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Ash Wednesday
Yesterday I still went powdered and addictedInto the many-colored sounding world.Today everything has long since drowned.Here is a thing.There is a thing.Something seems like this.Something seems otherwise.How easily someone blows outThe whole flowering earth.The sky is cold and blue.Or the moon is yellow and flat.A forest has many individual trees.There's nothing more to cry about.There's nothing more to scream about.Where am I -
Alfred Lichtenstein
Scenes Of The Mind
I have run where festival was loudWith drum and brass among the crowdOf panic revellers, whose criesAffront the quiet of the skies;Whose dancing lights contract the deepInfinity of night and sleepTo a narrow turmoil of troubled fire.And I have found my heart's desireIn beechen caverns that autumn fillsWith the blue shadowiness of distant hills;Whose luminous grey pillars bearThe stooping sky: calm is the air,Nor any sound is heard to marThat crystal silence - as from far,Far off a man may seeThe busy world all utterlyHushed as an old memorial scene.Long evenings I have sat and beenStrangely content, while in my handsI held a wealth of coloured strands,Shimmering plaits of silk and skeinsOf soft bright wool. Each co...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
The Results Of Thought
Acquaintance; companion;One dear brilliant woman;The best-endowed, the elect,All by their youth undone,All, all, by that inhumanBitter glory wrecked.But I have straightened outRuin, wreck and wrack;I toiled long years and at lengthCame to so deep a thoughtI can summon backAll their wholesome strength.What images are theseThat turn dull-eyed away,Or Shift Time's filthy load,Straighten aged knees,Hesitate or stay?What heads shake or nod?
William Butler Yeats
Sea Dreamings
To-day a bird on wings as white as foam That crests the blue-gray wave,With the vesper light upon its breast, flew home Seaward. The God who gaveTo the birds the virgin-wings of snowSomehow telleth them the ways they go.Unto the Evening went the white-winged bird -- Gray clouds hung round the West --And far away the tempest's tramp was heard. The bird flew for a restAway from the grove, out to the sea --Is it only a bird's mystery?Nay! nay! lone bird! I watched thy wings of white That cleft thy waveward way --Past the evening and swift into the night, Out of the calm, bright day --And thou didst teach me, bird of the sea,More than one human heart's history.Only men's hearts -- tho' God shows each ...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Pilgrims
Who is your lady of love, O ye that passSinging? and is it for sorrow of that which wasThat ye sing sadly, or dream of what shall be?For gladly at once and sadly it seems ye sing.Our lady of love by you is unbeholden;For hands she hath none, nor eyes, nor lips, nor goldenTreasure of hair, nor face nor form; but weThat love, we know her more fair than anything.Is she a queen, having great gifts to give?Yea, these; that whoso hath seen her shall not liveExcept he serve her sorrowing, with strange pain,Travail and bloodshedding and bitterer tears;And when she bids die he shall surely die.And he shall leave all things under the skyAnd go forth naked under sun and rainAnd work and wait and watch out all his years.Hath she on earth no pla...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
An Old Likeness
Recalling R. T.Who would have thoughtThat, not having missed herTalks, tears, laughterIn absence, or soughtTo recall for so longHer gamut of song;Or ever to waft herSignal of aughtThat she, fancy-fanned,Would well understand,I should have kissed herPicture when scannedYawning years after!Yet, seeing her poorDim-outlined formChancewise at night-time,Some old allureCame on me, warm,Fresh, pleadful, pure,As in that bright timeAt a far seasonOf love and unreason,And took me by stormHere in this blight-time!And thus it aroseThat, yawning years afterOur early flowsOf wit and laughter,And framing of rhymesAt idle times,At sight of her pain...
Thomas Hardy
Content And Happiness
How is it that men pray their earthly lot May be 'content and happiness'? Dire foes Without one common trait which kinship showsI hold these two. Contentment comes when sought,While Happiness pursued was never caught. But, sudden, storms the heart with mighty throes Whenceforth, mild eyed Content affrighted goes,To seek some calmer heart, less danger fraught.Bold Happiness knows but one rival -Fear; Who follows ever on his footsteps, sent By jealous Fate who calls great joy a crime.While in far ways 'mong leaves just turning sere,With gaze serene and placid, walks Content. No heart ere held these two guests at one time.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Still When Daylight.
Still when daylight o'er the waveBright and soft its farewell gave,I used to hear, while light was falling,O'er the wave a sweet voice calling, Mournfully at distance calling.Ah! once how blest that maid would come,To meet her sea-boy hastening home;And thro' the night those sounds repeating,Hail his bark with joyous greeting, Joyously his light bark greeting.But, one sad night, when winds were high,Nor earth, nor heaven could hear her cry.She saw his boat come tossing overMidnight's wave,--but not her lover! No, never more her lover.And still that sad dream loath to leave,She comes with wandering mind at eve,And oft we hear, when night is falling,Faint her voice thro' twilight calling, Mournfully...
Thomas Moore
Kissing The Rod.
O heart of mine, we shouldn't Worry so!What we've missed of calm we couldn't Have, you know!What we've met of stormy pain,And of sorrow's driving rain,We can better meet again, If it blow!We have erred in that dark hour We have known,When our tears fell with the shower, All alone! -Were not shine and shadow blentAs the gracious Master meant? -Let us temper our content With His own.For, we know, not every morrow Can be sad;So, forgetting all the sorrow We have had,Let us fold away our fears,And put by our foolish tears,And through all the coming years Just be glad.
