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The Eve Of Election
From gold to grayOur mild sweet dayOf Indian Summer fades too soon;But tenderlyAbove the seaHangs, white and calm, the hunter's moon.In its pale fire,The village spireShows like the zodiac's spectral lance;The painted wallsWhereon it fallsTransfigured stand in marble trance!O'er fallen leavesThe west-wind grieves,Yet comes a seed-time round again;And morn shall seeThe State sown freeWith baleful tares or healthful grain.Along the streetThe shadows meetOf Destiny, whose hands concealThe moulds of fateThat shape the State,And make or mar the common weal.Around I seeThe powers that be;I stand by Empire's primal springs;And princes meet,In every street,And hear the tread ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Mak a Gooid Start.
Let's mak a gooid start, nivver fearWhat grum'lers an growlers may say;That nivver need cause yo a tear,For whear ther's a will ther's a way.If yo've plenty to ait an to drink,Nivver heed, though yor wark may be rough;If yo'll nobbut keep hooapful, aw think,Yo'll find th' way to mend plain enuff.If yor temper gets saar'd an cross,An yor mind is disturbed an perplext;Or if troubled wi' sickness an loss,An yor poverty maks yo feel vext; -Nivver heed! for its fooilish to freeatAbaat things at yo connot prevent;An i'th futer ther may be a treeat,'At'll pay for all th' sad days you've spent,I' this new life beginnin, - who knowsWhat for each on us may be i' stoor?For th' river o' Time as it flows,Weshes th' threshold o'...
John Hartley
Margery.
"Truth lights our minds as sunrise lights the world.The heart that shuts out truth, excludes the lightThat wakes the love of beauty in the soul;And being foe to these, despises God,The sole Dispenser of the gracious blissThat brings us nearer the celestial gate.They who might feed on rose-leaves of the True,And grow in loveliness of heart and soul,Catch at Deception's airy gossamers,As children clutch at stars. To some, the worldIs a bleak desert, parched with blinding sand,With here and there a mirage, fair to view,But insubstantial as the visions bornOf Folly and Despair. Could we but knowHow nigh we are to the true light of heaven;In what a world of love we live and breathe;On what a tide of truth our souls are borne!Yet we're bu...
Charles Sangster
Provide, Provide
The witch that came (the withered hag)To wash the steps with pail and rag,Was once the beauty Abishag,The picture pride of Hollywood.Too many fall from great and goodFor you to doubt the likelihood.Die early and avoid the fate.Or if predestined to die late,Make up your mind to die in state.Make the whole stock exchange your own!If need be occupy a throne,Where nobody can call you crone.Some have relied on what they knew;Others on simply being true.What worked for them might work for you.No memory of having starredAtones for later disregard,Or keeps the end from being hard.Better to go down dignifiedWith boughten friendship at your sideThan none at all. Provide, provide!
Robert Lee Frost
The Goal.
Each life converges to some centreExpressed or still;Exists in every human natureA goal,Admitted scarcely to itself, it may be,Too fairFor credibility's temerityTo dare.Adored with caution, as a brittle heaven,To reachWere hopeless as the rainbow's raimentTo touch,Yet persevered toward, surer for the distance;How highUnto the saints' slow diligenceThe sky!Ungained, it may be, by a life's low venture,But then,Eternity enables the endeavoringAgain.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Barter
There is a long thin line of fading gold In the far West, and the transfigured leaves On some slight, topmost bough that sways and heavesHang limp and tremulous. Nor warm, nor cold The pungent air, and, 'neath the yellow haze, Show flushed and glad the wild, October ways.There is a soft enchantment in the air, A mystery the Summer knows not, nor The sturdy, frost-crowned Winter. Nature woreHer blandest smile to-day, as here and there I wandered, elf-beset, through wood and field And gleaned the glories of the autumn yield.A bunch of purple aster, golden-rod Darkened by the first frost, a drooping spray Of scarlet barberry, and tall and grayThe silk-cored cotton with its bursting pod, Some tarnished m...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Sharing
On the far horizon thereHeaps of cloudy darkness rest;Though the wind is in the airThere is stupor east and west.For the sky no change is making,Scarce we know it from the plain;Droop its eyelids never waking,Blinded by the misty rain;Save on high one little spot,Round the baffled moon a spaceWhere the tumult ceaseth not:Wildly goes the midnight race!And a joy doth rise in meUpward gazing on the sight,When I think that others seeIn yon clouds a like delight;How perchance an aged manStruggling with the wind and rain,In the moonlight cold and wanFeels his heart grow young again;As the cloudy rack goes by,How the life-blood mantles upTill the fountain deep and dryYields once m...
