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The Garden. (From Gilbert)
Above the city hung the moon,Right o'er a plot of groundWhere flowers and orchard-trees were fencedWith lofty walls around:'Twas Gilbert's garden, there to-nightAwhile he walked alone;And, tired with sedentary toil,Mused where the moonlight shone.This garden, in a city-heart,Lay still as houseless wild,Though many-windowed mansion frontsWere round it; closely piled;But thick their walls, and those withinLived lives by noise unstirred;Like wafting of an angel's wing,Time's flight by them was heard.Some soft piano-notes aloneWere sweet as faintly given,Where ladies, doubtless, cheered the hearthWith song that winter-even.The city's many-mingled soundsRose like the hum of ocean;They rather lulled the...
Charlotte Bronte
Invocation To Misery.
1.Come, be happy! - sit near me,Shadow-vested Misery:Coy, unwilling, silent bride,Mourning in thy robe of pride,Desolation - deified!2.Come, be happy! - sit near me:Sad as I may seem to thee,I am happier far than thou,Lady, whose imperial browIs endiademed with woe.3.Misery! we have known each other,Like a sister and a brotherLiving in the same lone home,Many years - we must live someHours or ages yet to come.4.'Tis an evil lot, and yetLet us make the best of it;If love can live when pleasure dies,We two will love, till in our eyesThis heart's Hell seem Paradise.5.Come, be happy! - lie thee downOn the fresh grass newly mown,Where the Grasshopper doth sing<...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Fragments On Nature And Life - Nature
The patient Pan,Drunken with nectar,Sleeps or feigns slumber,Drowsily hummingMusic to the march of time.This poor tooting, creaking cricket,Pan, half asleep, rolling overHis great body in the grass,Tooting, creaking,Feigns to sleep, sleeping never;'T is his manner,Well he knows his own affair,Piling mountain chains of phlegmOn the nervous brain of man,As he holds down central firesUnder Alps and Andes cold;Haply else we could not live,Life would be too wild an ode.Come search the wood for flowers,--Wild tea and wild pea,Grapevine and succory,CoreopsisAnd liatris,Flaunting in their bowers;Grass with green flag half-mast high,Succory to match the sky,Columbine with horn...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Sonnet CXLIV
Mille piagge in un giorno e mille rivi.TO BE NEAR HER RECOMPENSES HIM FOR ALL THE PERILS OF THE WAY. Love, who his votary wings in heart and feet,To the third heaven that lightly he may soar,In one short day has many a stream and shoreGiven to me, in famed Ardennes, to meet.Unarm'd and single to have pass'd is sweetWhere war in earnest strikes, nor tells before--A helmless, sail-less ship 'mid ocean's roar--My breast with dark and fearful thoughts replete;But reach'd my dangerous journey's far extreme,Remembering whence I came, and with whose wings,From too great courage conscious terror springs.But this fair country and belovèd streamWith smiling welcome reassures my heart,Where dwells its sole light ready to depart.
Francesco Petrarca
Our Poor Brethren.
"Our poor and penniless brethren, dispersed over land and sea."--Masonic SentimentThey met in the festive hall, Lamps in their brightness shone,And merry music and mirth, Aided the feast of St. John.Men pledged the health of their Queen And of all the Royal band,The flags of a thousand years, The swords of their motherland.Then mid the revelry came The sound of a mournful strain,Like a minor chord in music, A sweet but sad refrain;It rose on the heated air, Like a mourner's earnest plea,"Our poor and penniless brethren Dispersed over land and sea."Poor and penniless brethren Scattered over the world,Want and misfortune and woe Round them fierce darts have ...
Harriet Annie Wilkins
Now
Sometimes a single hourRings thro' a long life-time,As from a temple towerThere often falls a chimeFrom blessed bells, that seemsTo fold in Heaven's dreamsOur spirits round a shrine;Hath such an hour been thine?Sometimes -- who knoweth why?One minute holds a powerThat shadows every hour,Dialed in life's sky.A cloud that is a speckWhen seen from far awayMay be a storm, and wreckThe joys of every day.Sometimes -- it seems not much,'Tis scarcely felt at all --Grace gives a gentle touchTo hearts for once and all,Which in the spirit's strifeMay all unnoticed be.And yet it rules a life;Hath this e'er come to thee?Sometimes one little word,Whispered sweet and fleet,That scar...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Orphanage
When, ere the tangled web is reft,The kid-gloved villain scowls and sneers,And hapless innocence is leftWith no assets save sighs and tears,'Tis then, just then, that in there stalksThe hero, watchful of her needs;He talks, Great heavens how he talks!But we forgive him, for his deeds.Life is the drama here to-dayAnd Death the villain of the plot.It is a realistic play.Shall it end well or shall it not?The hero? Oh, the hero's partIs vacant to be played by you.Then act it well! An orphan's heartMay beat the lighter if you do.
Arthur Conan Doyle
A Song Of Comfort
"Sleep, weary ones, while ye may,Sleep, oh, sleep!"Eugene Field.Thro' May time blossoms, with whisper low,The soft wind sang to the dead below:"Think not with regret on the Springtime's songAnd the task ye left while your hands were strong.The song would have ceased when the Spring was past,And the task that was joyous be weary at last."To the winter sky when the nights were longThe tree-tops tossed with a ceaseless song:"Do ye think with regret on the sunny daysAnd the path ye left, with its untrod ways?The sun might sink in a storm cloud's frownAnd the path grow rough when the night came down."In the grey twilight of the autumn eves,It sighed as it sang through the dying leaves:"Ye think with regret that th...
John McCrae
Love.
Thou source of bliss, thou cause of woe,Disturber of the mind of man,Wilt thou still calmly onward go,A sightless leader of the van?In court and camp wilt thou still rule,And nation's destinies still sway;Make wise men act as doth the fool,And blindly follow thee, away?Thou siren nymph, ethereal sprite,Thou skilful charmer of mankind,Oh, when wilt thou lead man aright,And when will they thy cords unbind?Thy potent spells have still their force,And reason's dictates still are scorn'd,And reason runs a shackl'd course,While life, with love, is still adorn'd.Thou fond inmate of maiden's breast,Thou lighter up of manly heart;Thou surely hast some high behest,And we shall surely never part.We'll ...
Thomas Frederick Young
Night.
Night spreads upon the plain her ebon pall,Day seems unable to wash out the stain;A pausing truce kind nature gives to all,And fairy nations now have leave to reign:So may conjecturing Fancy think, and feign.Doubtless in tiny legions, now unseen,They venture from their dwellings once again:From keck-stalk cavity, or hollow bean,Or perfum'd bosom of pea-flower between,They to the dark green rings now haste, to meet,To dance, or pay some homage to their queen;Or journey on, some pilgrim-friend to greet.With rushy switch they urge some beetle's flight,And ride to revel, ere 'tis morning-light.
John Clare
De Profundis.
Oh why is heaven built so far,Oh why is earth set so remote?I cannot reach the nearest starThat hangs afloat.I would not care to reach the moon,One round monotonous of change;Yet even she repeats her tuneBeyond my range.I never watch the scattered fireOf stars, or sun's far-trailing train,But all my heart is one desire,And all in vain:For I am bound with fleshly bands,Joy, beauty, lie beyond my scope;I strain my heart, I stretch my hands,And catch at hope.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
At the Abbey Theatre
Dear Craoibhin Aoibhin, look into our case.When we are high and airy hundreds sayThat if we hold that flight theyll leave the place,While those same hundreds mock another dayBecause we have made our art of common things,So bitterly, youd dream they longed to lookAll their lives through into some drift of wings.Youve dandled them and fed them from the bookAnd know them to the bone; impart to us,Well keep the secret, a new trick to please.Is there a bridle for this ProteusThat turns and changes like his draughty seas?Or is there none, most popular of men,But when they mock us that we mock again?