James Whitcomb Riley
To William Wordsworth
Friend of the Wise! and Teacher of the Good!Into my heart have I received that LayMore than historic, that prophetic LayWherein (high theme by thee first sung aright)Of the foundations and the building upOf a Human Spirit thou hast dared to tellWhat may be told, to the understanding mindRevealable; and what within the mindBy vital breathings secret as the soulOf vernal growth, oft quickens in the heartThoughts all too deep for words! Theme hard as high!Of smiles spontaneous, and mysterious fears(The first-born they of Reason and twin-birth),Of tides obedient to external force,And currents self-determined, as might seem,Or by some inner Power; of moments awful,Now in thy inner life, and now abroad,When power st...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Genoa
A long farewell to GenoaThat rises to the skies,Where the barren coast of ItalyLike our own coastline lies.A sad farewell to Genoa,And long my heart shall grieve,The only city in the worldThat I was loath to leave.No sign of rush or strife is there,No war of greed they wage.The deep cool streets of GenoaAre rock-like in their age.No garish signs of commerce thereAre flaunting in the sun.A rag hung from a balconyIs by an artist done.And she was fair in Genoa,And she was very kind,Those pale blind-seeming eyes that seemMost beautifully blind.Oh they are sad in Genoa,Those poor soiled singing birds.I had but three Italian wordsAnd she three English words.But love is cheap in Genoa,A...
Henry Lawson
To a Pansy-Violet
Found Solitary Among the Hills.I.O pansy-violet,With early April wet,How frail and pure you lookLost in this glow-worm nookOf heaven-holding hills:Down which the hurrying rillsFling scrolls of melodies:O'er which the birds and beesWeave gossamers of song,Invisible, but strong:Sweet music webs they spinTo snare the spirit in.II.O pansy-violet,Unto your face I setMy lips, and - do you speak?Or is it but some freakOf fancy, love impartsThrough you unto the heart'sDesire? whispering lowA secret none may know,But such as sit and dreamBy forest-side and stream.III.O pansy-violet,O darling floweret,Hued like the timid gem...
Madison Julius Cawein
Balade*
I cannot tell, of twain beneath this bond,Which one in grief the other goes beyond,---Narcissus, who to end the pain he boreDied of the love that could not help him more;Or I, that pine because I cannot seeThe lady who is queen and love to me.Nay--for Narcissus, in the forest pondSeeing his image, made entreaty fond,"Beloved, comfort on my longing pour":So for a while he soothed his passion sore;So cannot I, for all too far is she---The lady who is queen and love to me.But since that I have Love's true colours donned,I in his service will not now despond,For in extremes Love yet can all restore:So till her beauty walks the world no moreAll day remembered in my hope shall beThe lady who is queen and love to me.
Henry John Newbolt
What The Voice Said
Maddened by Earth's wrong and evil,"Lord!" I cried in sudden ire,"From Thy right hand, clothed with thunder,Shake the bolted fire!"Love is lost, and Faith is dying;With the brute the man is sold;And the dropping blood of laborHardens into gold."Here the dying wail of Famine,There the battle's groan of pain;And, in silence, smooth-faced MammonReaping men like grain."'Where is God, that we should fear Him?'Thus the earth-born Titans say'God! if Thou art living, hear us!'Thus the weak ones pray.""Thou, the patient Heaven upbraiding,"Spake a solemn Voice within;"Weary of our Lord's forbearance,Art thou free from sin?"Fearless brow to Him uplifting,Canst thou for His thunders call,Kno...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Epitaphs IX. Pause, Courteous Spirit
Pause, courteous Spirit! Balbi supplicatesThat Thou, with no reluctant voice, for himHere laid in mortal darkness, wouldst preferA prayer to the Redeemer of the world.This to the dead by sacred right belongs;All else is nothing. Did occasion suitTo tell his worth, the marble of this tombWould ill suffice: for Plato's lore sublime,And all the wisdom of the Stagyrite,Enriched and beautified his studious mind:With Archimedes also he conversedAs with a chosen friend, nor did he leaveThose laureat wreaths ungathered which the NymphsTwine near their loved Permessus. Finally,Himself above each lower thought uplifting,His ears he closed to listen to the songsWhich Sion's Kings did consecrate of old;And his Permessus found on Lebanon.A bless...
William Wordsworth
Old Age
The young see heaven - but to the old who wait The final call, the hills of youth arise More beautiful than shores of Paradise.Beside a glowing and voracious grate A dozing couple dream of yesterday;The islands of a vanished past appear,Bringing forgotten names and faces near; While lost in mist, the present fades away.The fragrant winds of tender memories blow Across the gardens of the "Used-to-be!" They smile into each other's eyes, and seeThe bride and bridegroom of the long ago. And tremulous lips, pressed close to faded cheek Love's silent tale of deathless passion speak.
All We Had.
It worn't for her winnin ways,Nor for her bonny faceBut shoo wor th' only lass we had,An that quite alters th' case.We'd two fine lads as yo need see,An' weel we love 'em still;But shoo war th' only lass we had,An' we could spare her ill.We call'd her bi mi mother's name,It saanded sweet to me;We little thowt ha varry sooinAwr pet wod have to dee.Aw used to watch her ivery day,Just like a oppenin bud;An' if aw couldn't see her change,Aw fancied' at aw could.Throo morn to neet her little tongueWor allus on a stir;Awve heeard a deeal o' childer lisp,But nooan at lispt like her.Sho used to play all sooarts o' tricks,'At childer shouldn't play;But then, they wor soa nicely done,
John Hartley
Requiescat
Strew on her roses, roses,And never a spray of yew!In quiet she reposes;Ah, would that I did too!Her mirth the world required;She bathed it in smiles of glee.But her heart was tired, tired,And now they let her be.Her life was turning, turning,In mazes of heat and sound.But for peace her soul was yearning,And now peace laps her round.Her cabin'd, ample spirit,It flutter'd and fail'd for breath.To-night it doth inheritThe vasty hall of death.
Matthew Arnold