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Your Body Is My Map
raise me more love... raise memy prettiest fits of madnessO daggers journey... in my fleshand knifes plunge...sink me further my lady...the sea calls meadd to me more death ...perhaps as death slays me... Im revivedyour body is my map...the world's map no longer concerns me...I am the oldest capital of sadness...and my wound a Pharaonic engravingmy pain.... extends like an oil patchfrom Beirut... to China...my pain... a caravan...dispatchedby the Caliphs of "AChaam"... to China...in the seventh century of the "Birth"...and lost in a dragons mouth...bird of my heart... "naysani"O sand of the sea, and forests of olivesO taste of snow, and taste of fire...my heathen flavor, and insightI feel scared of th...
Nizar Qabbani
Isandlwana
Scarlet coats, and crash o' the band, The grey of a pauper's gown, A soldier's grave in Zululand, And a woman in Brecon Town. My little lad for a soldier boy, (Mothers o' Brecon Town!) My eyes for tears and his for joy When he went from Brecon Town, His for the flags and the gallant sights His for the medals and his for the fights, And mine for the dreary, rainy nights At home in Brecon Town. They say he's laid beneath a tree, (Come back to B...
John McCrae
A Ballad Of Too Much Beauty
There is too much beauty upon this earth For lonely men to bear,Too many eyes, too enchanted skies, Too many things too fair;And the man who would live the life of a manMust turn his eyes away - if he can.He must not look at the dawning day, Or watch the rising moon;From the little feet, so white, so fleet, He must turn his eyes away;And the flowers and the faces he must pass byWith stern self-sacrificing eye.For beauty and duty are strangers forever, Work and wonder ever apart,And the laws of life eternally sever The ways of the brain from the ways of the heart;Be it flower or pearl, or the face of a girl,Or the ways of the waters as they swirl.Lo! beauty is sorrow, and sorrowful men Hav...
Richard Le Gallienne
Time And Love.
Time flies. The swift hours hurry by And speed us on to untried ways; New seasons ripen, perish, die, And yet love stays. The old, old love - like sweet, at first, At last like bitter wine - I know not if it blest or curst Thy life and mine. Time flies. In vain our prayers, our tears! We cannot tempt him to delays; Down to the past he bears the years, And yet love stays. Through changing task and varying dream We hear the same refrain, As one can hear a plaintive theme Run through each strain. Time flies. He steals our pulsing youth; He robs us of our care-free days; He takes away our trust and truth: And yet love s...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Autumn And Winter.
I.Beautiful Autumn is dead and gone - Weep for her!Calm, and gracious, and very fair,With sunny robe and with shining hair,And a tender light in her dreamy eye,She came to earth but to smile and die - Weep for her!Nay, nay, I will not weep! She came with a smile, And tarried awhile, Quieting Nature to sleep; - Then went on her way O'er the hill-tops grey,And yet - and yet, she is dead, you say!Nay! - she brought us blessings, and left us cheer,And alive and well shell return next year! - Why should I weep?II.Desolate Winter has come again - Frown on him! He comes with a withering breath,
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Sonnet XXXIV.
When Death, or adverse Fortune's ruthless gale, Tears our best hopes away, the wounded Heart Exhausted, leans on all that can impart The charm of Sympathy; her mutual wailHow soothing! never can her warm tears fail To balm our bleeding grief's severest smart; Nor wholly vain feign'd Pity's solemn art, Tho' we should penetrate her sable veil.Concern, e'en known to be assum'd, our pains Respecting, kinder welcome far acquires Than cold Neglect, or Mirth that Grief profanes.Thus each faint Glow-worm of the Night conspires, Gleaming along the moss'd and darken'd lanes, To cheer the Gloom with her unreal fires.June 1780.
Anna Seward
To Helen.
I saw thee once--once only--years ago:I must not say how many--but not many.It was a July midnight; and from outA full-orbed moon, that, like thine own soul, soaring,Sought a precipitate pathway up through heaven,There fell a silvery-silken veil of light,With quietude, and sultriness and slumber,Upon the upturn'd faces of a thousandRoses that grew in an enchanted garden,Where no wind dared to stir, unless on tiptoe--Fell on the upturn'd faces of these rosesThat gave out, in return for the love-light,Their odorous souls in an ecstatic death--Fell on the upturn'd faces of these rosesThat smiled and died in this parterre, enchantedBy thee, and by the poetry of thy presence.Clad all in white, upon a violet bankI saw thee h...
Edgar Allan Poe
On Death.
