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Voices Of Hope
It is the hither side, O Hope,And afternoon; our shadows slopeBackward along the mountain cope.The early morning was so sweet,We seemed to climb with winged feet,Like moving vapors fine and fleet,Not more elastic poised and swungHarebell or yellow adder's tongue,Nor blither any bird that sung.Thy light foot bent not any stemOf frailest plant, whose diademIn passing kissed thy garment's hem.O Hope! so near me and so bright,Thy foot above me on the height,I might not touch thy garments white.Thy lifted face, so fair, so rapt,Like sunshine rolled and overlappedCliff, slope, and tall peak thunder-capped.Thy voice to me like silver brooksDown dropped from secret mountain nooks,Still drew me...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Late October.
Ah, haughty hills, sardonic solitudes,What wizard touch hath, crowning you with gold,Cast Tyrian purple o'er broad-shouldered woods,And to your pride anointed empire soldFor wan traditioned death, whose misty moodsShake each huge throne of quarried shadows cold?Now where the agate-foliaged forests sleep,Bleak briars are ruby-berried, and the brushFlames - when the winds armsful of motion heapIn wincing gusts upon it - amber blush;The beech an inner beryle breaks from deepEncrusting topaz of a sullen flush.Dead gold, dead bronze, dull amethystine rose,Rose cameo, in day's gray, somber sparOf smoky quartz - intaglioed beauty - glowsLuxuriance of color. Trunks that areVast organs antheming the winds' wild woesA faded sun and pale...
Madison Julius Cawein
A Blown Rose.
Lay but a finger onThat pallid petal sweet,It trembles gray and wanBeneath the passing feet.But soft! blown rose, we knowA merriment of bloom,A life of sturdy glow, -But no such dear perfume.As some good bard, whose pageOf life with beauty's fraught,Grays on to ripe old ageSweet-mellowed through with thought.So when his hoary headIs wept into the tomb,The mind, which is not dead,Sheds round it rare perfume.
The Suicide
"Curse thee, Life, I will live with thee no more! Thou hast mocked me, starved me, beat my body sore! And all for a pledge that was not pledged by me, I have kissed thy crust and eaten sparingly That I might eat again, and met thy sneers With deprecations, and thy blows with tears,-- Aye, from thy glutted lash, glad, crawled away, As if spent passion were a holiday! And now I go. Nor threat, nor easy vow Of tardy kindness can avail thee now With me, whence fear and faith alike are flown; Lonely I came, and I depart alone, And know not where nor unto whom I go; But that thou canst not follow me I know." Thus I to Life, and ceased; but through my brain My thought ran still, until I spake again:<...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Poem: Requiescat
Tread lightly, she is nearUnder the snow,Speak gently, she can hearThe daisies grow.All her bright golden hairTarnished with rust,She that was young and fairFallen to dust.Lily-like, white as snow,She hardly knewShe was a woman, soSweetly she grew.Coffin-board, heavy stone,Lie on her breast,I vex my heart alone,She is at rest.Peace, Peace, she cannot hearLyre or sonnet,All my life's buried here,Heap earth upon it.AVIGNON
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
Farewell And Defiance To Love
Love and thy vain employs, awayFrom this too oft deluded breast!No longer will I court thy stay,To be my bosom's teazing guest.Thou treacherous medicine, reckoned pure,Thou quackery of the harassed heart,That kills what it pretends to cure,Life's mountebank thou art.With nostrums vain of boasted powers,That, ta'en, a worse disorder leave;An asp hid in a group of flowers,That bites and stings when few perceive;Thou mock-truce to the troubled mind,Leading it more in sorrow's way,Freedom, that leaves us more confined,I bid thee hence away.Dost taunt, and deem thy power beyondThe resolution reason gave?Tut! Falsity hath snapt each bond,That kept me once thy quiet slave,And made thy snare a spider's thread,W...
John Clare
Sonnet LXXI.
Piangete, donne, e con voi pianga Amore.ON THE DEATH OF CINO DA PISTOIA. Weep, beauteous damsels, and let Cupid weep,Of every region weep, ye lover train;He, who so skilfully attuned his strainTo your fond cause, is sunk in death's cold sleep!Such limits let not my affliction keep,As may the solace of soft tears restrain;And, to relieve my bosom of its pain,Be all my sighs tumultuous, utter'd deep!Let song itself, and votaries of verse,Breathe mournful accents o'er our Cino's bier,Who late is gone to number with the blest!Oh! weep, Pistoia, weep your sons perverse;Its choicest habitant has fled our sphere,And heaven may glory in its welcome guest!NOTT. Ye damsels, pour your tears! weep with...
Francesco Petrarca
Music In The Bush
O'er the dark pines she sees the silver moon,And in the west, all tremulous, a star;And soothing sweet she hears the mellow tuneOf cow-bells jangled in the fields afar.Quite listless, for her daily stent is done,She stands, sad exile, at her rose-wreathed door,And sends her love eternal with the sunThat goes to gild the land she'll see no more.The grave, gaunt pines imprison her sad gaze,All still the sky and darkling drearily;She feels the chilly breath of dear, dead daysCome sifting through the alders eerily.Oh, how the roses riot in their bloom!The curtains stir as with an ancient pain;Her old piano gleams from out the gloom,And waits and waits her tender touch in vain.But now her hands like moonlight brush the keys
Robert William Service
Sonnet CXCV.
I' mi vivea di mia sorte contento.HE FEARS THAT AN ILLNESS WHICH HAS ATTACKED THE EYES OF LAURA MAY DEPRIVE HIM OF THEIR SIGHT. I lived so tranquil, with my lot content,No sorrow visited, nor envy pined,To other loves if fortune were more kindOne pang of mine their thousand joys outwent;But those bright eyes, whence never I repentThe pains I feel, nor wish them less to find,So dark a cloud and heavy now does blind,Seems as my sun of life in them were spent.O Nature! mother pitiful yet stern,Whence is the power which prompts thy wayward deeds,Such lovely things to make and mar in turn?True, from one living fount all power proceeds:But how couldst Thou consent, great God of Heaven,That aught should rob the world of what thy ...
Sonnet XCV.
On the damp margin of the sea-beat shore Lonely at eve to wander; - or reclin'd Beneath a rock, what time the rising wind Mourns o'er the waters, and, with solemn roar,Vast billows into caverns surging pour, And back recede alternate; while combin'd Loud shriek the sea-fowls, harbingers assign'd, Clamorous and fearful, of the stormy hour;To listen with deep thought those awful sounds; Gaze on the boiling, the tumultuous waste, Or promontory rude, or craggy moundsStaying the furious main, delight has cast O'er my rapt spirit, and my thrilling heart, Dear as the softer joys green vales impart.
Anna Seward
Jessie
When Jessie comes with her soft breast,And yields the golden keys,Then is it as if God caress'dTwin babes upon His knees,Twin babes that, each to other press'd,Just feel the Father's arms, wherewith they both are bless'd.But when I think if we must part,And all this personal dream be fled,O then my heart! O then my useless heart!Would God that thou wert dead,A clod insensible to joys and ills,A stone remote in some bleak gully of the hills!
Thomas Edward Brown
Kenotaphion.
O wanderer! whoever thou mayest be, I beg of thee to pass in silence here And leave me with my empty sepulchreBeside the ceaseless turmoil of the sea;Pass me as one whom life's old tragedy Hath made distraught--who now in dreams doth keep His cherished dead, unmindful of her sleepIn ocean's bosom locked eternally!Scorn not the foolish grave that I have made Beside the deep sea of my soul's unrest,But let me hope that when the storms are stayed My phantom ship shall sail from out the westBringing the boon for which I long have prayed-- The broken vigil and the ended quest.
