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On The Fly-Leaf Of The Rubaiyat
Deem not this book a creed, 't is but the cryOf one who fears not death, yet would not die;Who at the table feigns with sorry jest.To love the wine the Master's hand has pressed,The while he loves the absent Master best,The bitter cry of Love for love's reply!
Arthur Sherburne Hardy
Sunset.
Last eve the sun went downLike a globe of glorious fire;Into a sea of goldI watched the orb expire.It seemed the fitting endFor the brightness it had shed,And the cloudlets he had kissedLong lingered over head.All vegetation drooped,As if with pleasure faint:The lily closed its cupTo guard 'gainst storm and taint.The cool refreshing dewFell softly to the earth,All lovely things to cheer,And call more beauties forth.And as I sat and thoughtOn Nature's wond'rous plan,I felt with some regret,How small a thing is man.However bright he be,His efforts are confined,Yet maybe, if he will,Leave some rich fruits behind.The sun that kissed the flowers,And made the earth look gay...
John Hartley
The Punisher
I have fetched the tears up out of the little wells,Scooped them up with small, iron words,Dripping over the runnels.The harsh, cold wind of my words drove on, and stillI watched the tears on the guilty cheek of the boysGlitter and spill.Cringing Pity, and Love, white-handed, cameHovering about the Judgment which stood in my eyes,Whirling a flame.The tears are dry, and the cheeks' young fruits are freshWith laughter, and clear the exonerated eyes, since painBeat through the flesh.The Angel of Judgment has departed again to the Nearness.Desolate I am as a church whose lights are put out.And night enters in drearness.The fire rose up in the bush and blazed apace,The thorn-leaves crackled and twisted and sweated...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
A Midsummer Holiday:- IX. On The Verge
Here begins the sea that ends not till the worlds end. Where we stand,Could we know the next high sea-mark set beyond these waves that gleam,We should know what never man hath known, nor eye of man hath scanned.Nought beyond these coiling clouds that melt like fume of shrines that steamBreaks or stays the strength of waters till they pass our bounds of dream.Where the waste Lands End leans westward, all the seas it watches rollFind their border fixed beyond them, and a worldwide shores control:These whereby we stand no shore beyond us limits: these are free.Gazing hence, we see the water that grows iron round the Pole,From the shore that hath no shore beyond it set in all the sea.Sail on sail along the sea-line fades and flashes; here on landFlash and fade the wheeling w...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Ex Fumo Dare Lucem - Twixt The Cup And The Lip
PrologueCalm and clear! the bright day is declining,The crystal expanse of the bay,Like a shield of pure metal, lies shiningTwixt headlands of purple and grey,While the little waves leap in the sunset,And strike with a miniature shock,In sportive and infantine onset,The base of the iron-stone rock.Calm and clear! the sea-breezes are ladenWith a fragrance, a freshness, a power,With a song like the song of a maiden,With a scent like the scent of a flower;And a whisper, half-weird, half-prophetic,Comes home with the sigh of the surf;But I pause, for your fancies poeticNever rise from the level of Turf.Fellow-bungler of mine, fellow-sinner,In public performances past,In trials whence touts take their wi...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Quid Non Supremus, Amantes?
Why is there in the least touch of her handsMore grace than other women's lips bestow,If love is but a slave in fleshly bandsOf flesh to flesh, wherever love may go?Why choose vain grief and heavy-hearted hoursFor her lost voice, and dear remembered hair,If love may cull his honey from all flowers,And girls grow thick as violets, everywhere?Nay! She is gone, and all things fall apart;Or she is cold, and vainly have we prayed;And broken is the summer's splendid heart,And hope within a deep, dark grave is laid.As man aspires and falls, yet a soul springsOut of his agony of flesh at last,So love that flesh enthralls, shall rise on wingsSoul-centred, when the rule of flesh is past.Then, most High Love, or wreathed with myrtl...
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Here They Trysted, Here They Strayed
To P. A. G.Here they trysted, here they strayed,In the leafage dewy and boon,Many a man and many a maid,And the morn was merry June.'Death is fleet, Life is sweet,'Sang the blackbird in the may;And the hour with flying feet,While they dreamed, was yesterday.Many a maid and many a manFound the leafage close and boon;Many a destiny began -O, the morn was merry June!Dead and gone, dead and gone,(Hark the blackbird in the may!),Life and Death went hurrying on,Cheek on cheek - and where were they?Dust on dust engendering dustIn the leafage fresh and boon,Man and maid fulfil their trust -Still the morn turns merry June.Mother Life, Father Death(O, the blackbird in the may!),Each ...
William Ernest Henley
The Worst Of It
I.Would it were I had been false, not you!I that am nothing, not you that are allI, never the worse for a touch or twoOn my speckled hide; not you, the prideOf the day, my swan, that a first flecks fallOn her wonder of white must unswan, undo!II.I had dipped in lifes struggle and, out again,Bore specks of it here, there, easy to see,When I found my swan and the cure was plain;The dull turned bright as I caught your whiteOn my bosom: you saved me saved in vainIf you ruined yourself, and all through me!III.Yes, all through the speckled beast that I am,Who taught you to stoop; you gave me yourself,And bound your soul by the vows that damn:Since on better thought you break, as you ought,Vows words, no angel set down,...
Robert Browning
Sonnet XXXI.
Io temo sì de' begli occhi l' assalto.HE EXCUSES HIMSELF FOR HAVING SO LONG DELAYED TO VISIT HER. So much I fear to encounter her bright eye.Alway in which my death and Love reside,That, as a child the rod, its glance I fly,Though long the time has been since first I tried;And ever since, so wearisome or high,No place has been where strong will has not hied,Her shunning, at whose sight my senses die,And, cold as marble, I am laid aside:Wherefore if I return to see you late,Sure 'tis no fault, unworthy of excuse,That from my death awhile I held aloof:At all to turn to what men shun, their fate,And from such fear my harass'd heart to loose,Of its true faith are ample pledge and proof.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Free Will
Dear are some hidden things My soul has sealed in silence; past delights, Hope unconfessed; desires with hampered wings, Remembered in the nights. But my best treasures are Ignoble, undelightful, abject, cold; Yet O! profounder hoards oracular No reliquaries hold. There lie my trespasses, Abjured but not disowned. Ill not accuse Determinism, nor, as the Master {26} says, Charge even "the poor Deuce." Under my hand they lie, My very own, my proved iniquities, And though the glory of my life go by I hold and garner these. How else, how otherwhere. How otherwise, shall I discern and grope<...
Alice Meynell
Sunrise.
September 26, 1881.Weep for the martyr! Strew his bierWith the last roses of the year;Shadow the land with sables; knellThe harsh-tongued, melancholy bell;Beat the dull muffled drum, and flauntThe drooping banner; let the chantOf the deep-throated organ sob -One voice, one sorrow, one heart-throb,From land to land, from sea to sea -The huge world quires his elegy.Tears, love, and honor he shall have,Through ages keeping green his grave.Too late approved, too early lost,His story is the people's boast.Tough-sinewed offspring of the soil,Of peasant lineage, reared to toil,In Europe he had been a thingTo the glebe tethered - here a king!Crowned not for some transcendent gift,Genius of power that may lift<...
Emma Lazarus
Lament III
So, thou hast scorned me, my delight and heir;Thy father's halls, then, were not broad and fairEnough for thee to dwell here longer, sweet.True, there was nothing, nothing in them meetFor thy swift-budding reason, that foretoldVirtues the future years would yet unfold.Thy words, thy archness, every turn and bow -How sick at heart without them am I now!Nay, little comfort, never more shall IBehold thee and thy darling drollery.What may I do but only follow onAlong the path where earlier thou hast gone.And at its end do thou, with all thy charms,Cast round thy father's neck thy tender arms.
