Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 176 of 206
Previous
Next
Mary.
The drowsy summer in the flowering limesHad laid her down at ease,Lulled by soft, sportive winds, whose tinkling chimesSummoned the wandering beesTo feast, and dance, and hold high carnivalWithin that vast and fragrant banquet-hall.She stood, my Mary, on the wall below,Poised on light, arching feet,And drew the long, green branches down to showWhere hung, mid odors sweet,--A tiny miracle to touch and view,--The humming-bird's, small nest and pearls of blue.Fair as the summer's self she stood, and smiled,With eyes like summer sky,Wistful and glad, half-matron and half-child,Gentle and proud and shy;Her sweet head framed against the blossoming bough,She stood a moment,--and she stands there now!'Tis sixteen years sin...
Susan Coolidge
A Reverie ["Those hearts of ours -- how strange! how strange!"]
Those hearts of ours -- how strange! how strange!How they yearn to ramble and love to rangeDown through the vales of the years long gone,Up through the future that fast rolls on.To-days are dull -- so they wend their waysBack to their beautiful yesterdays;The present is blank -- so they wing their flightTo future to-morrows where all seems bright.Build them a bright and beautiful home,They'll soon grow weary and want to roam;Find them a spot without sorrow or pain,They may stay a day, but they're off again.Those hearts of ours -- how wild! how wild!They're as hard to tame as an Indian child;They're as restless as waves on the sounding sea,Like the breeze and the bird are they fickle and free.Those hearts of ours -- how l...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Love-Wonder.
Or whether sad or joyous be her hours,Yet ever is she good and ever fair.If she be glad, 'tis like a child's wild air,Who claps her hands above a heap of flowers;And if she's sad, it is no cloud that lowers,Rather a saint's pale grace, whose golden hairGleams like a crown, whose eyes are like a prayerFrom some quiet window under minster towers.But ah, Beloved, how shall I be taughtTo tell this truth in any rhymed line?For words and woven phrases fall to naught,Lost in the silence of one dream divine,Wrapped in the beating wonder of this thought:Even thou, who art so precious, thou art mine!
Archibald Lampman
Cristina
I.She should never have looked at meIf she meant I should not love her!There are plenty . . . men, you call such,I suppose . . . she may discoverAll her soul to, if she pleases,And yet leave much as she found them:But Im not so, and she knew itWhen she fixed me, glancing round them,II.What? To fix me thus meant nothing?But I cant tell . . . theres my weakness . . .What her look said! no vile cant, sure,About need to strew the bleaknessOf some lone shore with its pearl-seed.That the sea feels no strange yearningThat such souls have, most to lavishWhere theres chance of least returning.III.Oh, were sunk enough here, God knows!But not quite so sunk that moments,Sure tho seld...
Robert Browning
Patience Of Hope.
The flowers that bloom in sun and shadeAnd glitter in the dew,The flowers must fade.The birds that build their nest and singWhen lovely spring is new,Must soon take wing.The sun that rises in his strengthTo wake and warm the world,Must set at length.The sea that overflows the shoreWith billows frothed and curled,Must ebb once more.All come and go, all wax and wane,O Lord, save only ThouWho dost remainThe Same to all eternity.All things which fail us nowWe trust to Thee.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Canzone XIV.
Chiare, fresche e dolci acque.TO THE FOUNTAIN OF VAUOLUSE--CONTEMPLATIONS OF DEATH. Ye limpid brooks, by whose clear streamsMy goddess laid her tender limbs!Ye gentle boughs, whose friendly shadeGave shelter to the lovely maid!Ye herbs and flowers, so sweetly press'dBy her soft rising snowy breast!Ye Zephyrs mild, that breathed aroundThe place where Love my heart did wound!Now at my summons all appear,And to my dying words give ear.If then my destiny requires,And Heaven with my fate conspires,That Love these eyes should weeping close,Here let me find a soft repose.So Death will less my soul affright,And, free from dread, my weary sprightNaked alone will dare t' essayThe still unknown, though b...
