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Under the Figtree
Like drifts of balm from cedared glens, those darling memories come,With soft low songs, and dear old tales, familiar to our home.Then breathe again that faint refrain, so tender, sad, and true,My soul turns round with listening eyes unto the harp and you!The fragments of a broken Past are floating down the tide,And she comes gleaming through the dark, my love, my life, my bride!Oh! sit and sing I know her well, that phantom deadly fairWith large surprise, and sudden sighs, and streaming midnight hair!I know her well, for face to face we stood amongst the sheaves,Our voices mingling with a mist of music in the leaves!I know her well, for hand in hand we walked beside the sea,And heard the huddling waters boom beneath this old Figtree.God help the man that goes a...
Henry Kendall
L'Envol.
Now, gentle reader, is our journey ended,Mute is our minstrel, silent is our song;Sweet the bard's voice whose strains our course attended,Pleasant the paths he guided us along.Now must we part, Oh word all full of sadness,Changing to pensive retrospect our gladness!Reader, farewell! we part perchance for ever,Scarce may I hope to meet with thee again;But e'en though fate our fellowship may sever,Reader, will aught to mark that tie remain?Yes! there is left one sad sweet bond of union,Sorrow at parting links us in communion.But of the twain, the greater is my sorrow,Reader, and why? Bethink thee of the sun,How, when he sets, he waiteth for the morrow,Proudly once more his giant-race to run,Yet, e'...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Princess
The princess looked down from her bower high,The youth blew his horn as he lingered thereby."Be quiet, O youth, will forever you blow?It hinders my thoughts, that would far away go, Now, when sets the sun."The princess looked down from her bower high,The youth ceased his blowing, his horn he laid by."Why are you so quiet? Now more shall you blow,It lifts all my thoughts, that would far away go, Now, when sets the sun."The princess looked down from her bower high,The youth blew again, as he lingered thereby.Then weeping, she whispered: "O God, let me knowThe name of this sorrow that burdens me so! - Now has set the sun."
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Dawn.
I cannot echo the old wish to die at morn, as darkness strays! We have been glad together greeting some new-born radiant days, The earth would hold me, every day familiar things Would weigh me fast, The stir, the touch of morn, the bird that on swift wings Goes flitting past. Some flower would lift to me its tender tear-wet face, and send its breath To whisper of the earth, its beauty and its grace, And combat death. It would be light, and I would see in thy dear eyes The sorrow grow. Love, could I lift my own, undimmed, to paradise And leave thee so! A thousand cords would hold me down to this low sphere, When thou didst grieve; Ah! should death come upo...
Jean Blewett
The Infanticide.
Hark where the bells toll, chiming, dull and steady,The clock's slow hand hath reached the appointed time.Well, be it so prepare, my soul is ready,Companions of the grave the rest for crime!Now take, O world! my last farewell receivingMy parting kisses in these tears they dwell!Sweet are thy poisons while we taste believing,Now we are quits heart-poisoner, fare-thee-well!Farewell, ye suns that once to joy invited,Changed for the mould beneath the funeral shade;Farewell, farewell, thou rosy time delighted,Luring to soft desire the careless maid,Pale gossamers of gold, farewell, sweet dreamingFancies the children that an Eden bore!Blossoms that died while dawn itself was gleaming,Opening in happy sunlight never more.Swanlike the robe ...
Friedrich Schiller
The crazed moon
Crazed through much child-bearingThe moon is staggering in the sky;Moon-struck by the despairingGlances of her wandering eyeWe grope, and grope in vain,For children born of her pain.Children dazed or dead!When she in all her virginal prideFirst trod on the mountain's headWhat stir ran through the countrysideWhere every foot obeyed her glance!What manhood led the dance!Fly-catchers of the moon,Our hands are blenched, our fingers seemBut slender needles of bone;Blenched by that malicious dreamThey are spread wide that eachMay rend what comes in reach.
William Butler Yeats
A Dirge Upon The Death Of The Right Valiant Lord, Bernard Stuart.
