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Prologue, Spoken At The Theatre, Dumfries, 1 Jan. 1790.
No song nor dance I bring from yon great city That queens it o'er our taste, the more's the pity: Tho', by-the-by, abroad why will you roam? Good sense and taste are natives here at home: But not for panegyric I appear, I come to wish you all a good new year! Old Father Time deputes me here before ye, Not for to preach, but tell his simple story: The sage grave ancient cough'd, and bade me say, "You're one year older this important day." If wiser too, he hinted some suggestion, But 'twould be rude, you know, to ask the question; And with a would-be roguish leer and wink, He bade me on you press this one word, "think!" Ye sprightly youths, quite flushed with hope and spirit, Who think to storm...
Robert Burns
Paths
I.What words of mine can tell the spellOf garden ways I know so well?The path that takes me in the springPast quince-trees where the bluebirds sing,And peonies are blossoming,Unto a porch, wistaria-hung,Around whose steps May-lilies blow,A fair girl reaches down among,Her arm more white than their sweet snow.II.What words of mine can tell the spellOf garden ways I know so well?Another path that leads me, whenThe summer time is here again,Past hollyhocks that shame the westWhen the red sun has sunk to rest;To roses bowering a nest,A lattice, 'neath which mignonetteAnd deep geraniums surge and sough,Where, in the twilight, starless yet,A fair girl's eyes are stars enough.III....
Madison Julius Cawein
The Wanderer's Storm-Song.
He whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,Feels no dread within his heartAt the tempest or the rain.He whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,Will to the rain-clouds,Will to the hailstorm,Sing in replyAs the lark sings,Oh thou on high!Him whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,Thou wilt raise above the mud-trackWith thy fiery pinions.He will wander,As, with flowery feet,Over Deucalion's dark flood,Python-slaying, light, glorious,Pythius Apollo.Him whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,Thou wilt place upon thy fleecy pinionWhen he sleepeth on the rock,Thou wilt shelter with thy guardian wingIn the forest's midnight hour.Him whom thou ne'er leavest, Genius,Thou wilt wrap up warmlyIn the snow-drift;Tow'...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
April
The April winds are magicalAnd thrill our tuneful frames;The garden walks are passionalTo bachelors and dames.The hedge is gemmed with diamonds,The air with Cupids full,The cobweb clues of RosamondGuide lovers to the pool.Each dimple in the water,Each leaf that shades the rockCan cozen, pique and flatter,Can parley and provoke.Goodfellow, Puck and goblins,Know more than any book.Down with your doleful problems,And court the sunny brook.The south-winds are quick-witted,The schools are sad and slow,The masters quite omittedThe lore we care to know.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
To Virgil
I.Roman Virgil, thou that singestIlions lofty temples robed in fire,Ilion falling, Rome arising,wars, and filial faith, and Didos pyre;II.Landscape-lover, lord of languagemore than he that sang the Works and Days,All the chosen coin of fancyflashing out from many a golden phrase;III.Thou that singest wheat and woodland,tilth and vineyard, hive and horse and herd;All the charm of all the Musesoften flowering in a lonely word;IV.Poet of the happy Tityruspiping underneath his beechen bowers;Poet of the poet-satyrwhom the laughing shepherd bound with flowers;V.Chanter of the Pollio, gloryingin the blissful years again to be,Summers of the snakeless m...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Child At The Gate
The sunset was a sleepy gold,And stars were in the skiesWhen down a weedy lane he strolledIn vague and thoughtless wise.And then he saw it, near a wood,An old house, gabled brown,Like some old woman, in a hood,Looking toward the town.A child stood at its broken gate,Singing a childish song,And weeping softly as if FateHad done her child's heart wrong.He spoke to her:"Now tell me, dear,Why do you sing and weep?"But she she did not seem to hear,But stared as if asleep.Then suddenly she turned and fledAs if with soul of fear.He followed; but the house looked dead,And empty many a year.The light was wan: the dying dayGrew ghostly suddenly:And from the house he turned away,Wrapp...
Gold Leaves
Lo! I am come to autumn,When all the leaves are gold;Grey hairs and golden leaves cry outThe year and I are old.In youth I sought the prince of men,Captain in cosmic wars,Our Titan, even the weeds would showDefiant, to the stars.But now a great thing in the streetSeems any human nod,Where shift in strange democracyThe million masks of God.In youth I sought the golden flowerHidden in wood or wold,But I am come to autumn,When all the leaves are gold.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
The Lover Tells Of The Rose In His Heart
All things uncomely and broken, all things worn outand old,The cry of a child by the roadway, the creak of a lum-bering cart,The heavy steps of the ploughman, splashing thewintry mould,Are wronging your image that blossoms a rose in thedeeps of my heart.The wrong of unshapely things is a wrong too greatto be told;I hunger to build them anew and sit on a green knollapart,With the earth and the sky and the water, re-made, likea casket of goldFor my dreams of your image that blossoms a rose inthe deeps of my heart.
William Butler Yeats
Tis The Last Rose Of Summer.
'Tis the last rose of summer Left blooming alone;All her lovely companions Are faded and gone;No flower of her kindred, No rose-bud is nigh,To reflect back her blushes, Or give sigh for sigh.I'll not leave thee, thou lone one! To pine on the stem;Since the lovely are sleeping. Go, sleep thou with them.Thus kindly I scatter Thy leaves o'er the bed,Where thy mates of the garden Lie scentless and dead.So soon may I follow, When friendships decay,And from Love's shining circle The gems drop away.When true hearts lie withered, And fond ones are flown,Oh! who would inhabit This bleak world alone?
