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William and Emily
There is something about Death Like love itself! If with some one with whom you have known passion And the glow of youthful love, You also, after years of life Together, feel the sinking of the fire And thus fade away together, Gradually, faintly, delicately, As it were in each other's arms, Passing from the familiar room - That is a power of unison between souls Like love itself!
Edgar Lee Masters
Ecclesiastes
There is one sin: to call a green leaf grey,Whereat the sun in heaven shuddereth.There is one blasphemy: for death to pray,For God alone knoweth the praise of death.There is one creed: 'neath no world-terror's wingApples forget to grow on apple-trees.There is one thing is needful--everything--The rest is vanity of vanities.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
The Chariot.
Because I could not stop for Death,He kindly stopped for me;The carriage held but just ourselvesAnd Immortality.We slowly drove, he knew no haste,And I had put awayMy labor, and my leisure too,For his civility.We passed the school where children played,Their lessons scarcely done;We passed the fields of gazing grain,We passed the setting sun.We paused before a house that seemedA swelling of the ground;The roof was scarcely visible,The cornice but a mound.Since then 't is centuries; but eachFeels shorter than the dayI first surmised the horses' headsWere toward eternity.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
A Wayside Queen
She was born in the season of fire,When a mantle of murkiness layOn the front of the crimson Destroyer:And none knew the name of her sireBut the woman; and she, ashen grey,In the fierce pangs of motherhood lay.The skies were aflame at her comingWith a marvellous message of ill;And fear-stricken pinions were drummingThe hot, heavy air, whence the hummingOf insects rose, sudden and shrill,As they fled from that hell-begirt hill.Then the smoke-serpent writhed in her tresses:The flame kissed her hard on the lips:She smiled at their ardent caressesAs the wanton who smiles, but repressesA lover's hot haste, and so slipsFrom the arm that would girdle her hips.Such the time of her coming and fashion:How long ere her ...
Barcroft Boake
The Close Of The Session
The Session's over. We must say farewell To these east winds and to this eastern sea, For summer comes, with swallow and with bee,With many a flower and many a golfing swell.No more the horribly discordant bell Shall startle slumber; and all men agree That whatsoever other things may beA cause of sorrow, this at least is well.The class-room shall not open wide its doors, Or if it does, such opening will be vain; The gown shall hang unused upon a nail;South Street shall know us not; we'll wipe the Scores From our remembrance; as for Mutto's Lane, Yea, even the memory of this shall fail.
Robert Fuller Murray
The Thief And Cordelier. A Ballad
To the tune of King John and the Abbot of Canterbury.Who has e'er been at Paris must needs know the Greve,The fatal retreat of th' unfortunate brave,Where honour and justice most oddly contributeTo ease heroes' pains by a halter and gibbet.Derry down, down, hey derry down.There death breaks the shackles which force had put on,And the hangman completes what the judge but begun;There the Squire of the Pad and the Knight of the PostFind their pains no more baulk'd and their hopes no more cross'd.Derry down, down, hey derry down.Great claims are there made, and great secrets are known,And the king, and the law, and the thief, has his own;But my hearers cry out, What a deuce dost thou ail?Cut off thy reflections, and give us thy tale.Der...
Matthew Prior
Shadow Of Nightmare
What hand is this, that unresisted grips My spirit as with chains, and from the sound And light of dreams, compels me to the bound Where darkness waits with wide, expectant lips? Albeit thereat my footing holds, nor slips, The threats of that Omnipotence confound All days and hours of gladness, girt around With sense of near, unswervable eclipse. So lies a land whose noon is plagued with whirr Of bats, than their own shadows swarthier, Whose flight is traced on roofs of white abodes, Wherein from court to court, from room to room, In hieroglyphics of abhorrent doom, Is slowly trailed the slime of crawling toads.
Clark Ashton Smith
Hesperia
Out of the golden remote wild west where the sea without shore is,Full of the sunset, and sad, if at all, with the fulness of joy,As a wind sets in with the autumn that blows from the region of stories,Blows with a perfume of songs and of memories beloved from a boy,Blows from the capes of the past oversea to the bays of the present,Filled as with shadow of sound with the pulse of invisible feet,Far out to the shallows and straits of the future, by rough ways or pleasant,Is it thither the winds wings beat? is it hither to me, O my sweet?For thee, in the stream of the deep tide-wind blowing in with the water,Thee I behold as a bird borne in with the wind from the west,Straight from the sunset, across white waves whence rose as a daughterVenus thy mother, in years when the w...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
When The Duke Of Clarence Died
Let us sing in tear-choked numbers how the Duke of Clarence went,Just to make a royal sorrow rather more pre-eminent.Ladies sighed and sobbed and drivelled, toadies spoke with bated breath,And the banners floating half-mast made a mockery of death,And they said Australia sorrowed for the Princes death, they lied!She had done with kings and princes ere the Duke of Clarence died.Whats a death in lofty places? Whats a noble birth?, say I,To the poor who die in hundreds, as a man should never die?Can they shed a tear, or sorrow for a royal dunces fate?No! for royalty has taught them how to sing the songs of hate;Oer the sounds of grief in Europe, and the lands across the tideRose the growl of revolution, when the Duke of Clarence died.We, it matters not h...