Hence, hence, profane! soft silence let us haveWhile we this trental sing about thy grave.Had wolves or tigers seen but thee,They would have showed civility;And, in compassion of thy years,Washed those thy purple wounds with tears.But since thou'rt slain, and in thy fallThe drooping kingdom suffers all;Chor. This we will do, we'll daily comeAnd offer tears upon thy tomb:And if that they will not suffice,Thou shall have souls for sacrifice.Sleep in thy peace, while we with spice perfume thee,And cedar wash thee, that no times consume thee.Live, live thou dost, and shall; for why?Souls do not with their bodies die:Ignoble offsprings, they may fallInto the flames of funeral:Whenas the chosen seed shall s...
Robert Herrick
Ophelia
There runs a crisscross pattern of small leavesEspalier, in a fading summer air,And there Ophelia walks, an azure flower,Whom wind, and snowflakes, and the sudden rainOf love's wild skies have purified to heaven.There is a beauty past all weeping nowIn that sweet, crooked mouth, that vacant smile;Only a lonely grey in those mad eyes,Which never on earth shall learn their loneliness.And when amid startled birds she sings lament,Mocking in hope the long voice of the stream,It seems her heart's lute hath a broken string.Ivy she hath, that to old ruin clings;And rosemary, that sees remembrance fade;And pansies, deeper than the gloom of dreams;But ah! if utterable, would this earthRemain the base, unreal thing it is?Better be out of sight of p...
Walter De La Mare
Absence.
"What ails my love, where can he be?He never broke a vow,Though twice the clock's reminded meThat he's deceiv'd me now.Through some bad girl, I well know that,Poor Peggy's love's forgot:"Thus sigh'd a lass, as down she satOn the appointed spot.The night was gathering dark and deep,But absent was the swain;The dews on many a flower did weep,But Peggy wept in vain:And every noise that meets her ear,And fancy of her eye,Hope instant wipes away the tear,And paints the shepherd nigh."Ah, now he comes, my cheek glows hot,His dog barks to the sheep!"Alas, her own dog lay forgot,Loud whimpering in his sleep."He rustles down the wood-path park,The boughs hung o'er it stirr'd!"--Alas, her Rover's dreaming b...
John Clare
The Suicide
White, I lieOn the remains of an amusement parkBetween jagged buildings -Burning flower... shining sea...Toes and handsReach out into emptiness.Longing tears the weeping body to pieces.The little moon glides above me.Eyes gropeGently into the deep world,Sunken hatsWandering stars.
Alfred Lichtenstein
The Journey
Heart-sick of his journey was the Wanderer; Footsore and parched was he;And a Witch who long had lurked by the wayside, Looked out of sorcery."Lift up your eyes, you lonely Wanderer," She peeped from her casement small;"Here's shelter and quiet to give you rest, young man, And apples for thirst withal."And he looked up out of his sad reverie, And saw all the woods in green,With birds that flitted feathered in the dappling, The jewel-bright leaves between.And he lifted up his face towards her lattice, And there, alluring-wise,Slanting through the silence of the long past, Dwelt the still green Witch's eyes.And vaguely from the hiding-place of memory Voices seemed to cry;"What is the ...
The Lock Of Hair.
It is in sooth a lovely tress, Still curled in many a ring,As glossy as the plumes that dress The raven's jetty wing.And the broad and soul-illumined brow, Above whose arch it grew,Was like the stainless mountain snow, In its purity of hue.I mind the time 'twas given to me, The night, the hour, the spot;And the eye that pleaded silently, "Forget the giver not."Oh! myriads of stars, on high, Were smiling sweetly fair,But none was lovely as the eye That shone beside me there!Above our heads an ancient oak Its strong, wide arms held out,And from its roots a fountain broke, With a tiny laughing shout;And the fairy people of the wild Were bending to their rest,As trusti...
George W. Sands
Third Ode.