THERE IS NO WORK, NOR DEVICE, NOR KNOWLEDGE, NOR WISDOM, IN THE GRAVE, WHITHER THOU GOEST. - Ecclesiastes.The pale, the cold, and the moony smileWhich the meteor beam of a starless nightSheds on a lonely and sea-girt isle,Ere the dawning of morn's undoubted light,Is the flame of life so fickle and wanThat flits round our steps till their strength is gone.O man! hold thee on in courage of soulThrough the stormy shades of thy worldly way,And the billows of cloud that around thee rollShall sleep in the light of a wondrous day,Where Hell and Heaven shall leave thee freeTo the universe of destiny.This world is the nurse of all we know,This world is the mother of all we feel,And the coming of death is a fearful blowTo a brain unenco...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Album Verses
When Eve had led her lord away,And Cain had killed his brother,The stars and flowers, the poets say,Agreed with one another.To cheat the cunning tempter's art,And teach the race its duty,By keeping on its wicked heartTheir eyes of light and beauty.A million sleepless lids, they say,Will be at least a warning;And so the flowers would watch by day,The stars from eve to morning.On hill and prairie, field and lawn,Their dewy eyes upturning,The flowers still watch from reddening dawnTill western skies are burning.Alas! each hour of daylight tellsA tale of shame so crushing,That some turn white as sea-bleached shells,And some are always blushing.But when the patient stars look downOn all the...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The End Of Laughter
O never laugh again!Laughter is dead,Deep hiding in her grave,A sacred thing.O never laugh again,Never take hands and runThrough the wild streets,Or sing,Glad in the sun:For she, the immortal sweetness of all sweets,Took laughter with herWhen she went awayWith sleep.O never laugh again!Ours but to weep,Ours but to pray.
Devastation
Little red berries arethe crop of this stump tree.They are the prize stubblewhere little growth is come.A transplant of hair aftera serious illnessor after fire ravagesthe body's wildernessis that first sip of broth taken.Little by little, they bring cautioushope that more willstumble into other pocket crevices,the bits of life amidst the spores of stillness.
Paul Cameron Brown
To Primroses Filled With Morning Dew
Why do ye weep, sweet babes? can tearsSpeak grief in you,Who were but bornjust as the modest mornTeem'd her refreshing dew?Alas, you have not known that showerThat mars a flower,Nor felt th' unkindBreath of a blasting wind,Nor are ye worn with years;Or warp'd as we,Who think it strange to see,Such pretty flowers, like to orphans young,To speak by tears, before ye have a tongue.Speak, whimp'ring younglings, and make knownThe reason whyYe droop and weep;Is it for want of sleep,Or childish lullaby?Or that ye have not seen as yetThe violet?Or brought a kissFrom that Sweet-heart, to this?No, no, this sorrow shownBy your tears shed,Would have this lecture read,That things of greatest, ...
Robert Herrick
September 1913
What need you, being come to sense,But fumble in a greasy tillAnd add the halfpence to the penceAnd prayer to shivering prayer, untilYou have dried the marrow from the bone;For men were born to pray and save:Romantic Irelands dead and gone,Its with OLeary in the grave.Yet they were of a different kindThe names that stilled your childish play,They have gone about the world like wind,But little time had they to prayFor whom the hangmans rope was spun,And what, God help us, could they save:Romantic Irelands dead and gone,Its with OLeary in the grave.Was it for this the wild geese spreadThe grey wing upon every tide;For this that all that blood was shed,For this Edward Fitzgerald died,And Robert Emmet and ...
William Butler Yeats
Sympathetic Horror
From that sky livid, bizarreas your tortured destiny,what thoughts fill your empty heart,Freethinker, answer me.Insatiable and avidfor vague and obscure skies,Ill not groan like Ovid,banned from Rome and paradise.Skies, shores split and seamed,my prides mirrored in you:your clouds in mourning, too,are the hearses of my dreams,Hells reflected in your light,where my heart takes delight.
Charles Baudelaire
The Hushed House
I, who went at nightfall, came again at dawn;On Love's door again I knocked. Love was gone.He who oft had bade me in, now would bid no more;Silence sat within his house; barred its door.When the slow door opened wide through it I could seeHow the emptiness within stared at me.Through the dreary chambers, long I sought and sighed,But no answering footstep came; naught replied.Then at last I entered, dim, a darkened room:There a taper glimmered gray in the gloom.And I saw one lying crowned with helichrys;Never saw I face as fair as was his.Like a wintry lily was his brow in hue;And his cheeks were each a rose, wintry too.Then my soul remembered all that made us part,And what I had laughed at once broke my heart...
Madison Julius Cawein
To ..........
Look at the fate of summer flowers,Which blow at daybreak, droop e'er evensong;And, grieved for their brief date, confess that ours,Measured by what we are and ought to be,Measured by all that, trembling, we foresee,Is not so long!If human Life do pass away,Perishing yet more swiftly than the flower,If we are creatures of a 'winter's' day;What space hath Virgin's beauty to discloseHer sweets, and triumph o'er the breathing rose?Not even an hour!The deepest grove whose foliage hidThe happiest lovers Arcady might boast,Could not the entrance of this thought forbid:O be thou wise as they, soul-gifted Maid!Nor rate too high what must so quickly fade,So soon be lost.Then shall love teach some virtuous Youth"To dra...
William Wordsworth
Compensation.
For each ecstatic instantWe must an anguish payIn keen and quivering ratioTo the ecstasy.For each beloved hourSharp pittances of years,Bitter contested farthingsAnd coffers heaped with tears.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Renunciation.
There came a day at summer's fullEntirely for me;I thought that such were for the saints,Where revelations be.The sun, as common, went abroad,The flowers, accustomed, blew,As if no soul the solstice passedThat maketh all things new.The time was scarce profaned by speech;The symbol of a wordWas needless, as at sacramentThe wardrobe of our Lord.Each was to each the sealed church,Permitted to commune this time,Lest we too awkward showAt supper of the Lamb.The hours slid fast, as hours will,Clutched tight by greedy hands;So faces on two decks look back,Bound to opposing lands.And so, when all the time had failed,Without external sound,Each bound the other's crucifix,We gave no ...