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Ballade Of Summer's Sleep.
Sweet summer is gone; they have laid her away -The last sad hours that were touched with her grace -In the hush where the ghosts of the dead flowers play;The sleep that is sweet of her slumbering spaceLet not a sight or a sound eraseOf the woe that hath fallen on all the lands:Gather ye, dreams, to her sunny face,Shadow her head with your golden hands.The woods that are golden and red for a dayGirdle the hills in a jewelled case,Like a girl's strange mirth, ere the quick death slayThe beautiful life that he hath in chase.Darker and darker the shadows paceOut of the north to the southern sands,Ushers bearing the winter's mace:Keep them away with your woven hands.The yellow light lies on the wide wastes gray,More bitter and cold...
Archibald Lampman
Behind The Lines
The wind of evening cried along the darkening trees, Along the darkening trees, heavy with ancient pain, Heavy with ancient pain from faded centuries, From faded centuries.... O foolish thought and vain! O foolish thought and vain to think the wind could know, To think the wind could know the griefs of men who died, The griefs of men who died and mouldered long ago: "And mouldered long ago," the wind of evening cried.
John Collings Squire, Sir
Sapphics
All the night sleep came not upon my eyelids,Shed not dew, nor shook nor unclosed a feather,Yet with lips shut close and with eyes of ironStood and beheld me.Then to me so lying awake a visionCame without sleep over the seas and touched me,Softly touched mine eyelids and lips; and I too,Full of the vision,Saw the white implacable Aphrodite,Saw the hair unbound and the feet unsandalledShine as fire of sunset on western waters;Saw the reluctantFeet, the straining plumes of the doves that drew her,Looking always, looking with necks reverted,Back to Lesbos, back to the hills whereunderShone Mitylene;Heard the flying feet of the Loves behind herMake a sudden thunder upon the waters,As the thunder flung from the st...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Heaven And Earth.
Turn from the grave, turn from the grave,There's fearful mystery there;Descend not to the shadowy tomb,If thou wouldst shun despair.It tells a tale of severed tiesTo break the bleeding heart,And from the "canopy of dust"Would make it death to part.Oh! lift the eye of faith to worldsWhere death shall never come,And there behold "the pure in heart"Whom God has gathered home,Beyond the changing things of time,Beyond the reach of care.How sweet to view the ransomed onesIn dazzling glory there!They seem to whisper to the lovedWho smoothed their path below,"Weep not for us, our tears have allForever ceased to flow."Take from the grave, take from the grave,Those bright, but withering; flowers,The spiri...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
On The Death Of W. C.
Thou arrant robber, Death!Couldst thou not findSome lesser one than heTo rob of breath,--Some poorer mindThy prey to be?His mind was like the sky,--As pure and free;His heart was broad and openAs the sea.His soul shone purely through his face,And Love made him her dwelling place.Not less the scholar than the friend,Not less a friend than man;The manly life did shorter endBecause so broad it ran.Weep not for him, unhappy Muse!His merits found a grander useSome other-where. God wisely seesThe place that needs his qualities.Weep not for him, for when Death lowersO'er youth's ambrosia-scented bowersHe only plucks the choicest flowers.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
What Of The Night?
The doom is imminent of unholy hate.Hail to the light that glimmers where the leavesAre shaken by winds of dawning, and the sheavesOf hemlock swirl and scatter in the spate!Love, that has learned in faith to sorrow and wait,Sings loud his glorious charm and subtly weavesThe spell subduing madness that receivesThe madman at his own mad estimate.Ah, but the ponderous horror! Nay, not yetThe cloud of sorrow leeward growls and rolls;The eyes that meet the morn are heavy and wet.The loss the military mind enscrolls,Spilt blood and battered bones, we may forget,But not the wastage of beloved souls
John Le Gay Brereton
To The Same
(Ode to Lycoris. May 1817)Enough of climbing toil! Ambition treadsHere, as 'mid busier scenes, ground steep and rough,Or slippery even to peril! and each step,As we for most uncertain recompenceMount toward the empire of the fickle clouds,Each weary step, dwarfing the world below,Induces, for its old familiar sights,Unacceptable feelings of contempt,With wonder mixed, that Man could e'er be tied,In anxious bondage, to such nice arrayAnd formal fellowship of petty things!Oh! 'tis the 'heart' that magnifies this life,Making a truth and beauty of her own;And moss-grown alleys, circumscribing shades,And gurgling rills, assist her in the workMore efficaciously than realms outspread,As in a map, before the adventurer's gaze,Ocean an...
