Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 174 of 206
Previous
Next
The Newly Dead.
I.With the light just quenched in their eyesThey lie in their graves 'neath the skies,And the fresh clod restsHeavy upon their breasts.The white rose diesUpon the new-made mound, and underneathThe lily shrivels in the shriveling hand.Pale guests of sovereign Death,They sought their silent beds at his command,And it seemsStrange that their life-long dreamsShall find them no more,--never bid them ariseAnd go forth with a glory in their eyes.II.Still, voiceless, cold,They lie in their shrouds and holdThe crumbling links that makeA chain for Memory's sake,Broken, alas! too soon.Blithe morn and brazen noonAnd eve with garb of gray and gold,Know them no more in the dark ways they take....
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
Anthony O'Daly
Since your limbs were laid out The stars do not shine, The fish leap not out In the waves. On our meadows the dew Does not fall in the morn, For O'Daly is dead: Not a flower can be born, Not a word can be said, Not a tree have a leaf; Anthony, after you There is nothing to do, There is nothing but grief.
James Stephens
Stanzas.
If thou be in a lonely place,If one hour's calm be thine,As Evening bends her placid faceO'er this sweet day's decline;If all the earth and all the heavenNow look serene to thee,As o'er them shuts the summer even,One moment, think of me!Pause, in the lane, returning home;'Tis dusk, it will be still:Pause near the elm, a sacred gloomIts breezeless boughs will fill.Look at that soft and golden light,High in the unclouded sky;Watch the last bird's belated flight,As it flits silent by.Hark! for a sound upon the wind,A step, a voice, a sigh;If all be still, then yield thy mind,Unchecked, to memory.If thy love were like mine, how blestThat twilight hour would seem,When, back from the regretted Past,
Charlotte Bronte
South-Wind
Soft-throated South, breathing of summer's ease(Sweet breath, whereof the violet's life is made!)Through lips moist-warm, as thou hadst lately stayed'Mong rosebuds, wooing to the cheeks of theseLoth blushes faint and maidenly: - rich breeze,Still doth thy honeyed blowing bring a shadeOf sad foreboding. In thy hand is laidThe power to build or blight the fruit of trees,The deep, cool grass, and field of thick-combed grain.Even so my Love may bring me joy or woe,Both measureless, but either counted gainSince given by her. For pain and pleasure flowLike tides upon us of the self-same sea.Tears are the gems of joy and misery.
George Parsons Lathrop
Agamemnon's Tomb.
Uplift the ponderous, golden mask of death, And let the sun shine on him as it didHow many thousand years agone! Beneath This worm-defying, uncorrupted lid,Behold the young, heroic face, round-eyed,Of one who in his full-flowered manhood died; Of nobler frame than creatures of to-day,Swathed in fine linen cerecloths fold on fold,With carven weapons wrought of bronze and gold, Accoutred like a warrior for the fray.We gaze in awe at these huge-modeled limbs, Shrunk in death's narrow house, but hinting yetTheir ancient majesty; these sightless rims Whose living eyes the eyes of Helen met;The speechless lips that ah! what tales might tellOf earth's morning-tide when gods did dwell Amidst a generous-fashioned, god...
Emma Lazarus
The Two Sayings
Two savings of the Holy Scriptures beatLike pulses in the Church's brow and breast;And by them we find rest in our unrestAnd, heart deep in salt-tears, do yet entreatGod's fellowship as if on heavenly seat.The first is Jesus wept, whereon is prestFull many a sobbing face that drops its bestAnd sweetest waters on the record sweet:And one is where the Christ, denied and scornedLooked upon Peter. Oh, to render plainBy help of having loved a little and mourned,That look of sovran love and sovran painWhich He, who could not sin yet suffered, turnedOn him who could reject but not sustain!
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Memorials Of A Tour In Scotland 1814 I. Suggested By A Beautiful Ruin Upon One Of The Islands Of Loch Lomond
ITo barren heath, bleak moor, and quaking fen,Or depth of labyrinthine glen;Or into trackless forest setWith trees, whose lofty umbrage met;World-wearied Men withdrew of yore;(Penance their trust, and prayer their storeAnd in the wilderness were boundTo such apartments as they found,Or with a new ambition raised;That God might suitably be praised.IIHigh lodged the 'Warrior', like a bird of prey;Or where broad waters round him lay:But this wild Ruin is no ghostOf his devices buried, lost!Within this little lonely isleThere stood a consecrated Pile;Where tapers burned, and mass was sung,For them whose timid Spirits clungTo mortal succour, though the tombHad fixed, for ever fixed, their doom!
William Wordsworth
White Pansies
Day and night pass over, rounding,Star and cloud and sun,Things of drift and shadow, emptyOf my dearest one.Soft as slumber was my baby,Beaming bright and sweet;Daintier than bloom or jewelWere his hands and feet.He was mine, mine all, mine only,Mine and his the debt;Earth and Life and Time are changers;I shall not forget.Pansies for my dear one - heartsease -Set them gently so;For his stainless lips and forehead,Pansies white as snow.Would that in the flower-grown littleGrave they dug so deep,I might rest beside him, dreamless,Smile no more, nor weep.
Archibald Lampman
Songs Of The Summer Nights
I. The dreary wind of night is out, Homeless and wandering slow; O'er pale seas moaning like a doubt, It breathes, but will not blow. It sighs from out the helpless past, Where doleful things abide; Gray ghosts of dead thought sail aghast Across its ebbing tide. O'er marshy pools it faints and flows, All deaf and dumb and blind; O'er moor and mountain aimless goes-- The listless woesome wind! Nay, nay!--breathe on, sweet wind of night! The sigh is all in me; Flow, fan, and blow, with gentle might, Until I wake and see. II. The west is broken into bars Of orange, gold, and gray; Gone is the sun, fast come the stars,
George MacDonald
Her Last Letter
Sitting alone by the window, Watching the moonlit street,Bending my head to listen To the well-known sound of your feet,I have been wondering, darling, How I can bear the pain,When I watch, with sighs and tear-wet eyes, And wait for your coming in vain.For I know that a day approaches When your heart will tire of me;When by door and gate I may watch and wait For a form I shall not see;When the love that is now my heaven, The kisses that make my life,You will bestow on another, And that other will be - your wife.You will grow weary of sinning (Though you do not call it so),You will long for a love that is purer Than the love that we two know.God knows I have loved you dearly,
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Written In Very Early Youth
Calm is all nature as a resting wheel.The kine are couched upon the dewy grass;The horse alone, seen dimly as I pass,Is cropping audibly his later meal:Dark is the ground; a slumber seems to stealO'er vale, and mountain, and the starless sky.Now, in this blank of things, a harmony,Home-felt, and home-created, comes to healThat grief for which the senses still supplyFresh food; for only then, when memoryIs hushed, am I at rest. My Friends! restrainThose busy cares that would allay my pain;Oh! leave me to myself, nor let me feelThe officious touch that makes me droop again.
Ghosts Of A Lunatic Asylum
Here, where men's eyes were empty and as brightAs the blank windows set in glaring brick,When the wind strengthens from the sea -- and nightDrops like a fog and makes the breath come thick;By the deserted paths, the vacant halls,One may see figures, twisted shades and lean,Like the mad shapes that crawl an Indian screen,Or paunchy smears you find on prison walls.Turn the knob gently! There's the Thumbless Man,Still weaving glass and silk into a dream,Although the wall shows through him -- and the KhanJourneys Cathay beside a paper stream.A Rabbit Woman chitters by the door ---- Chilly the grave-smell comes from the turned sod --Come -- lift the curtain -- and be cold beforeThe silence of the eight men who were God!
Stephen Vincent Benét
The Youth Of Man
We, O Nature, depart:Thou survivest us: this,This, I know, is the law.Yes, but more than this,Thou who seest us dieSeest us change while we live;Seest our dreams one by one,Seest our errors depart:Watchest us, Nature, throughout,Mild and inscrutably calm.Well for us that we change!Well for us that the PowerWhich in our morning primeSaw the mistakes of our youth,Sweet, and forgiving, and good,Sees the contrition of age!Behold, O Nature, this pair!See them to-night where they stand,Not with the halo of youthCrowning their brows with its light,Not with the sunshine of hope,Not with the rapture of spring,Which they had of old, when they stoodYears ago at my sideIn this self same garden, an...
Matthew Arnold
Among The Tombs
She is a lady fair and wise, Her heart her counsel keeps,And well she knows of time that flies And tide that onward sweeps;But still she sits with restless eyes Where Memory sleeps--- Where Memory sleeps.Ye that have heard the whispering dead In every wind that creeps,Or felt the stir that strains the lead Beneath the mounded heaps,Tread softly, ah! more softly tread Where Memory sleeps--- Where Memory sleeps.
Henry John Newbolt
The Complaint Of Ceres. [29]
Does pleasant spring return once more?Does earth her happy youth regain?Sweet suns green hills are shining o'er;Soft brooklets burst their icy chain:Upon the blue translucent riverLaughs down an all-unclouded day,The winged west winds gently quiver,The buds are bursting from the spray;While birds are blithe on every tree;The Oread from the mountain-shoreSighs, "Lo! thy flowers come back to theeThy child, sad mother, comes no more!"Alas! how long an age it seemsSince all the earth I wandered over,And vainly, Titan, tasked thy beamsThe loved the lost one to discover!Though all may seek yet none can callHer tender presence back to meThe sun, with eyes detecting all,Is blind one vanished form to see.Hast thou, O Zeus! ...
Friedrich Schiller
The Mad Wind
What hast thou seen, O wind, Of beauty or of terror Surpassing, denied to us, That with precipitate wings, Mad and ecstatical, Thou spurnest the hollows and trees That offer thee refuge of peace, And findest within the sky No safety nor respite From the memory of thy vision?
Clark Ashton Smith
Asleep.
As far from pity as complaint,As cool to speech as stone,As numb to revelationAs if my trade were bone.As far from time as history,As near yourself to-dayAs children to the rainbow's scarf,Or sunset's yellow playTo eyelids in the sepulchre.How still the dancer lies,While color's revelations break,And blaze the butterflies!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
The Sacrifice Of Er-Heb
Er-Heb beyond the Hills of Ao-SafaiBears witness to the truth, and Ao-SafaiHath told the men of Gorukh. Thence the taleComes westward o'er the peaks to India.The story of Bisesa, Armod's child,A maiden plighted to the Chief in War,The Man of Sixty Spears, who held the PassThat leads to Thibet, but to-day is goneTo seek his comfort of the God called BudhThe Silent showing how the Sickness ceasedBecause of her who died to save the tribe.Taman is One and greater than us all,Taman is One and greater than all Gods:Taman is Two in One and rides the sky,Curved like a stallion's croup, from dusk to dawn,And drums upon it with his heels, wherebyIs bred the neighing thunder in the hills.This is Taman, the God of all Er-Heb,W...
Rudyard