Be void of feeling!A heart that soon is stirr'd,Is a possession sadUpon this changing earth.Behrisch, let spring's sweet smileNever gladden thy brow!Then winter's gloomy tempestsNever will shadow it o'er.Lean thyself ne'er on a maiden'sSorrow-engendering breast.Ne'er on the arm,Misery-fraught, of a friend.Already envyFrom out his rocky ambushUpon thee turnsThe force of his lynx-like eyes,Stretches his talons,On thee falls,In thy shouldersCunningly plants them.Strong are his skinny arms,As panther-claws;He shaketh thee,And rends thy frame.Death 'tis to part,'Tis threefold deathTo part, not hopingEver to meet again.Thou wouldst rejoic...
Persephone.
O Hades! O false gods! false to yourselves!O Hades, 'twas thy brother gave her theeWithout a mother's sanction or her knowledge!He bare her to the horrid gulfs below,And made her queen, a shadowy queen of shades,Queen of the fiery flood and mournful realmsOf grating iron and the clank of chains.On blossomed plains in far TrinacriaA maiden, the dark cascade of whose hairSeemed gleaming rays of midnight 'mid the stars,Rays slowly bright'ning 'neath a mellow moon,She 'mid the flowers with the OceanidsSought Echo's passion, loved Narcissus pale,'Ghast staring in the mirror of a lake,Whose smoothness brake his image, flickering seen,E'en with the fast tears of his dewy eyes.A shape there rose with iron wain and steeds'Mid sallow fume of ...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Consolation
Though bleak these woods and damp the groundWith fallen leaves so thickly strewn,And cold the wind that wanders roundWith wild and melancholy moan,There is a friendly roof I knowMight shield me from the wintry blast;There is a fire whose ruddy glowWill cheer me for my wanderings past.And so, though still where'er I roamCold stranger glances meet my eye,Though when my spirit sinks in woeUnheeded swells the unbidden sigh,Though solitude endured too longBids youthful joys too soon decay,Makes mirth a stranger to my tongueAnd overclouds my noon of day,When kindly thoughts that would have wayFlow back discouraged to my breastI know there is, though far awayA home where heart and soul may rest.War...
Anne Bronte
He Mourns For The Change That Has Come Upon Him And His Beloved, And Longs For The End Of The World
Do you not hear me calling, white deer with no horns?I have been changed to a hound with one red ear;I have been in the Path of Stones and the Wood of Thorns,For somebody hid hatred and hope and desire and fearUnder my feet that they follow you night and day.A man with a hazel wand came without sound;He changed me suddenly; I was looking another way;And now my calling is but the calling of a hound;And Time and Birth and Change are hurrying by.I would that the Boar without bristles had come from the WestAnd had rooted the sun and moon and stars out of the skyAnd lay in the darkness, grunting, and turning to his rest.
The Messenger
She rose up in the early dawn, And white and silently she movedAbout the house. Four men had gone To battle for the land they loved,And she, the mother and the wife,Waited for tidings from the strife.How still the house seemed! and her treadWas like the footsteps of the dead.The long day passed, the dark night came; She had not seen a human face.Some voice spoke suddenly her name. How loud it echoed in that placeWhere, day by day, no sound was heardBut her own footsteps! "Bring you word,"She cried to whom she could not see,"Word from the battle-plain to me?"A soldier entered at the door, And stood within the dim firelight:"I bring you tidings of the four," He said, "who left you for the figh...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
One Day
Today I have been happy. All the dayI held the memory of you, and woveIts laughter with the dancing light o' the spray,And sowed the sky with tiny clouds of love,And sent you following the white waves of sea,And crowned your head with fancies, nothing worth,Stray buds from that old dust of misery,Being glad with a new foolish quiet mirth.So lightly I played with those dark memories,Just as a child, beneath the summer skies,Plays hour by hour with a strange shining stone,For which (he knows not) towns were fire of old,And love has been betrayed, and murder done,And great kings turned to a little bitter mould.
Rupert Brooke