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So Fair, So Sweet, Withal So Sensitive
So fair, so sweet, withal so sensitive,Would that the little Flowers were born to live,Conscious of half the pleasure which they give;That to this mountain-daisy's self were knownThe beauty of its star-shaped shadow, thrownOn the smooth surface of this naked stone!And what if hence a bold desire should mountHigh as the Sun, that he could take accountOf all that issues from his glorious fount!So might he ken how by his sovereign aidThese delicate companionships are made;And how he rules the pomp of light and shade;And were the Sister-power that shines by nightSo privileged, what a countenance of delightWould through the clouds break forth on human sight!Fond fancies! wheresoe'er shall turn thine eyeOn earth, air, oc...
William Wordsworth
The Miracle
I have trod this path a hundred timesWith idle footsteps, crooning rhymes.I know each nest and web-worm's tent,The fox-hole which the woodchucks rent,Maple and oak, the old DivanSelf-planted twice, like the banian.I know not why I came againUnless to learn it ten times ten.To read the sense the woods impartYou must bring the throbbing heart.Love is aye the counterforce,--Terror and Hope and wild Remorse,Newest knowledge, fiery thought,Or Duty to grand purpose wrought.Wandering yester morn the brake,I reached this heath beside the lake,And oh, the wonder of the power,The deeper secret of the hour!Nature, the supplement of man,His hidden sense interpret can;--What friend to friend cannot conveyShall the dumb bird ins...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Earth's Eternity
Man, Earth's poor shadow! talks of Earth's decay:But hath it nothing of eternal kin?No majesty that shall not pass away?No soul of greatness springing up within?Thought marks without hoar shadows of sublime,Pictures of power, which if not doomed to winEternity, stand laughing at old TimeFor ages: in the grand ancestral lineOf things eternal, mounting to divine,I read Magnificence where ages payWorship like conquered foes to the Apennine,Because they could not conquer. There sits DayToo high for Night to come at--mountains shine,Outpeering Time, too lofty for decay.
John Clare
Time's Defeat
Time has made conquest of so many thingsThat once were mine. Swift-footed, eager youthThat ran to meet the years; bold brigand health,That broke all laws of reason unafraid,And laughed at talk of punishment.Close ties of blood and friendship, joy of life,Which reads its music in the major keyAnd will not listen to a minor strain -These things and many more are spoils of time.Yet as a conqueror who only stormsThe outposts of a town, and finds the fortToo strong to be assailed, so time retreatsAnd knows his impotence. He cannot takeMy three great jewels from the crown of life:Love, sympathy, and faith; and year on yearHe sees them grow in lustre and in worth,And glowers by me, plucking at his beard,And dragging, as h...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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....
Francesco Petrarca
Composed After Reading A Newspaper Of The Day
"People! your chains are severing link by link;Soon shall the Rich be leveled down the PoorMeet them half way." Vain boast! for These, the moreThey thus would rise, must low and lower sinkTill, by repentance stung, they fear to think;While all lie prostrate, save the tyrant fewBent in quick turns each other to undo,And mix the poison, they themselves must drink.Mistrust thyself, vain Country! cease to cry,"Knowledge will save me from the threatened woe."For, if than other rash ones more thou know,Yet on presumptuous wing as far would flyAbove thy knowledge as they dared to go,Thou wilt provoke a heavier penalty.
George And Sarah Green
Who weeps for strangers? Many weptFor George and Sarah Green;Wept for that pair's unhappy fate,Whose grave may here be seen.By night, upon these stormy fells,Did wife and husband roam;Six little ones at home had left,And could not find that home.For 'any' dwelling-place of manAs vainly did they seek.He perish'd; and a voice was heardThe widow's lonely shriek.Not many steps, and she was leftA body without lifeA few short steps were the chain that boundThe husband to the wife.Now do those sternly-featured hillsLook gently on this grave;And quiet now are the depths of air,As a sea without a wave.But deeper lies the heart of peaceIn quiet more profound;The heart of quietness is here<...
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet C
O teares! no teares, but raine, from Beauties skies,Making those lillies and those roses growe,Which ay most faire, now more then most faire shew,While gracefull Pitty Beautie beautifies.O honied sighs! which from that breast do rise,Whose pants do make vnspilling creame to flow,Wing'd with whose breath, so pleasing Zephires blow.As might refresh the hell where my soule fries.O plaints! conseru'd in such a sugred phrase,That Eloquence itself enuies your praise,While sobd-out words a perfect musike giue.Such teares, sighs, plaints, no sorrow is, but ioy:Or if such heauenly signes must proue annoy,All mirth farewell, let me in sorrow liue.
Philip Sidney
Our Mountain Cemetery.
Lonely and silent and calm it lies'Neath rosy dawn or midnight skies;So densely peopled, yet so still,The murmuring voice of mountain rill,The plaint the wind 'mid branches wakes,Alone the solemn silence breaks.Whatever changes the seasons bring, -The birds, the buds of joyous spring,The glories that come with the falling yearThe snows and storms of winter drear, -Are all unmarked in this lone spot,Its shrouded inmates feel them not.Thoughts full of import, earnest and deep,Must the feeling heart in their spirit steep,Here, where Death's footprints meet the sight:The long chill rows of tombstones white,The graves so thickly, widely spread,Within this city of the Dead.Say, who could tell what aching sighs,What...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Altitude
I wonderhow it would be here with you,where the windthat has shaken off its dust in low valleystouches one cleanly,as with a new-washed hand,and painis as the remote hunger of droning things,and angerbut a little silencesinking into the great silence.