Francesco Petrarca
Rest
I. When round the earth the Father's hands Have gently drawn the dark; Sent off the sun to fresher lands, And curtained in the lark; 'Tis sweet, all tired with glowing day, To fade with fading light, And lie once more, the old weary way, Upfolded in the night. If mothers o'er our slumbers bend, And unripe kisses reap, In soothing dreams with sleep they blend, Till even in dreams we sleep. And if we wake while night is dumb, 'Tis sweet to turn and say, It is an hour ere dawning come, And I will sleep till day.II. There is a dearer, warmer bed, Where one all day may lie, Earth's bosom pillowing the hea...
George MacDonald
Childish Recollections.
"Perhaps it is foolish to remark it, but there are times and places when I am a child at those things"--MACKENZIE.Each scene of youth to me's a pleasing toy,Which memory, like a lover, doats upon;And mix'd with them I am again a boy,With tears and sighs regretting pleasures gone.Ah! with enthusiast excesses wildThe scenes of childhood meet my moist'ning eye,And with the very weakness of a childI feel the raptures of delights gone by.And still I fancy, as around I strollEach boyish scene, to mark the sport and game,Others are living with a self-like soul,That think, and love such trifles, just the same.An old familiar spot I witness here,With young companions where we oft have met:Tho' since we play'd 'tis bleach'd with m...
John Clare
Maceo.
Maceo dead! a thrill of sorrow Through our hearts in sadness ranWhen we felt in one sad hour That the world had lost a man.He had clasped unto his bosom The sad fortunes of his land -Held the cause for which he perished With a firm, unfaltering hand.On his lips the name of freedom Fainted with his latest breath.Cuba Libre was his watchword Passing through the gates of death.With the light of God around us, Why this agony and strife?With the cross of Christ before us, Why this fearful waste of life?Must the pathway unto freedom Ever mark a crimson line,And the eyes of wayward mortals Always close to light divine?Must the hearts of fearless valor Fa...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Hampton Beach
The sunlight glitters keen and bright,Where, miles away,Lies stretching to my dazzled sightA luminous belt, a misty light,Beyond the dark pine bluffs and wastes of sandy gray.The tremulous shadow of the Sea!Against its groundOf silvery light, rock, hill, and tree,Still as a picture, clear and free,With varying outline mark the coast for miles around.On, on, we tread with loose-flung reinOur seaward way,Through dark-green fields and blossoming grain,Where the wild brier-rose skirts the lane,And bends above our heads the flowering locust spray.Ha! like a kind hand on my browComes this fresh breeze,Cooling its dull and feverish glow,While through my being seems to flowThe breath of a new life, the healing of the...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Ruination
The sun is bleeding its fires upon the mistThat huddles in grey heaps coiling and holding back.Like cliffs abutting in shadow a drear grey seaSome street-ends thrust forward their stack.On the misty waste-lands, away from the flushing greyOf the morning the elms are loftily dimmed, and tallAs if moving in air towards us, tall angelsOf darkness advancing steadily over us all.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
The Ballad Of Morbid Mothers
Why do you sit in the churchyard weeping?Why do you cling to the dear old graves,When the dim, drear mists of the dusk are creepingOut of the marshes in wan, white waves?Darling, I know you're a slave to sorrow;Dearie, I know that the world is cruel;But you'll be in bed with a cold to-morrow,I shall be running upstairs with gruel.Why do you weep on a tombstone, Mammy,Sobbing alone in the drizzling sleet,When the chill mists rise, and the wind strikes clammy?Think of your bones, and your poor old feet!Darling, I know that you feel lugubrious;Dearie, I know you must work this off;But graveyards are not, as a rule, salubrious,Whence the expression, a 'churchyard cough.'[The Old Lady explains her eccentric...