George MacDonald
Memory
Remembrance of the past will joy impartIf in that past the conscience was supreme;But if the soul be made an auction mart,And thoughts and deeds be sold for what you deemThe price of virtue, then the called-up pastWill be like hooks of steel to hold thee fast.Or like the stings those nettles left behindWhich I so fondly handled in my play;I deemed the friend who warned me true and kind,And in great haste I threw the weeds away,But soon the burning flesh reminded me'Twere safer far from all such weeds to flee.The cloud that flitted o'er the saintly browWhich now a crown of life so well adorns,When you by ways and means you know not now,Did what your soul with holy horror scorns,Will stay with you long as you live on earth,And b...
Joseph Horatio Chant
To the Virgin Mary
Mother of Him we call the Christ,No halo round thy brows we paint,Incense and prayer we offer not,Nor mind to title thee as saint.And yet, no womans name, of allWith honour from the ages sent,Mary, is aureoled like thine,With love and grief and glory blent!Oh wisely was it that He chose,Who the unwritten future reads,To teach the after-world, through thee,What cherishers Messiah needs.Thou heardst the angels prophecy,The tidings which the shepherds brought,Anna and Simeon praising God,And sawst that star the Wise Men sought!Ah, who of us could bear, like thee,With meekness, Gods triumphal light;Then, still believing, with His Charge,At midnight take an exiles flight?Throughout the Son...
Mary Hannay Foott
Illusions.
I.As down life's morning stream we glide,Full oft some Flower stoops o'er its side,And beckons to the smiling shore,Where roses strew the landscape o'er:Yet as we reach that Flower to clasp,It seems to mock the cheated grasp,And whisper soft, with siren glee,"My bloom is not oh not for thee!"II.Within Youth's flowery vale I tread,By some entrancing shadow ledAnd Echo to my call repliesYet, as she answers, lo, she flies!And, as I seem to reach her cellThe grotto, where she weaves her spellThe Nymph's sweet voice afar I hearSo Love departs, as we draw near!III.Upon a mountain's dizzy height,Ambition's temple gleams with light:Proud forms are moving fair within,And bid u...
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
Blank Misgivings Of A Creature Moving About In Worlds Not Realised.
IHere am I yet, another twelvemonth spent,One-third departed of the mortal span,Carrying on the child into the man,Nothing into reality. Sails rent,And rudder broken, reason impotentAffections all unfixed; so forth I fareOn the mid seas unheedingly, so dareTo do and to be done by, well content.So was it from the first, so is it yet;Yea, the first kiss that by these lips was setOn any human lips, methinks was sinSin, cowardice, and falsehood; for the willInto a deed een then advanced, whereinGod, unidentified, was thought-of still.IIThough to the vilest things beneath the moonFor poor Ease sake I give away my heart,And for the moments sympathy let partMy sight and sense of truth, Thy precious boon,My ...
