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In Rome
At last the dream of youthStands fair and bright before me,The sunshine of the home of truthFalls tremulously o'er me.And tower, and spire, and lofty domeIn brightest skies are gleaming;Walk I, to-day, the ways of Rome,Or am I only dreaming?No, 'tis no dream; my very eyesGaze on the hill-tops seven;Where crosses rise and kiss the skies,And grandly point to Heaven.Gray ruins loom on ev'ry side,Each stone an age's story;They seem the very ghosts of prideThat watch the grave of glory.There senates sat, whose sceptre soughtAn empire without limit;There grandeur dreamed its dream and thoughtThat death would never dim it.There rulers reigned; yon heap of stonesWas once their gorgeous palace;...
Abram Joseph Ryan
An Ode To Time
Ho! sportsman Time, whose chargers fleet The moments, madly driven,Beat in the dust beneath their feet Sweet hopes that years have given;Turn, turn aside those reckless steeds, Oh! do not urge them my way;There's nothing that Time wants or needs In this contented by-way.You have down-trodden, in your race, So much that proves your power,Why not avoid my humble place? Why rob me of my dower?With your vast cellars, cavern deep, Packed tier on tier with treasures,You would not miss them should I KEEP My little store of pleasures.As one who, frightened, flying, flings Her riches down at random,Your course is paved with precious things Life casts before your tandem:The warrior's fame,...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Barcaroles.
I.Over the lapsing lagune all the dayUrging my gondola with oar-strokes light,Always beside one shadowy waterwayI pause and peer, with eager, jealous sight,Toward the Piazza where Pepita stands,Wooing the hungry pigeons from their flight.Dark the canal; but she shines like the sun,With yellow hair and dreaming, wine-brown eyes.Thick crowd the doves for food. She gives ME none.She sees and will not see. Vain are my sighs.One slow, reluctant stroke. Aha! she turns,Gestures and smiles, with coy and feigned surprise.Shifting and baffling is our Lido track,Blind and bewildering all the currents flow.Me they perplex not. In the midnight blackI hold my way secure and fearless row,But ah! what chart have I to her, my Sea,W...
Susan Coolidge
July 9th, 1872
Between two pillared clouds of goldThe beautiful gates of evening swung --And far and wide from flashing foldThe half-furled banners of light, that hungO'er green of wood and gray of woldAnd over the blue where the river rolled,The fading gleams of their glory flung.The sky wore not a frown all dayTo mar the smile of the morning tide;The soft-voiced winds sang joyous lay --You never would think they had ever sighed;The stream went on its sunlit wayIn ripples of laughter; happy theyAs the hearts that met at Riverside.No cloudlet in the sky serene!Not a silver speck in the golden hue!But where the woods waved low and green,And seldom would let the sunlight through,Sweet shadows fell, and in their screen,The faces of ...
If Thou'lt Be Mine.
If thou'lt be mine, the treasures of air, Of earth, and sea, shall lie at thy feet;Whatever in Fancy's eye looks fair, Or in Hope's sweet music sounds most sweet,Shall be ours--if thou wilt be mine, love!Bright flowers shall bloom wherever we rove, A voice divine shall talk in each stream;The stars shall look like worlds of love, And this earth be all one beautiful dream In our eyes--if thou wilt be mine, love!And thoughts, whose source is hidden and high, Like streams, that come from heavenward hills,Shall keep our hearts, like meads, that lie To be bathed by those eternal rills, Ever green, if thou wilt be mine, love!All this and more the Spirit of Love Can breathe o'er them, who feel hi...
Thomas Moore
The Lord of the Castle of Indolence
I.Nor did we lack our own right royal king,The glory of our peaceful realm and race.By no long years of restless travailing,By no fierce wars or intrigues bland and base,Did he attain his superlofty place;But one fair day he lounging to the throneReclined thereon with such possessing graceThat all could see it was in sooth his own,That it for him was fit and he for it alone.II.He there reclined as lilies on a river,All cool in sunfire, float in buoyant rest;He stirred as flowers that in the sweet south quiver;He moved as swans move on a lakes calm breast,Or clouds slow gliding in the golden west;He thought as birds may think when mid the treesTheir joy showers music oer the brood-filled nest;He swaye...