William Butler Yeats
Sonnet CCXIV.
In dubbio di mio stato, or piango, or canto.TO HIS LONGING TO SEE HER AGAIN IS NOW ADDED THE FEAR OF SEEING HER NO MORE. Uncertain of my state, I weep and sing,I hope and tremble, and with rhymes and sighsI ease my load, while Love his utmost triesHow worse my sore afflicted heart to sting.Will her sweet seraph face again e'er bringTheir former light to these despairing eyes.(What to expect, alas! or how advise)Or must eternal grief my bosom wring?For heaven, which justly it deserves to win,It cares not what on earth may be their fate,Whose sun it was, where centred their sole gaze.Such terror, so perpetual warfare in,Changed from my former self, I live of lateAs one who midway doubts, and fears and strays.MACG...
An Imperfect Revolution
They crowded weeping from the teachers house,Crying aloud their fear at what he taught,Old men and young men, wives and maids unwed,And children screaming in the crowds unsought:Some to their temples with accustomed feetBent-as the oxen go beneath the rod,To fling themselves before some pictured saint,Alas! God help us if there is no God.Some to the bed-side of their dying kindTo clasp with arms afraid to loose their hold;Some to a church-yard falling on a graveTo kiss the carven name with lips as cold.Some watched from break of day into the night.The flash of birds, the bloom of flower and tree,The whirling worlds that glimmer in the dark,All said: God help us if no God there be.Some hid in caves and chattered mad with fear...
Dora Sigerson Shorter
The Wishing-Caps
Life's all getting and giving,I've only myself to give.What shall I do for a living?I've only one life to live.End it? I'll not find another.Spend it? But how shall I best?Sure the wise plan is to live like a manAnd Luck may look after the rest!Largesse! Largesse, Fortune!Give or hold at your will.If I've no care for Fortune,Fortune must follow me still.Bad Luck, she is never a ladyBut the commonest wench on the street,Shuffling, shabby and shady,Shameless to pass or meet.Walk with her once, it's a weakness!Talk to her twice. It's a crime!Thrust her away when she gives you "good day"And the besom won't board you next time.Largesse! Largesse, Fortune!What is Your Ladyship's mood?If I have no care for For...
Rudyard
To F--
Beloved! amid the earnest woesThat crowd around my earthly path,(Drear path, alas! where growsNot even one lonely rose),My soul at least a solace hathIn dreams of thee, and therein knowsAn Eden of bland repose.And thus thy memory is to meLike some enchanted far-off isleIn some tumultuous sea,Some ocean throbbing far and freeWith storm,but where meanwhileSerenest skies continuallyJust oer that one bright inland smile.
Edgar Allan Poe
The Halcyon.
Not only men of stormy minds, The storms of trouble know,All creatures of this earth must find A share of earthly woe!Ye whose pure hearts with pity swell, For pain by all incurr'd;Hear how affliction once befell, Serenity's sweet bird.Ye fair, who in your carols praise The Halcyon's happy state;Hear in compassionate amaze, One Halcyon's hapless fate.A nymph, Selina is her name, Lovely in mind and mien,When spring, however early, came, Was fond of walks marine.Between a woman and a child, In tender charms she grew,And lov'd with fancy sweetly wild, The lonely shore to view.Nature she studied, every spring, To all her offspring kind,And taught the ...
William Hayley
Lost Son Found.
An English ship when homeward bound, Near to its port was shipwrecked found, For it had struck a sunken rock, And was slowly sinking from the shock. In port they quick did man life boat, Which o'er tempestuous sea did float, They rescued all the crew, save one, And were content with what they done. But they had not their captain, Harry, Who on the shore was forced to tarry, And knew not of the disaster, So crew had worked without a master. But when he heard of the shipwreck, And that a man was left on deck, He quickly hurried the boat's crew For to again attempt his rescue. But earnestly his old mother,...
James McIntyre