Lola Ridge
A Good Husband.
A Master of a house, as I have read,Must be the first man up, and last in bed.With the sun rising he must walk his grounds;See this, view that, and all the other bounds:Shut every gate; mend every hedge that's torn,Either with old, or plant therein new thorn;Tread o'er his glebe, but with such care, that whereHe sets his foot, he leaves rich compost there.
Robert Herrick
Sonnet: - XIII.
I've almost grown a portion of this place,I seem familiar with each mossy stone;Even the nimble chipmunk passes on,And looks, but never scolds me. Birds have flownAnd almost touched my hand; and I can traceThe wild bees to their hives. I've never knownSo sweet a pause from labour. But the toneOf a past sorrow, like a mournful rillThreading the heart of some melodious hill,Or the complainings of the whippoorwill,Passes through every thought, and hope, and aim.It has its uses; for it cools the flameOf ardent love that burns my being up -Love, life's celestial pearl, diffused through all its cup.
Charles Sangster
Twilight
A fat young man plays with a pond.The wind has caught itself in a tree.The pale sky seems to be rumpled,As though it had run out of makeup.On long crutches, bent nearly in halfAnd chatting, two cripples creep across the field.A blond poet perhaps goes mad.A little horse stumbles over a lady.A fat man is stuck to a window.A boy wants to visit a soft woman.A gray clown puts on his boots.A baby carriage shrieks and dogs curse.
Alfred Lichtenstein
Sonnet XXXVI.
Quel che 'n Tessaglia ebbe le man sì pronte.SOME HAVE WEPT FOR THEIR WORST ENEMIES, BUT LAURA DEIGNS HIM NOT A SINGLE TEAR. He who for empire at Pharsalia threw,Reddening its beauteous plain with civil gore,As Pompey's corse his conquering soldiers bore,Wept when the well-known features met his view:The shepherd youth, who fierce Goliath slew,Had long rebellious children to deplore,And bent, in generous grief, the brave Saul o'erHis shame and fall when proud Gilboa knew:But you, whose cheek with pity never paled,Who still have shields at hand to guard you wellAgainst Love's bow, which shoots its darts in vain,Behold me by a thousand deaths assail'd,And yet no tears of thine compassion tell,But in those bright eyes anger an...
To Charles Sumner
If I have seemed more prompt to censure wrongThan praise the right; if seldom to thine earMy voice hath mingled with the exultant cheerBorne upon all our Northern winds along;If I have failed to join the fickle throngIn wide-eyed wonder, that thou standest strongIn victory, surprised in thee to findBrougham's scathing power with Canning's grace combined;That he, for whom the ninefold Muses sang,From their twined arms a giant athlete sprang,Barbing the arrows of his native tongueWith the spent shafts Latona's archer flung,To smite the Python of our land and time,Fell as the monster born of Crissa's slime,Like the blind bard who in Castalian springsTempered the steel that clove the crest of kings,And on the shrine of England's freedom laidT...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Day Dream.
On a sunny brae alone I layOne summer afternoon;It was the marriage-time of May,With her young lover, June.From her mother's heart seemed loath to partThat queen of bridal charms,But her father smiled on the fairest childHe ever held in his arms.The trees did wave their plumy crests,The glad birds carolled clear;And I, of all the wedding guests,Was only sullen there!There was not one, but wished to shunMy aspect void of cheer;The very gray rocks, looking on,Asked, "What do you here?"And I could utter no reply;In sooth, I did not knowWhy I had brought a clouded eyeTo greet the general glow.So, resting on a heathy bank,I took my heart to me;And we together sadly sankInto a re...
Emily Bronte
Answer To A Beautiful Poem, Written By Montgomery, Author Of "The Wanderer Of Switzerland," Etc., Entitled "The Common Lot." [1]
1.Montgomery! true, the common lotOf mortals lies in Lethe's wave;Yet some shall never be forgot,Some shall exist beyond the grave.2."Unknown the region of his birth,"The hero [2] rolls the tide of war;Yet not unknown his martial worth,Which glares a meteor from afar.3.His joy or grief, his weal or woe,Perchance may 'scape the page of fame;Yet nations, now unborn, will knowThe record of his deathless name.4.The Patriot's and the Poet's frameMust share the common tomb of all:Their glory will not sleep the same;'That' will arise, though Empires fall.5.The lustre of a Beauty's eyeAssumes the ghastly stare of death;The ...
George Gordon Byron
The Maiden's Sorrow.
Seven long years has the desert rainDropped on the clods that hide thy face;Seven long years of sorrow and painI have thought of thy burial-place.Thought of thy fate in the distant west,Dying with none that loved thee near;They who flung the earth on thy breastTurned from the spot williout a tear.There, I think, on that lonely grave,Violets spring in the soft May shower;There, in the summer breezes, waveCrimson phlox and moccasin flower.There the turtles alight, and thereFeeds with her fawn the timid doe;There, when the winter woods are bare,Walks the wolf on the crackling snow.Soon wilt thou wipe my tears away;All my task upon earth is done;My poor father, old and gray,Slumbers beneath the churchyard s...
William Cullen Bryant