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To The Husbandman.
Smoothly and lightly the golden seed by the furrow is cover'd;Yet will a deeper one, friend, cover thy bones at the last.Joyously plough'd and sow'd! Here food all living is budding,E'en from the side of the tomb Hope will not vanish away.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Crepuscular
No creature stirs in the wide fields. The rifted western heaven yields The dying sun's illumination. This is the hour of tribulation When, with clear sight of eve engendered, Day's homage to delusion rendered, Mute at her window sits the soul. Clouds and skies and lakes and seas, Valleys and hills and grass and trees, Sun, moon, and stars, all stand to her Limbs of one lordless challenger, Who, without deigning taunt or frown. Throws a perennial gauntlet down: "Come conquer me and take thy toll." No cowardice or fear she knows, But, as once more she girds, there grows An unresignèd hopelessness From memory of former stress. Head bent, she muses whilst he waits:
John Collings Squire, Sir
Spleen
When low and heavy sky weighs like a lidUpon the spirit moaning in ennui,And when, spanning the circle of the world,It pours a black day sadder than our nights;When earth is changed into a sweaty cell,In which Hope, captured, like a frantic bat,Batters the walls with her enfeebled wing,Striking her head against the rotting beams;When steady rain trailing its giant trainDescends on us like heavy prison bars,And when a silent multitude of spidersSpins its disgusting threads deep in our brains,Bells all at once jump out with all their force,And hurl about a mad cacophonyAs if they were those lost and homeless soulsWho send a dogged whining to the skies.And long corteges minus drum or toneDeploy morosely through my bei...
Charles Baudelaire
Insight
Sirs, when you pity us, I sayYou waste your pity. Let it stay,Well corked and stored upon your shelves,Until you need it for yourselves.We do appreciate God's thoughtIn forming you, before He broughtUs into life. His art was crude,But oh! so virile in its rude,Large, elemental strength; and thenHe learned His trade in making men,Learned how to mix and mould the clayAnd fashion in a finer way.How fine that skilful way can beYou need but lift your eyes to see;And we are glad God placed you thereTo lift your eyes and find us fair.Apprentice labour though you were,He made you great enough to stirThe best and deepest depths of us,And we are glad He made you thus.Aye! we are glad of many thi...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Not In The Lucid Intervals Of Life
Not in the lucid intervals of lifeThat come but as a curse to party-strife;Not in some hour when Pleasure with a sighOf languor puts his rosy garland by;Not in the breathing-times of that poor slaveWho daily piles up wealth in Mammon's caveIs Nature felt, or can be; nor do words,Which practiced talent readily affords,Prove that her hand has touched responsive chords;Nor has her gentle beauty power to moveWith genuine rapture and with fervent loveThe soul of Genius, if he dare to takeLife's rule from passion craved for passion's sake;Untaught that meekness is the cherished bentOf all the truly great and all the innocent.But who is innocent? By grace divine,Not otherwise, O Nature! we are thine,Through good and evil thine, in just deg...
William Wordsworth
On Recovering From A Fit Of Sickness, In the Country
Thy verdant scenes, O Goulder's hill,Once more I seek, a languid guest:With throbbing temples and with burden'd breastOnce more I climb thy steep aerial way.O faithful cure of oft-returning ill,Now call thy sprightly breezes round,Dissolve this rigid cough profound,And bid the springs of life with gentler movement play.How gladly 'mid the dews of dawnMy weary lungs thy healing gale,The balmy west or the fresh north, inhale!How gladly, while my musing footsteps roveRound the cool orchard or the sunny lawn,Awak'd I stop, and look to findWhat shrub perfumes the pleasant wind,Or what wild songster charms the Dryads of the grove.Now, ere the morning walk is done,The distant voice of health I hearWelcome as beauty's to the lover's e...
Mark Akenside
Dream Anguish
My thought of thee is tortured in my sleep--Sometimes thou art near beside me, but a cloudDoth grudge me thy pale face, and rise to creepSlowly about thee, to lap thee in a shroud;And I, as standing by my dead, to weepDesirous, cannot weep, nor cry aloud.Or we must face the clamouring of a crowdHissing our shame; and I who ought to keepThine honour safe and my betrayed heart proud,Knowing thee true, must watch a chill doubt leapThe tired faith of thee, and thy head bow'd,Nor budge while the gross world holdeth thee cheap!Or there are frost-bound meetings, and reproachAt parting, furtive snatches full of fear;Love grown a pain; we bleed to kiss, and kissBecause we bleed for love; the time doth broachShame, and shame teareth at us till we t...
Maurice Henry Hewlett
Honors. - Part I.
(A Scholar is musing on his want of success.)To strive - and fail. Yes, I did strive and fail;I set mine eyes upon a certain nightTo find a certain star - and could not hail With them its deep-set light.Fool that I was! I will rehearse my fault:I, wingless, thought myself on high to liftAmong the winged - I set these feet that halt To run against the swift.And yet this man, that loved me so, can write -That loves me, I would say, can let me see;Or fain would have me think he counts but light These Honors lost to me. (The letter of his friend.)"What are they? that old house of yours which gaveSuch welcome oft to me, the sunbeams fallYet, down the squares of blue and white which pave ...
Jean Ingelow
Upon Her Alms.
See how the poor do waiting standFor the expansion of thy hand.A wafer dol'd by thee will swellThousands to feed by miracle.
Robert Herrick
Substitution
When some beloved voice that was to youBoth sound and sweetness, faileth suddenly,And silence, against which you dare not cry,Aches round you like a strong disease and newWhat hope? what help? what music will undoThat silence to your sense? Not friendship's sigh,Not reason's subtle count; not melodyOf viols, nor of pipes that Faunus blew;Not songs of poets, nor of nightingalesWhose hearts leap upward through the cypress-treesTo the clear moon; nor yet the spheric lawsSelf-chanted, nor the angels' sweet 'All hails,'Met in the smile of God: nay, none of these.Speak thou, availing Christ! and fill this pause.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Contentment. - Philippians iv.11.
Fierce passions discompose the mind,As tempests vex the sea:But calm content and peace we find,When, Lord, we turn to thee.In vain by reason and by ruleWe try to bend the will;For none but in the Saviours schoolCan learn the heavenly skill.Since at his feet my soul has sat,His gracious words to hear,Contented with my present state,I cast on him my care.Art thou a sinner, soul? he said,Then how canst thou complain?How light thy troubles here, if weighdWith everlasting pain!If thou of murmuring wouldst be cured,Compare thy griefs with mine;Think what my love for thee endured,And thou wilt not repine.Tis I appoint thy daily lot,And I do all things wel...
William Cowper
Confiteor
The shore-boat lies in the morning light,By the good ship ready for sailing;The skies are clear, and the dawn is bright,Tho the bar of the bay is fleckd with white,And the wind is fitfully wailing;Near the tiller stands the priest, and the knightLeans over the quarter-railing.There is time while the vessel tarries still,There is time while her shrouds are slack,There is time ere her sails to the west wind fill,Ere her tall masts vanish from town and from hill,Ere cleaves to her keel the track:There is time for confession to those who will,To those who may never come back.Sir priest, you can shrive these men of mine,And, I pray you, shrive them fast,And shrive those hardy sons of the brine,Captain and mates of the Eglantin...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The Lass With The Delicate Air
Timid and smiling, beautiful and shy,She drops her head at every passer bye.Afraid of praise she hurries down the streetsAnd turns away from every smile she meets.The forward clown has many things to sayAnd holds her by the gown to make her stay,The picture of good health she goes along,Hale as the morn and happy as her song.Yet there is one who never feels a fearTo whisper pleasing fancies in her ear;Yet een from him she shuns a rude embrace,And stooping holds her hands before her face,--She even shuns and fears the bolder wind,And holds her shawl, and often looks behind.
John Clare
Epilogue
I.O Life! O Death! O God!Have we not striven?Have we not known Thee, GodAs Thy stars know Heaven?Have we not held Thee true,True as thy deepest,Sweet and immaculate blueHeaven that feels Thy dew!Have we not known Thee true,O God who keepest.II.O God, our Father, God!Who gav'st us fire,To soar beyond the sod,To rise, aspireWhat though we strive and strive,And all our soul says 'live'?The empty scorn of menWill sneer it down again.And, O sun-centred high,Who, too, art Poet,Beneath Thy tender skyEach day new Keatses die,Calling all life a lie;Can this be so and why?And canst Thou know it?III.We know Thee beautiful,We know Thee bitter!H...
Madison Julius Cawein
A New Year's Gift.
A little lad, - bare wor his feet,His 'een wor swell'd an red,Wor sleepin, one wild New Year's neet, -A cold doorstep his bed.His little curls wor drippin weet,His clooas wor thin an old,His face, tho' pinched, wor smilin sweet, -His limbs wor numb wi' cold.Th' wind whistled throo th' deserted street,An snowflakes whirled abaat, -It wor a sorry sooart o' neet,For poor souls to be aght.'Twor varry dark, noa stars or mooin,Could shine throo sich a storm; -Unless some succour turns up sooin,God help that freezin form!A carriage stops at th' varry haase, -A sarvent oppens th' door;A lady wi' a pale sad face,Steps aght o'th' cooach to th' floor.Her 'een fell on that huddled form,Shoo gives a startled cry;
John Hartley
The Taxidermist.
From other men he stands apart, Wrapped in sublimity of thought Where futile fancies enter not; With starlike purpose pressing on Where Agassiz and AudubonLabored, and sped that noble art Yet in its pristine dawn.Something to conquer, to achieve, Makes life well worth the struggle hard; Its petty ills to disregard, In high endeavor day by day With this incentive - that he maySomehow mankind the richer leave When he has passed away.Forest and field he treads alone, Finding companionship in birds, In reptiles, rodents, yea, in herds Of drowsy cattle fat and sleek; For these to him a language speakTo common multitudes unknown As tones of classic Greek.Unth...
Hattie Howard
Columbus.
Steer on, bold sailor Wit may mock thy soul that sees the land,And hopeless at the helm may droop the weak and weary hand,Yet ever ever to the West, for there the coast must lie,And dim it dawns, and glimmering dawns before thy reason's eye;Yea, trust the guiding God and go along the floating grave,Though hid till now yet now behold the New World o'er the wave!With genius Nature ever stands in solemn union still,And ever what the one foretells the other shall fulfil.
Friedrich Schiller
A Prayer For Old Age
I.These are the things which I would ask of Time:When I am old,Never to feel in soul doubt's spiritual rime;The heart grow coldWith self; but in me that which warms my time.II.Never to feel the drouth, the dearth that kills,Before one dies,Of mind, full-flowering on thought's fertile hills;But, in my skies,The falcon, Fancy, that no season kills.III.Never to see the shadow at my door,Nor fear its fall;But wait serenely, whether rich or poor,Nor care at all,So Love sits with me at my open door.IV.Never to have a dream I dreamed destroyed:And towards the lastLive o'er again all that I have enjoyed,The happy Past,Through these, the dreams, no time has yet destroyed...