James Thomson
This World Is All A Fleeting Show. (Air.--Stevenson.)
This world is all a fleeting show, For man's illusion given;The smiles of joy, the tears of woe,Deceitful shine, deceitful flow-- There's nothing true but Heaven!And false the light on glory's plume, As fading hues of even;And love and hope, and beauty's bloom,Are blossoms gathered for the tomb-- There's nothing bright but Heaven!Poor wanderers of a stormy day, From wave to wave we're driven,And fancy's flash and reason's rayServe but to light the troubled way-- There's nothing calm but Heaven!
A Dedication To E.C.B.
He was, through boyhood's storm and shower,My best, my nearest friend;We wore one hat, smoked one cigar,One standing at each end.We were two hearts with single hope,Two faces in one hood;I knew the secrets of his youth;I watched his every mood.The little things that none but ISaw were beyond his wont,The streaming hair, the tie behind,The coat tails worn in front.I marked the absent-minded scream,The little nervous trickOf rolling in the grate, with eyesBy friendship's light made quick.But youth's black storms are gone and past,Bare is each aged brow;And, since with age we're growing bald,Let us be babies now.Learning we knew; but still to-day,With spelling-book devotion,Words of...
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
The Wind Of March
Up from the sea, the wild north wind is blowingUnder the sky's gray arch;Smiling, I watch the shaken elm-boughs, knowingIt is the wind of March.Between the passing and the coming season,This stormy interludeGives to our winter-wearied hearts a reasonFor trustful gratitude.Welcome to waiting ears its harsh forewarningOf light and warmth to come,The longed-for joy of Nature's Easter morning,The earth arisen in bloom.In the loud tumult winter's strength is breaking;I listen to the sound,As to a voice of resurrection, wakingTo life the dead, cold ground.Between these gusts, to the soft lapse I hearkenOf rivulets on their way;I see these tossed and naked tree-tops darkenWith the fresh leaves of May.
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Coin
Into my hearts treasuryI slipped a coinThat time cannot takeNor a thief purloin,Oh better than the mintingOf a gold-crowned kingIs the safe-kept memoryOf a lovely thing.
Sara Teasdale
Horace, Book IV, Ode IX, Addressed To Archbishop King,[1] 1718
Virtue conceal'd within our breastIs inactivity at best:But never shall the Muse endureTo let your virtues lie obscure;Or suffer Envy to concealYour labours for the public weal.Within your breast all wisdom lies,Either to govern or advise;Your steady soul preserves her frame,In good and evil times, the same.Pale Avarice and lurking Fraud,Stand in your sacred presence awed;Your hand alone from gold abstains,Which drags the slavish world in chains. Him for a happy man I own,Whose fortune is not overgrown;[2]And happy he who wisely knowsTo use the gifts that Heaven bestows;Or, if it please the powers divine,Can suffer want and not repine.The man who infamy to shunInto the arms of death would run;That man is r...
Jonathan Swift
Willie's Weddin.
A'a, Willie, lad, aw'm fain to hearTha's won a wife at last;Tha'll have a happier time next year,Nor what tha's had i'th' past.If owt can lend this life a charm,Or mak existence sweet,It is a lovin woman's armCurled raand yor neck at neet.An if shoo's net an angel,Dooant grummel an find fault,For eearth-born angels, lad, tha'll findAre seldom worth ther salt.They're far too apt to flee away,To spreead ther bonny wings;They'd nivver think o'th' weshin dayNor th' duties wifehood brings.A wife should be a woman,An if tha's lucky been;Tha'il find a honest Yorksher lass,Is equal to a Queen.For if her heart is true to thee,An thine to her proves true, -Tha's won th' best prize 'at's under th' skies,
John Hartley
His Answer to Her Letter
Being asked by an intimate party,Which the same I would term as a friend,Though his health it were vain to call hearty,Since the mind to deceit it might lend;For his arm it was broken quite recent,And theres something gone wrong with his lung,Which is why it is proper and decentI should write what he runs off his tongue.First, he says, Miss, hes read through your letterTo the end, and the end came too soon;That a slight illness kept him your debtor,(Which for weeks he was wild as a loon);That his spirits are buoyant as yours is;That with you, Miss, he challenges Fate,(Which the language that invalid usesAt times it were vain to relate).And he says that the mountains are fairerFor once being held in your thought;...
Bret Harte
Suum Cuique
Wilt thou seal up the avenues of ill?Pay every debt as if God wrote the bill.If curses be the wage of love,Hide in thy skies, thou fruitless Jove,Not to be named:It is clearWhy the gods will not appear;They are ashamed.When wrath and terror changed Jove's regal port,And the rash-leaping thunderbolt fell short.Shun passion, fold the hands of thrift,Sit still and Truth is near:Suddenly it will upliftYour eyelids to the sphere:Wait a little, you shall seeThe portraiture of things to be.The rules to men made evidentBy Him who built the day,The columns of the firmamentNot firmer based than they.On bravely through the sunshine and the sho...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Colin's Mistakes. Written In Imitation Of Spenser's Style
Fast by the banks of Cam was Colin bred,(Ye Nymphs, for every guard that sacred stream)To Wimple's woody shade his way he sped,(Flourish those woods, the Muses' endless theme.)As whilom Colin ancient books had read,Lays Greek and Roman would he oft rehearse,And much he loved, and much by heart he said,What Father Spenser sung in British verse.Who reads that bard desire like him to write,Still fearful of success, still tempted by delight.Soon as Aurora had unbarr'd the morn,And light discover'd Nature's cheerful face,The sounding clarion and the sprightly hornCall'd the blithe huntsman to the distance chase.Eftsoons they issue forth, a goodly band;The deep mouth'd bounds with thunder rend the air,The fiery coursers strike the rising sand,<...
Matthew Prior
Nemesis
Already blushes on thy cheekThe bosom thought which thou must speak;The bird, how far it haply roamBy cloud or isle, is flying home;The maiden fears, and fearing runsInto the charmed snare she shuns;And every man, in love or pride,Of his fate is never wide.Will a woman's fan the ocean smooth?Or prayers the stony Parcae soothe,Or coax the thunder from its mark?Or tapers light the chaos dark?In spite of Virtue and the Muse,Nemesis will have her dues,And all our struggles and our toilsTighter wind the giant coils.
Hawthorn Tide
IDawn is alive in the world, and the darkness of heaven and of earthSubsides in the light of a smile more sweet than the loud noon's mirth,Spring lives as a babe lives, glad and divine as the sun, and unsureIf aught so divine and so glad may be worshipped and loved and endure.A soft green glory suffuses the love-lit earth with delight,And the face of the noon is fair as the face of the star-clothed night.Earth knows not and doubts not at heart of the glories again to be:Sleep doubts not and dreams not how sweet shall the waking beyond her be.A whole white world of revival awaits May's whisper awhile,Abides and exults in the bud as a soft hushed laugh in a smile.As a maid's mouth laughing with love and subdued for the love's sake, MayShines and withholds for a little t...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
To The Fire-Fly.[1]
At morning, when the earth and sky Are glowing with the light of spring,We see thee not, thou humble fly! Nor think upon thy gleaming wing.But when the skies have lost their hue, And sunny lights no longer play,Oh then we see and bless thee too For sparkling o'er the dreary way.Thus let me hope, when lost to me The lights that now my life illume,Some milder joys may come, like thee, To cheer, if not to warm, the gloom!