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
God-Forgotten
I towered far, and lo! I stood withinThe presence of the Lord Most High,Sent thither by the sons of earth, to winSome answer to their cry.- "The Earth, say'st thou? The Human race?By Me created? Sad its lot?Nay: I have no remembrance of such place:Such world I fashioned not." -- "O Lord, forgive me when I sayThou spak'st the word, and mad'st it all." -"The Earth of men - let me bethink me . . . Yea!I dimly do recall"Some tiny sphere I built long back(Mid millions of such shapes of mine)So named . . . It perished, surely - not a wrackRemaining, or a sign?"It lost my interest from the first,My aims therefor succeeding ill;Haply it died of doing as it durst?" -"Lord, it existeth still." -"Dark,...
Thomas Hardy
Sea Reverie
Strange Sea! why is it that you never rest?And tell me why you never go to sleep?Thou art like one so sad and sin-oppressed --(And the waves are the tears you weep) --And thou didst never sin -- what ails the sinless deep?To-night I hear you crying on the beach,Like a weary child on its mother's breast --A cry with an infinite and lonesome reachOf unutterably deep unrest;And thou didst never sin -- why art thou so distressed?But, ah, sad Sea! the mother's breast is warm,Where crieth the lone and the wearied child;And soft the arms that shield her own from harm;And her look is unutterably mild --But to-night, O Sea! thy cry is wild, so wild!What ails thee, Sea? The midnight stars are bright --How safe they lean on heaven's sinl...
The Other Woman.
You have shut me out from your tears and griefOver the man laid low and hoary.Listen to me now: I am no thief!You have shut me out from your tears and grief,Listen to me, I will tell my story.The love of a man is transitory.What do you know of his past? the yearsHe gave to another his manhood's glory?The love of a man is transitory.Listen to me now: open your ears.Over the dead have done with tears!Over the man who loved to madnessMe the woman you met with sneers,Over the dead have done with tears!Me the woman so sunk in badness.He loved me ever, and that is gladness!There by the dead now tell her so;There by the dead where she bows in sadness.He loved me ever, and that is gladness!Mine the gladness and hers ...
Madison Julius Cawein
I Grieved For Buonaparte
I grieved for Buonaparte, with a vainAnd an unthinking grief! The tenderest moodOf that Man's mind, what can it be? what foodFed his first hopes? what knowledge could 'he' gain?'Tis not in battles that from youth we trainThe Governor who must be wise and good,And temper with the sternness of the brainThoughts motherly, and meek as womanhood.Wisdom doth live with children round her knees:Books, leisure, perfect freedom, and the talkMan holds with week-day man in the hourly walkOf the mind's business: these are the degreesBy which true Sway doth mount; this is the stalkTrue Power doth grow on; and her rights are these.
William Wordsworth
After Death - Sonnet
The curtains were half drawn, the floor was swept And strewn with rushes, rosemary and may Lay thick upon the bed on which I lay,Where through the lattice ivy-shadows crept.He leaned above me, thinking that I slept And could not hear him; but I heard him say: 'Poor child, poor child:' and as he turned awayCame a deep silence, and I knew he wept.He did not touch the shroud, or raise the fold That hid my face, or take my hand in his, Or ruffle the smooth pillows for my head: He did not love me living; but once dead He pitied me; and very sweet it isTo know he still is warm though I am cold.
The Poet
IRight upward on the road of fameWith sounding steps the poet came;Born and nourished in miracles,His feet were shod with golden bells,Or where he stepped the soil did pealAs if the dust were glass and steel.The gallant child where'er he cameThrew to each fact a tuneful name.The things whereon he cast his eyesCould not the nations rebaptize,Nor Time's snows hide the names he set,Nor last posterity forget.Yet every scroll whereon he wroteIn latent fire his secret thought,Fell unregarded to the ground,Unseen by such as stood around.The pious wind took it away,The reverent darkness hid the lay.Methought like water-haunting birdsDivers or dippers were his words,And idle clowns beside the mereAt the new visi...
Ralph Waldo Emerson