Arthur Hugh Clough
The Reign Of Reason
The day of truth is dawning. I beholdO'er darksome hills the trailing robes of goldAnd silent footsteps of the gladsome dawn.The morning breaks by sages long foretold;Truth comes to set upon the world her throne.Men lift their foreheads to the rising sun,And lo the reign of Reason is begun.Fantastic phantasms fly before the lightPale, gibbering ghosts and ghouls and goblin fears:Man who hath walked in sleep what thousands years?Groping among the shadows of the night,Moon-struck and in a weird somnambulism,Mumbling some cunning cant or catechism,Thrilled by the electric magic of the skiesSun-touched by Truth awakes and rubs his eyes.Old Superstition, mother of cruel creeds,O'er all the earth hath sown her dragon-teeth.Lo centuries on...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
The Happy Man
To teach the grey earth like a child,To bid the heavens repent,I only ask from Fate the giftOf one man well content.Him will I find: though when in vainI search the feast and mart,The fading flowers of liberty,The painted masks of art.I only find him at the last,On one old hill where nodGolgotha's ghastly trinity--Three persons and one god.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
The Misanthrope Reclaimed - ACT II.
The verge of Creation. Enter Werner and Spirit.Werner.We have outtravelled light and sound:The harmonies that pealed around us, asThrough yon array of dim and distant worldsWe winged our flight, have wholly died away,Or come to us so faintly echoed, thatOur ears must watch and wait to catch them.Those stars are now like watch-fires, which though seenBlazing afar, send not their light to makeThe path of the benighted wandererMore plain and cheerful.Before us stretches one vast field of gloom,So dense as to appear impenetrable: -Darkness, that has a body and a form,Both palpable to touch and sight, acrossOur path a barrier rears that seems to barOur farther progress. If there be, beyondThis wall of blackness, aught of myst...
George W. Sands
Bright Scenes Must All Depart.
Bright scenes must all depart as they've departed,Unshadowed years will fly as they have flown,And fairer visions leave us silent-hearted,Keen, lashing blasts must blow as they have blown.Old mem'ries must grow dim and fade away,Across the world's wide wastes the sun shall set,Thou shalt press forward on thy toil-trod way,Nor leave me one, just one, one sad regret.Ah, where shall I be then?--forgot--estranged,When years have rolled their glory at thy feet,When friends and kindred all, yea, all have changedAnd others come their chosen one to greet.And yet what prayer from me could now implore,Could crave for all it would, for words have fled?May Heaven preserve thee as thou wast before,And multiply all blessings on thy head.
Lennox Amott
A Prayer
My God (oh, let me call Thee mine,Weak, wretched sinner though I be),My trembling soul would fain be Thine;My feeble faith still clings to Thee.Not only for the Past I grieve,The Future fills me with dismay;Unless Thou hasten to relieve,Thy suppliant is a castaway.I cannot say my faith is strong,I dare not hope my love is great;But strength and love to Thee belong;Oh, do not leave me desolate!I know I owe my all to Thee;Oh, TAKE the heart I cannot give!Do Thou my strength, my Saviour be,And MAKE me to Thy glory live.
Anne Bronte
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - December.
1. I AM a little weary of my life-- Not thy life, blessed Father! Or the blood Too slowly laves the coral shores of thought, Or I am weary of weariness and strife. Open my soul-gates to thy living flood; I ask not larger heart-throbs, vigour-fraught, I pray thy presence, with strong patience rife. 2. I will what thou will'st--only keep me sure That thou art willing; call to me now and then. So, ceasing to enjoy, I shall endure With perfect patience--willing beyond my ken Beyond my love, beyond my thinking scope; Willing to be because thy will is pure; Willing thy will beyond all bounds of hope. 3....
The Clouds Return After The Rain.
Dark and yet darker my day's clouded o'er;Are its bright joys all fled, and its sunshine no more?I look to the skies for the bright bow in vain,For constantly "clouds return after the rain."Must it always be thus, peace banished forever,And joy to this sad heart returned again never?I long for the rest that I cannot obtain,For the clouds, so much dreaded, return after rain.Is there not in this wide world one spot that is blessedWith exemption from suffering, where one may find rest;Where sickness and sorrow no entranpe can gain,And the clouds do not return after the rain?Ah! deceive not thyself by a vain hope like this,Nor expect in this world to enjoy lasting peace:But bow with submission to God's holy will,For the hand that afflic...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow