks.He calls me far a-forest, whereThe twin-leaf and the blood-root bloom;And, circled by the amber air,Life sits with beauty and perfumeWeaving the new web of her loom.He calls me where the waters runThrough fronding ferns where wades the hern;And, sparkling in the equal sun,Song leans above her brimming urn,And dreams the dreams that love shall learn.The wind has summoned, and I go:To read God's meaning in each lineThe wildflowers write; and, walking slow,God's purpose, of which song is sign, -The wind's great, gusty hand in mine.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Butterfly's Day.
From cocoon forth a butterflyAs lady from her doorEmerged -- a summer afternoon --Repairing everywhere,Without design, that I could trace,Except to stray abroadOn miscellaneous enterpriseThe clovers understood.Her pretty parasol was seenContracting in a fieldWhere men made hay, then struggling hardWith an opposing cloud,Where parties, phantom as herself,To Nowhere seemed to goIn purposeless circumference,As 't were a tropic show.And notwithstanding bee that worked,And flower that zealous blew,This audience of idlenessDisdained them, from the sky,Till sundown crept, a steady tide,And men that made the hay,And afternoon, and butterfly,Extinguished in its sea.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
On A Noisy Polemic.
Below thir stanes lie Jamie's banes: O Death, it's my opinion, Thou ne'er took such a blethrin' b--ch Into thy dark dominion!
Robert Burns
Time From His Grave
When the south-west wind cameThe air grew bright and sweet, as though a flameHad cleansed the world of winter. The low skyAs the wind lifted it rose trembling vast and high,And white clouds sallied byAs children in their pleasure goChasing the sun beneath the orchard's shadow and snow.Nothing, nothing was the same!Not the dull brick, not the stained London stone,Not the delighted trees that lost their moan--Their moan that daily vexed me with such painUntil I hated to see trees again;Nor man nor woman was the sameNor could be stones again,Such light and colour with the south-west came.As I drank all that brightness up I sawA dark globe lapt in fold on fold of gloom,With all her hosts asleep in that cold tomb,Sealed by an iron law.
John Frederick Freeman
Stanzas.[1]
(FROM TYLNEY HALL.)Still glides the gentle streamlet on,With shifting current new and strange;The water that was here is gone,But those green shadows do not change.Serene, or ruffled by the storm,On present waves as on the past,The mirrored grave retains its form,The self-same trees their semblance cast.The hue each fleeting globule wears,That drop bequeaths it to the next,One picture still the surface bears,To illustrate the murmured text.So, love, however time may flow,Fresh hours pursuing those that fleeOne constant image still shall showMy tide of life is true to thee!
Thomas Hood