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Sonnets on Separation IV.
Lovers that drug themselves for ecstasy Seek love too closely in an overdose, When the sweet spasm turns to agony And the quick limbs are still and the eyes close. I too, a fool, desired, to make love strong, Absence and parting but the measure's brimmed, The dose is over-poured, the time's too long Already, though two nights have hardly dimmed My lonely eyes with the elusive sleep. O I'll remember, I'll not wish again To go with ardent limbs into this deep Sea of dejection, this dull mere of pain: We'll love our safer loves upon the shore And quest for inexperienced joys no more.
Edward Shanks
I Cannot Forget With What Fervid Devotion.
I cannot forget with what fervid devotionI worshipped the vision of verse and of fame.Each gaze at the glories of earth, sky, and ocean,To my kindled emotions, was wind over flame.And deep were my musings in life's early blossom,Mid the twilight of mountain groves wandering long;How thrilled my young veins, and how throbbed my full bosom,When o'er me descended the spirit of song.'Mong the deep-cloven fells that for ages had listenedTo the rush of the pebble-paved river between,Where the kingfisher screamed and gray precipice glistened,All breathless with awe have I gazed on the scene;Till I felt the dark power o'er my reveries stealing,From his throne in the depth of that stern solitude,And he breathed through my lips, in that tempest of ...
William Cullen Bryant
Submission.
O Lord, my best desire fulfil,And help me to resignLife, health, and comfort to thy will,And make thy pleasure mine.Why should I shrink at thy command,Whose love forbids my fears?Or tremble at the gracious handThat wipes away my tears?No, let me rather freely yieldWhat most I prize to thee;Who never hast a good withheld,Or wilt withhold, from me.Thy favour, all my journey through,Thou art engaged to grant;What else I want, or think I do,Tis better still to want.Wisdom and mercy guide my way,Shall I resist them both?A poor blind creature of a day,And crushd before the moth!But ah! my inward spirit cries,Still bind me to thy sway;Else the next cloud ...
William Cowper
The Sonnets LIV - O! how much more doth beauty beauteous seem
O! how much more doth beauty beauteous seemBy that sweet ornament which truth doth give.The rose looks fair, but fairer we it deemFor that sweet odour, which doth in it live.The canker blooms have full as deep a dyeAs the perfumed tincture of the roses.Hang on such thorns, and play as wantonlyWhen summers breath their masked buds discloses:But, for their virtue only is their show,They live unwood, and unrespected fade;Die to themselves. Sweet roses do not so;Of their sweet deaths, are sweetest odours made:And so of you, beauteous and lovely youth,When that shall vade, by verse distills your truth.
William Shakespeare
Town And Country
Here, where love's stuff is body, arm and sideAre stabbing-sweet 'gainst chair and lamp and wall.In every touch more intimate meanings hide;And flaming brains are the white heart of all.Here, million pulses to one centre beat:Closed in by men's vast friendliness, alone,Two can be drunk with solitude, and meetOn the sheer point where sense with knowing's one.Here the green-purple clanging royal night,And the straight lines and silent walls of town,And roar, and glare, and dust, and myriad whiteUndying passers, pinnacle and crownIntensest heavens between close-lying facesBy the lamp's airless fierce ecstatic fire;And we've found love in little hidden places,Under great shades, between the mist and mire.Stay! though the woo...
Rupert Brooke
A Coronal With His Songs And Her Days To His Lady And To Love
Violets and leaves of vine,Into a frail, fair wreathWe gather and entwine:A wreath for Love to wear,Fragrant as his own breath,To crown his brow divine,All day till night is near.Violets and leaves of vineWe gather and entwine.Violets and leaves of vineFor Love that lives a day,We gather and entwine.All day till Love is dead,Till eve falls, cold and gray,These blossoms, yours and mine,Love wears upon his head,Violets and leaves of vineWe gather and entwine.Violets and leaves of vine,For Love when poor Love diesWe gather and entwine.This wreath that lives a dayOver his pale, cold eyes,Kissed shut by Proserpine,At set of sun we lay:Violets and leaves of vineWe gather and entw...
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Spirit Love.
How great my joy! How grand my recompense! I bow to thee; I keep thee in my sight. I call thee mine, in love though not in sense I share with thee the hermitage immense Of holy dreams which come to us at night, When, through the medium of the spirit-lens We see the soul, in its primeval light, And Reason spares the hopes it cannot blight. It is the soul of thee, and not the form, And not the face, I yearn-to in my sleep. It is thyself. The body is the storm, The soul the star beyond it in the deep Of Nature's calm. And yonder on the steep The Sun of Faith, quiescent, round, and warm!
Eric Mackay
Love From The North
I had a love in soft south land, Beloved through April far in May;He waited on my lightest breath, And never dared to say me nay.He saddened if my cheer was sad, But gay he grew if I was gay;We never differed on a hair, My yes his yes, my nay his nay.The wedding hour was come, the aisles Were flushed with sun and flowers that day;I pacing balanced in my thoughts: 'It's quite too late to think of nay.'--My bridegroom answered in his turn, Myself had almost answered 'yea:'When through the flashing nave I heard A struggle and resounding 'nay.'Bridemaids and bridegroom shrank in fear, But I stood high who stood at bay:'And if I answer yea, fair Sir, What man art thou to bar wit...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Sonnet CLI.
Amor, Natura, e la bell' alma umile.DURING A SERIOUS ILLNESS OF LAURA. Love, Nature, Laura's gentle self combines,She where each lofty virtue dwells and reigns,Against my peace: To pierce with mortal painsLove toils--such ever are his stern designs.Nature by bonds so slight to earth confinesHer slender form, a breath may break its chains;And she, so much her heart the world disdains,Longer to tread life's wearying round repines.Hence still in her sweet frame we view decayAll that to earth can joy and radiance lend,Or serve as mirror to this laggard age;And Death's dread purpose should not Pity stay,Too well I see where all those hopes must end,With which I fondly soothed my lingering pilgrimage.WRANGHAM.<...