Jan Kochanowski
A Toccata Of Galuppis
IOh Galuppi, Baldassaro, this is very sad to find!I can hardly misconceive you; it would prove me deaf and blind;But although I take your meaning, tis with such a heavy mind!IIHere you come with your old music, and heres all the good it brings.What, they lived once thus at Venice where the merchants were the kings,Where Saint Marks is, where the Doges used to wed the sea with rings?IIIAy, because the seas the street there; and tis arched by . . . what you call. . . Shylocks bridge with houses on it, where they kept the carnival:I was never out of England, its as if I saw it all.IVDid young people take their pleasure when the sea was warm in May?Balls and masks begun at midnight, burning ever to mid-day,
All For The Cause
Hear a word, a word in season, for the day is drawing nigh,When the Cause shall call upon us, some to live, and some to die!He that dies shall not die lonely, many an one hath gone before;He that lives shall bear no burden heavier than the life they bore.Nothing ancient is their story, e'en but yesterday they bled,Youngest they of earth's beloved, last of all the valiant dead.E'en the tidings we are telling was the tale they had to tell,E'en the hope that our hearts cherish, was the hope for which they fell.In the grave where tyrants thrust them, lies their labour and their pain,But undying from their sorrow springeth up the hope again.Mourn not therefore, nor lament it, that the world outlives their life;Voice and vision yet they give us, maki...
William Morris
Canzone I.
Nel dolce tempo della prima etade.HIS SUFFERINGS SINCE HE BECAME THE SLAVE OF LOVE. In the sweet season when my life was new,Which saw the birth, and still the being seesOf the fierce passion for my ill that grew,Fain would I sing--my sorrow to appease--How then I lived, in liberty, at ease,While o'er my heart held slighted Love no sway;And how, at length, by too high scorn, for aye,I sank his slave, and what befell me then,Whereby to all a warning I remain;Although my sharpest painBe elsewhere written, so that many a penIs tired already, and, in every vale,The echo of my heavy sighs is rife,Some credence forcing of my anguish'd life;And, as her wont, if here my memory fail,Be my long martyrdom its saving plea,...
Lilith's Lover
I.White art thou, O Lilith! as the foam that glimmers and quivers,Glitters and clingingly silvers and snows from the balmOf the beautiful breasts of the nymphs of the seas and riversThat crystal and pearl by clusters of tropical palm,Forests of tenebrous palm.Once didst thou beckon and smile, O Lilith! as giversOf heavenly gifts smile: and, lo! my heart no longer was calm.II.Cruel art thou, O Lilith! as spirits that battleIn tempest and night, in ultimate realms of the Earth;Immaterial hosts, that shimmer and shout and rattleElemental armour and drive, with madness and mirth,Down from the mountains, into the sea, like cattle,Gaunt and glacial cattle,Congealed thunder, the icebergs, gigantic of girth.III.Subtl...
Madison Julius Cawein
Resurrection.
'T was a long parting, but the timeFor interview had come;Before the judgment-seat of God,The last and second timeThese fleshless lovers met,A heaven in a gaze,A heaven of heavens, the privilegeOf one another's eyes.No lifetime set on them,Apparelled as the newUnborn, except they had beheld,Born everlasting now.Was bridal e'er like this?A paradise, the host,And cherubim and seraphimThe most familiar guest.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Farewell And Defiance To Love
Love and thy vain employs, awayFrom this too oft deluded breast!No longer will I court thy stay,To be my bosom's teazing guest.Thou treacherous medicine, reckoned pure,Thou quackery of the harassed heart,That kills what it pretends to cure,Life's mountebank thou art.With nostrums vain of boasted powers,That, ta'en, a worse disorder leave;An asp hid in a group of flowers,That bites and stings when few perceive;Thou mock-truce to the troubled mind,Leading it more in sorrow's way,Freedom, that leaves us more confined,I bid thee hence away.Dost taunt, and deem thy power beyondThe resolution reason gave?Tut! Falsity hath snapt each bond,That kept me once thy quiet slave,And made thy snare a spider's thread,W...
John Clare