Thomas Moore
Moonset
Past seven o'clock: time to be gone;Twelfth-night's over and dawn shivering up:A hasty cut of the loaf, a steaming cup,Down to the door, and there is Coachman John.Ruddy of cheek is John and bright of eye;But John it appears has none of your grins and winks;Civil enough, but short: perhaps he thinks:Words come once in a mile, and always dry.Has he a mind or not? I wonder; but soonWe turn through a leafless wood, and there to the right,Like a sun bewitched in alien realms of night,Mellow and yellow and rounded hangs the moon.Strangely near she seems, and terribly great:The world is dead: why are we travelling still?Nightmare silence grips my struggling will;We are driving for ever and ever to find a gate."When you come to...
Henry John Newbolt
Hail, Twilight, Sovereign Of One Peaceful Hour
Hail Twilight, sovereign of one peaceful hour!Not dull art Thou as undiscerning Night;But studious only to remove from sightDay's mutable distinctions. Ancient Power!Thus did the waters gleam, the mountains lower,To the rude Briton, when, in wolf-skin vestHere roving wild, he laid him down to restOn the bare rock, or through a leafy bowerLooked ere his eyes were closed. By him was seenThe self-same Vision which we now behold;At thy meek bidding, shadowy Power! brought forthThese mighty barriers, and the gulf between;The flood, the stars, a spectacle as oldAs the beginning of the heavens and earth!
William Wordsworth
Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part II. - XLIII - Illustration
The Jung-Frau And The Fall Of The Rhine Near Schaffhausen,The Virgin Mountain, wearing like a QueenA brilliant crown of everlasting snow,Sheds ruin from her sides; and men belowWonder that aught of aspect so sereneCan link with desolation. Smooth and green,And seeming, at a little distance, slow,The waters of the Rhine; but on they goFretting and whitening, keener and more keen;Till madness seizes on the whole wide Flood,Turned to a fearful Thing whose nostrils breatheBlasts of tempestuous smoke, wherewith he triesTo hide himself, but only magnifies;And doth in more conspicuous torment writhe,Deafening the region in his ireful mood.
The Park
The prosperous and beautifulTo me seem not to wearThe yoke of conscience masterful,Which galls me everywhere.I cannot shake off the god;On my neck he makes his seat;I look at my face in the glass,--My eyes his eyeballs meet.Enchanters! Enchantresses!Your gold makes you seem wise;The morning mist within your groundsMore proudly rolls, more softly lies.Yet spake yon purple mountain,Yet said yon ancient wood,That Night or Day, that Love or Crime,Leads all souls to the Good.
Where Three Roads Joined
Where three roads joined it was green and fair,And over a gate was the sun-glazed sea,And life laughed sweet when I halted there;Yet there I never again would be.I am sure those branchways are brooding now,With a wistful blankness upon their face,While the few mute passengers notice howSpectre-beridden is the place;Which nightly sighs like a laden soul,And grieves that a pair, in bliss for a spellNot far from thence, should have let it rollAway from them down a plumbless wellWhile the phasm of him who fared starts up,And of her who was waiting him sobs from near,As they haunt there and drink the wormwood cupThey filled for themselves when their sky was clear.Yes, I see those roads now rutted and bare,While over the...
Thomas Hardy
Sketch. - New Year's Day. To Mrs. Dunlop.
This day, Time winds th' exhausted chain, To run the twelvemonth's length again: I see the old, bald-pated follow, With ardent eyes, complexion sallow, Adjust the unimpair'd machine, To wheel the equal, dull routine. The absent lover, minor heir, In vain assail him with their prayer; Deaf as my friend, he sees them press, Nor makes the hour one moment less. Will you (the Major's with the hounds, The happy tenants share his rounds; Coila's fair Rachel's care to-day, And blooming Keith's engaged with Gray) From housewife cares a minute borrow, That grandchild's cap will do to-morrow, And join with me a moralizing, This day's propitious to be wise in. First, what did...
The Seed Shop.
Here in a quiet and dusty room they lie, Faded as crumbled stone or shifting sand, Forlorn as ashes, shrivelled, scentless, dry - Meadows and gardens running through my hand. Dead that shall quicken at the call of Spring, Sleepers to stir beneath June's magic kiss, Though birds pass over, unremembering, And no bee seek here roses that were his. In this brown husk a dale of hawthorn dreams A cedar in this narrow cell is thrust That will drink deeply of a century's streams, These lilies shall make summer on my dust. Here in their safe and simple house of death, Sealed in their shells a million roses leap; Here I can blow a garden with my breath, And in my hand a forest lies asleep.
Muriel Stuart
If You Had Known
If you had knownWhen listening with her to the far-down moanOf the white-selvaged and empurpled sea,And rain came on that did not hinder talk,Or damp your flashing facile gaietyIn turning home, despite the slow wet walkBy crooked ways, and over stiles of stone;If you had knownYou would lay roses,Fifty years thence, on her monument, that disclosesIts graying shape upon the luxuriant green;Fifty years thence to an hour, by chance led there,What might have moved you? yea, had you foreseenThat on the tomb of the selfsame one, gone whereThe dawn of every day is as the close is,You would lay roses!
Memorials Of A Tour Of Scotland, 1803 VI. Glen-Almain, Or, The Narrow Glen
In this still place, remote from men,Sleeps Ossian, in the NARROW GLEN;In this still place, where murmurs onBut one meek streamlet, only one:He sang of battles, and the breathOf stormy war, and violent death;And should, methinks, when all was past,Have rightfully been laid at lastWhere rocks were rudely heaped, and rentAs by a spirit turbulent;Where sights were rough, and sounds were wild,And everything unreconciled;In some complaining, dim retreat,For fear and melancholy meet;But this is calm; there cannot beA more entire tranquillity.Does then the Bard sleep here indeed?Or is it but a groundless creed?What matters it? I blame them notWhose Fancy in this lonely SpotWas moved; and in such way expressedTheir notion ...