Francesco Petrarca
Sing--Sing--Music Was Given.
Sing--sing--Music was given, To brighten the gay, and kindle the loving;Souls here, like planets in Heaven, By harmony's laws alone are kept moving.Beauty may boast of her eyes and her cheeks, But Love from the lips his true archery wings;And she, who but feathers the dart when she speaks, At once sends it home to the heart when she sings. Then sing--sing--Music was given, To brighten the gay, and kindle the loving; Souls here, like planets in Heaven, By harmony's laws alone are kept moving.When Love, rocked by his mother, Lay sleeping as calm as slumber could make him,"Hush, hush," said Venus, "no other "Sweet voice but his own is worthy to wake him."Dreaming of music he slumbered the while ...
Thomas Moore
Child Of Dawn
O gentle vision in the dawn:My spirit over faint cool water glides.Child of the day,To thee;And thou art drawnBy kindred impulse over silver tidesThe dreamy wayTo me.I need thy hands, O gentle wonder-child,For they are moulded unto all repose;Thy lips are frail,And thou art cooler than an April rose;White are thy words and mild:Child of the morning, hail!Breathe thus upon mine eyelids, that we twainMay build the day together out of dreams.Life, with thy breath upon my eyelids, seemsExquisite to the utmost bounds of pain.I cannot live, except as I may beCompelled for love of thee.O let us drift,Frail as the floating silver of a star,Or like the summer humming of a bee,Or stream-reflected sunl...
Harold Monro
Though in my Firmament thou wilt not shine
Talk not, my Lord, of unrequited love,Since love requites itself most royally.Do we not live but by the sun above,And takes he any heed of thee or me?Though in my firmament thou wilt not shine,Thy glory, as a Star, is none the less.Oh, Rose, though all unplucked by hand of mine,Still am I debtor to thy loveliness.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Better Things
Better to smell the violet Than sip the glowing wine; Better to hearken to a brook Than watch a diamond shine. Better to have a loving friend Than ten admiring foes; Better a daisy's earthy root Than a gorgeous, dying rose. Better to love in loneliness Than bask in love all day; Better the fountain in the heart Than the fountain by the way. Better be fed by mother's hand Than eat alone at will; Better to trust in God, than say, My goods my storehouse fill. Better to be a little wise Than in knowledge to abound; Better to teach a child than toil To fill perfection's round. Better to sit at some man's feet Than thrill a l...
George MacDonald
Dear Is The Memory Of Our Wedded Lives
Dear is the memory of our wedded lives,And dear the last embraces of our wivesAnd their warm tears; but all hath sufferd change;For surely now our household hearths are cold,Our sons inherit us, our looks are strange,And we should come like ghosts to trouble joy.Or else the island princes over-boldHave eat our substance, and the minstrel singsBefore them of the ten years war in Troy,And our great deeds, as half-forgotten things.Is there confusion in the little isle?Let what is broken so remain.The Gods are hard to reconcile;T is hard to settle order once again.There is confusion worse than death,Trouble on trouble, pain on pain,Long labor unto aged breath,Sore task to hearts worn out by many warsAnd eyes grown dim with gazing on ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Sonnet CXXXVIII.
Giunto m' ha Amor fra belle e crude braccia.HE CANNOT END HER CRUELTY, NOR SHE HIS HOPE. Me Love has left in fair cold arms to lie,Which kill me wrongfully: if I complain,My martyrdom is doubled, worse my pain:Better in silence love, and loving die!For she the frozen Rhine with burning eyeCan melt at will, the hard rock break in twain,So equal to her beauty her disdainThat others' pleasure wakes her angry sigh.A breathing moving marble all the rest,Of very adamant is made her heart,So hard, to move it baffles all my art.Despite her lowering brow and haughty breast,One thing she cannot, my fond heart deterFrom tender hopes and passionate sighs for her.MACGREGOR.
Her Last Words, At Parting.
Her last words, at parting, how can I forget? Deep treasured thro' life, in my heart they shall stay;Like music, whose charm in the soul lingers yet, When its sounds from the ear have long melted away.Let Fortune assail me, her threatenings are vain; Those still-breathing words shall my talisman be,--"Remember, in absence, in sorrow, and pain, "There's one heart, unchanging, that beats but for thee."From the desert's sweet well tho' the pilgrim must hie, Never more of that fresh-springing fountain to taste,He hath still of its bright drops a treasured supply, Whose sweetness lends life to his lips thro' the waste.So, dark as my fate is still doomed to remain, These words shall my well in the wilderness be,--"Remember, in a...
The Old Stoic.
Riches I hold in light esteem,And Love I laugh to scorn;And lust of fame was but a dream,That vanished with the morn:And if I pray, the only prayerThat moves my lips for meIs, "Leave the heart that now I bear,And give me liberty!"Yes, as my swift days near their goal:'Tis all that I implore;In life and death a chainless soul,With courage to endure.
Emily Bronte
Parting.
There's no use in weeping,Though we are condemned to part:There's such a thing as keepingA remembrance in one's heart:There's such a thing as dwellingOn the thought ourselves have nursed,And with scorn and courage tellingThe world to do its worst.We'll not let its follies grieve us,We'll just take them as they come;And then every day will leave usA merry laugh for home.When we've left each friend and brother,When we're parted wide and far,We will think of one another,As even better than we are.Every glorious sight above us,Every pleasant sight beneath,We'll connect with those that love us,Whom we truly love till death!In the evening, when we're sittingBy the fire, perchance alone,
Charlotte Bronte