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
The Old Men
Old and alone, sit we,Caged, riddle-rid men;Lost to Earth's "Listen!" and "See!"Thought's "Wherefore?" and "When?"Only far memories strayOf a past once lovely, but nowWasted and faded away,Like green leaves from the bough.Vast broods the silence of night,The ruinous moonLifts on our faces her light,Whence all dreaming is gone.We speak not; trembles each head;In their sockets our eyes are still;Desire as cold as the dead;Without wonder or will.And One, with a lanthorn, draws near,At clash with the moon in our eyes:"Where art thou?" he asks: "I am here,"One by one we arise.And none lifts a hand to withholdA friend from the touch of that foe:Heart cries unto heart, "Thou art old!"Ye...
Walter De La Mare
To Laura In Death. Sonnet IV.
La vita fugge, e non s' arresta un' ora.PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE ARE NOW ALIKE PAINFUL TO HIM. Life passes quick, nor will a moment stay,And death with hasty journeys still draws near;And all the present joins my soul to tear,With every past and every future day:And to look back or forward, so does preyOn this distracted breast, that sure I swear,Did I not to myself some pity bear,I were e'en now from all these thoughts away.Much do I muse on what of pleasures pastThis woe-worn heart has known; meanwhile, t' opposeMy passage, loud the winds around me roar.I see my bliss in port, and torn my mastAnd sails, my pilot faint with toil, and thoseFair lights, that wont to guide me, now no more.ANON., OX., 1795....
The City Of The End Of Things
Beside the pounding cataractsOf midnight streams unknown to us'Tis builded in the leafless tractsAnd valleys huge of Tartarus.Lurid and lofty and vast it seems;It hath no rounded name that rings,But I have heard it called in dreamsThe City of the End of Things.Its roofs and iron towers have grownNone knoweth how high within the night,But in its murky streets far downA flaming terrible and brightShakes all the stalking shadows there,Across the walls, across the floors,And shifts upon the upper airFrom out a thousand furnace doors;And all the while an awful soundKeeps roaring on continually,And crashes in the ceaseless roundOf a gigantic harmony.Through its grim depths re-echoingAnd all its weary height o...
Archibald Lampman
Speak!
Why art thou silent! Is thy love a plantOf such weak fibre that the treacherous airOf absence withers what was once so fair?Is there no debt to pay, no boon to grant?Yet have my thoughts for thee been vigilantBound to thy service with unceasing care,The minds least generous wish a mendicantFor nought but what thy happiness could spare.Speak though this soft warm heart, once free to holdA thousand tender pleasures, thine and mine,Be left more desolate, more dreary coldThan a forsaken birds-nest filled with snowMid its own bush of leafless eglantineSpeak, that my torturing doubts their end may know!
William Wordsworth
Cupids Funeral
By his side, whose days are past,Lay bow and quiver!And his eyes that stare aghastClose, with a shiver.God nor man from Death, at last,Love may deliver.Though, of old, we vowed, my dear,Death should not take him;Mourn not thou that we must hereColdly forsake him;Shed above his grave no tear,Tears will not wake him.Cupid lieth cold and dead,Ended his flying,Pale his lips, once rosy-red,Swift was his dying.Place a stone above his head,Turn away, sighing.
Victor James Daley
De Amore
Shall one be sorrowful because of love,Which hath no earthly crown,Which lives and dies, unknown?Because no words of his shall ever moveHer maiden heart to ownHim lord and destined master of her own:Is Love so weak a thing as this,Who can not lie awake,Solely for his own sake,For lack of the dear hands to hold, the lips to kiss,A mere heart-ache?Nay, though love's victories be great and sweet,Nor vain and foolish toys,His crowned, earthly joys,Is there no comfort then in love's defeat?Because he shall defer,For some short span of years all part in her,Submitting to foregoThe certain peace which happier lovers know;Because he shall be utterly disowned,Nor length of service bringHer least awakening:Foiled...
Ernest Christopher Dowson