Henry Lawson
A Polish Insurgent
What would you have? said I;1Tis so easy to go and die,Tis so hard to stay and live,In this alien peace and this comfort callous,Where only the murderers get the gallows,Where the jails are for rogues who thieve.Tis so easy to go and die,Where our Country, our Mother, the Martyr,Moaning in bonds doth lie,Bleeding with stabs in her breast,Her throat with a foul clutch prest,Under the thrice-accursed Tartar.But Smith, your man of sense,Ruddy, and broad, and round, like so!Kindly, but dense, butt dense,Said to me: Do not go:It is hopeless; right is wrong;The tyrant is too strong.Must a man have hope to fight?Can a man not fight in despair?Must the soul cower down for the bodys weakness,
James Thomson
The Box-Tree's Love
Long time beside the squatter's gateA great grey Box-Tree, early, late,Or shine or rain, in silence thereHad stood and watched the seasons fare:Had seen the wind upon the plainCaress the amber ears of grain;The river burst its banks and comeFar past its belt of mighty gum:Had seen the scarlet months of droughtScourging the land with fiery knout;And seasons ill and seasons goodHad alternated as they would.The years were born, had grown and gone,While suns had set and suns had shone;Fierce flames had swept; chill waters drenched;That sturdy yeoman never blenched.The Tree had watched the station grow,The buildings rising row on row;And from that point of vantage green,Peering athwart its leafy screen,The wondering sol...
Suspense.
A woman's figure, on a ground of night Inlaid with sallow stars that dimly stare Down in the lonesome eyes, uplifted there As in vague hope some alien lance of light Might pierce their woe. The tears that blind her sight - The salt and bitter blood of her despair - Her hands toss back through torrents of her hair And grip toward God with anguish infinite. And O the carven mouth, with all its great Intensity of longing frozen fast In such a smile as well may designate The slowly-murdered heart, that, to the last, Conceals each newer wound, and back at Fate Throbs Love's eternal lie - "Lo, I can wait!"
James Whitcomb Riley
The Seven Old Men
O swarming city, city full of dreams,Where in a full day the spectre walks and speaks;Mighty colossus, in your narrow veinsMy story flows as flows the rising sap.One morn, disputing with my tired soul,And like a hero stiffening all my nerves,I trod a suburb shaken by the jarOf rolling wheels, where the fog magnifiedThe houses either side of that sad street,So they seemed like two wharves the ebbing floodLeaves desolate by the river-side. A mist,Unclean and yellow, inundated spaceA scene that would have pleased an actor's soul.Then suddenly an aged man, whose ragsWere yellow as the rainy sky, whose looksShould have brought alms in floods upon his head,Without the misery gleaming in his eye,Appeared before me; and his pupils seemed
Charles Baudelaire
The Woman In The Rye
"Why do you stand in the dripping rye,Cold-lipped, unconscious, wet to the knee,When there are firesides near?" said I."I told him I wished him dead," said she."Yea, cried it in my haste to oneWhom I had loved, whom I well loved still;And die he did. And I hate the sun,And stand here lonely, aching, chill;"Stand waiting, waiting under skiesThat blow reproach, the while I seeThe rooks sheer off to where he liesWrapt in a peace withheld from me."
Thomas Hardy
Victor Rafolski On Art
You dull Goliaths clothed in coats of blue,Strained and half bursted by the swell of flesh,Topped by Gorilla heads. You Marmoset,Trained scoundrel, taught to question and ensnare,I hate you, hate your laws and hate your courts.Hands off, give me a chair, now let me be.I'll tell you more than you can think to ask me.I love this woman, but what is love to you?What is it to your laws or courts? I love her.She loves me, if you'd know. I entered her room -She stood before me naked, shrank a little,Cried out a little, calmed her sudden cryWhen she saw amiable passion in my eyes -She loves me, if you'd know. I saw in her eyesMore in those moments than whole hours of talkFrom witness stands exculpate could make clearMy innocence. But...
Beyond The Gamut
Softly, softly, Niccolo Amati!What can put such fancies in your head?There, go dream of your blue-skied Cremona,While I ponder something you have said.Something in that last low lovely cadencePiercing the green dusk alone and far,Named a new room in the house of knowledge,Waiting unfrequented, door ajar.While you dream then, let me unmolestedPass in childish wonder through that door,--Breathless, touch and marvel at the beautiesSoon my wiser elders must explore.Ah, my Niccolo, it's no great scienceWe shall ever conquer, you and I.Yet, when you are nestled at my shoulder,Others guess not half that we descry.As all sight is but a finer hearing,And all color but a finer sound,Beauty, but the reach of lyric freed...
Bliss Carman
Nursery Rhyme. XLV. Tales. The Story Of Catskin.
The Story Of Catskin. There once was a gentleman grand, Who lived at his country seat; He wanted an heir to his land, For he'd nothing but daughters yet. His lady's again in the way, So she said to her husband with joy, "I hope some or other fine day, To present you, my dear, with a boy." The gentleman answered gruff, "If 't should turn out a maid or a mouse, For of both we have more than enough, She shan't stay to live in my house." The lady, at this declaration, Almost fainted away with pain; But what was her sad consternation, When a sweet little girl came again. She sent her away to be nurs'd, Without seeing he...
Unknown
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXXIX.
Io pensava assai destro esser sull' ale.UNWORTHY TO HAVE LOOKED UPON HER, HE IS STILL MORE SO TO ATTEMPT HER PRAISES. I thought me apt and firm of wing to rise(Not of myself, but him who trains us all)In song, to numbers fitting the fair thrallWhich Love once fasten'd and which Death unties.Slow now and frail, the task too sorely tries,As a great weight upon a sucker small:"Who leaps," I said, "too high may midway fall:Man ill accomplishes what Heaven denies."So far the wing of genius ne'er could fly--Poor style like mine and faltering tongue much less--As Nature rose, in that rare fabric, high.Love follow'd Nature with such full successIn gracing her, no claim could I advanceEven to look, and yet was bless'd by chance.
Francesco Petrarca