William Wordsworth
Autumnal
Pale amber sunlight falls acrossThe reddening October trees,That hardly sway before a breezeAs soft as summer: summer's lossSeems little, dear! on days like these.Let misty autumn be our part!The twilight of the year is sweet:Where shadow and the darkness meetOur love, a twilight of the heartEludes a little time's deceit.Are we not better and at homeIn dreamful Autumn, we who deemNo harvest joy is worth a dream?A little while and night shall come,A little while, then, let us dream.Beyond the pearled horizons lieWinter and night: awaiting theseWe garner this poor hour of ease,Until love turn from us and dieBeneath the drear November trees.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Ode On Imagination
Imagination's eyes Outreach and distance far The vision of the greatest star That measures instantaneously - Enisled therein as in a sea - Its cincture of the system-laden skies. Abysses closed about with night A tribute yield To her retardless sight; And Matter's gates disclose the candent ores Rock-held in furnaces of planet-cores. She penetrates the sun's transplendent shield, And through the obstruction of his vestment dire, Pierces the centermost sublimity Of his terrific heart, whose gurge of fire Heaves upward like a monstrous sea, And inly riven by Titanic throes, Fills all his frame with outward cataract Of separate and immingling torrent streams. Her eyes e...
Clark Ashton Smith
Father And Son
My grand-dame, vigorous at eighty-one,Delights in talking of her only son,My gallant father, long since dead and gone.'Ah, but he was the lad!'She says, and sighs, and looks at me askance.How well I read the meaning of that glance - 'Poor son of such a dad; Poor weakling, dull and sad.'I could, but would not tell her bitter truthAbout my father's youth.She says: 'Your father laughed his way through earth:He laughed right in the doctor's face at birth,Such joy of life he had, such founts of mirth. Ah, what a lad was he!'And then she sighs. I feel her silent blame,Because I brought her nothing but his name. Because she does not see Her worshipped son in me.I could, but would not, speak in my defence,An...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Sonnet: On The Sea
It keeps eternal whisperings aroundDesolate shores, and with its mighty swellGluts twice ten thousand caverns, till the spellOf Hecate leaves them their old shadowy sound.Often 'tis in such gentle temper foundThat scarcely will the very smallest shellBe mov'd for days from whence it sometime fell,When last the winds of heaven were unbound.Oh ye! who have your eye-balls vex'd and tir'd,Feast them upon the wideness of the Sea;Oh ye! whose ears are dinn'd with uproar rude,Or fed too much with cloying melody,Sit ye near some old cavern's mouth, and broodUntil ye start, as if the sea-nymphs quir'd!
John Keats
Adoration
Who does not feel desire unending To solace through his daily strife,With some mysterious Mental Blending, The hungry loneliness of life?Until, by sudden passion shaken, As terriers shake a rat at play,He finds, all blindly, he has taken The old, Hereditary way.Yet, in the moment of communion, The very heart of passion's fire,His spirit spurns the mortal union, "Not this, not this, the Soul's desire!" * * * *Oh You, by whom my life is riven, And reft away from my control,Take back the hours of passion given! Love me one moment from your soul.Although I once, in ardent fashion, Implored you long to give me this;(In hopes to stem, or stifle, passion) Y...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
To The Beloved Dead - A Lament
Beloved, thou art like a tune that idle fingers Play on a window-pane.The time is there, the form of music lingers; But O thou sweetest strain,Where is thy soul? Thou liest i' the wind and rain.Even as to him who plays that idle air, It seems a melody,For his own soul is full of it, so, my Fair, Dead, thou dost live in me,And all this lonely soul is full of thee.Thou song of songs!-not music as before Unto the outward ear;My spirit sings thee inly evermore, Thy falls with tear on tear.I fail for thee, thou art too sweet, too dear.Thou silent song, thou ever voiceless rhyme, Is there no pulse to move thee,At windy dawn, with a wild heart beating time, And falling tears above thee,O musi...
Alice Meynell
The Consolations Of Memory
Blessed was our first age and morning-time. Then were no waies tarren, ne no cars numberen, but each followed his owne playinge-busyness to go about singly or by large interspaces, for to leden his viage after his luste and layen under clene hedge.Jangling there was not, nor the overtaking wheele, and all those now cruel clarions were full-hushed and full-still. Then nobile horses, lest they should make the chariots moveable to run by cause of this new feare, we did not press, and were apayed by sweete thankes of him that drave. There was not cursings ne adventure of death blinded bankes betweene, but good-fellowship of yoke-mates at ignorance equal, and a one pillar of dust covered all exodus.... But, see now how the blacke road hath strippen herself of hearte and beauty where the dumbe lampe of Tartarus winketh red, etc.
Rudyard
Longings
Sleep, gentle, mysterious healer, Come down with thy balm-cup to me!Come down, O thou mystic revealer Of glories the day may not see!For dark is the cloud that is o'er me, And heavy the shadows that fall,And lone is the pathway before me, And far-off the voice that doth call - Faintly, yet tenderly ever, From over the dark river, call.Let me bask for an hour in the sun-ray That wraps him forever in light;Awhile tread his flowery pathway Through bowers of unfailing delight; -Again clasp the hands I lost sight of In the chill mist that hung o'er the tide,What time, with the pale, silent boatman, I saw him away from me glide - Out into the fathomless myst'ry, All s...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Meeting Among The Mountains
The little pansies by the road have turnedAway their purple faces and their gold,And evening has taken all the bees from the thyme,And all the scent is shed away by the cold.Against the hard and pale blue evening skyThe mountain's new-dropped summer snow is clearGlistening in steadfast stillness: like transcendentClean pain sending on us a chill down here.Christ on the Cross! - his beautiful young man's bodyHas fallen dead upon the nails, and hangsWhite and loose at last, with all the painDrawn on his mouth, eyes broken at last by his pangs.And slowly down the mountain road, belated,A bullock wagon comes; so I am ashamedTo gaze any more at the Christ, whom the mountain snowsWhitely confront; I wait on the grass, am lamed.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
A Prisoner In A Dungeon Deep
A prisoner in a dungeon deepSat musing silently;His head was rested on his hand,His elbow on his knee.Turned he his thoughts to future timesOr are they backward cast?For freedom is he pining nowOr mourning for the past?No, he has lived so long enthralledAlone in dungeon gloomThat he has lost regret and hope,Has ceased to mourn his doom.He pines not for the light of dayNor sighs for freedom now;Such weary thoughts have ceased at lengthTo rack his burning brow.Lost in a maze of wandering thoughtsHe sits unmoving there;That posture and that look proclaimThe stupor of despair.Yet not for ever did that moodOf sullen calm prevail;There was a something in his eyeThat told another ...
Anne Bronte
The Philosopher's Oration.
(From 'A Faun's Holiday')Meanwhile, though nations in distressCower at a comet's lovelinessShaken across the midnight sky;Though the wind roars, and Victory,A virgin fierce, on vans of goldStoops through the cloud's white smother rolledOver the armies' shock and flowAcross the broad green hills below,Yet hovers and will not circle downTo cast t'ward one the leafy crown;Though men drive galleys' golden beaksTo isles beyond the sunset peaks,And cities on the sea beholdWhose walls are glass, whose gates are gold,Whose turrets, risen in an hour,Dazzle between the sun and shower,Whose sole inhabitants are kingsSix cubits high with gryphon's wingsAnd beard and mien more gloriousThan Midas or Assaracus;Though ...
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols