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Cenotaph
By vain affections unenthralled,Though resolute when duty calledTo meet the world's broad eye,Pure as the holiest cloistered nunThat ever feared the tempting sun,Did Fermor live and die.This Tablet, hallowed by her name,One heart-relieving tear may claim;But if the pensive gloomOf fond regret be still thy choice,Exalt thy spirit, hear the voiceOf Jesus from her tomb!"I Am The Way, The Truth, And The Life"
William Wordsworth
Odes From Horace. - To The Hon. Thomas Erskine. Horace, Book The Second, Ode The Third, Imitated.
OCTOBER 1796.Conscious the mortal stamp is on thy breast,O, ERSKINE! still an equal mind maintain,That wild Ambition ne'er may goad thy rest,Nor Fortune's smile awake thy triumph vain,Whether thro' toilsome tho' renowned years'T is thine to trace the Law's perplexing maze,Or win the SACRED SEALS, whose awful caresTo high decrees devote thy honor'd days.Where silver'd Poplars with the stately PinesMix their thick branches in the summer sky,And the cool stream, whose trembling surface shines,Laboriously oblique, is hurrying by;There let thy duteous Train the banquet bring,In whose bright cups the liquid ruby flows,As Life's warm season, on expanded wing,Presents her too, too transitory rose;While every Mu...
Anna Seward
She Looks Back
The pale bubblesThe lovely pale-gold bubbles of the globe-flowersIn a great swarm clotted and singleWent rolling in the dusk towards the riverTo where the sunset hung its wan gold cloths;And you stood alone, watching them go,And that mother-love like a demon drew you from meTowards England.Along the road, after nightfall,Along the glamorous birch-tree avenueAcross the river levelsWe went in silence, and you staring to England.So then there shone within the jungle darknessOf the long, lush under-grass, a glow-worm's suddenGreen lantern of pure light, a little, intense, fusing triumph,White and haloed with fire-mist, down in the tangled darkness.Then you put your hand in mine again, kissed me, and we struggled to be together.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Odes Of Anacreon - Ode VII.
The women tell me every dayThat all my bloom has pas past away."Behold," the pretty wantons cry,"Behold this mirror with a sigh;The locks upon thy brow are few,And like the rest, they're withering too!"Whether decline has thinned my hair,I'm sure I neither know nor care;But this I know, and this I feelAs onward to the tomb I steal,That still as death approaches nearer,The joys of life are sweeter, dearer;And had I but an hour to live,That little hour to bliss I'd give.
Thomas Moore
The Swimmer
With short, sharp, violent lights made vivid,To southward far as the sight can roam,Only the swirl of the surges livid,The seas that climb and the surfs that comb.Only the crag and the cliff to norward,And the rocks receding, and reefs flung forward,And waifs wreckd seaward and wasted shorewardOn shallows sheeted with flaming foam.A grim, grey coast and a seaboard ghastly,And shores trod seldom by feet of men,Where the batterd hull and the broken mast lie,They have lain embedded these long years ten.Love! when we wanderd here together,Hand in hand through the sparkling weather,From the heights and hollows of fern and heather,God surely loved us a little then.The skies were fairer and shores were firmer,The blue sea over th...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Life.
Life, believe, is not a dreamSo dark as sages say;Oft a little morning rainForetells a pleasant day.Sometimes there are clouds of gloom,But these are transient all;If the shower will make the roses bloom,O why lament its fall?Rapidly, merrily,Life's sunny hours flit by,Gratefully, cheerilyEnjoy them as they fly!What though Death at times steps in,And calls our Best away?What though sorrow seems to win,O'er hope, a heavy sway?Yet Hope again elastic springs,Unconquered, though she fell;Still buoyant are her golden wings,Still strong to bear us well.Manfully, fearlessly,The day of trial bear,For gloriously, victoriously,Can courage quell despair!
Charlotte Bronte
Don Juan - Canto The Seventeenth.
The world is full of orphans: firstly, those Who are so in the strict sense of the phrase(But many a lonely tree the loftier grows Than others crowded in the forest's maze);The next are such as are not doomed to lose Their tender parents in their budding days,But merely their parental tenderness,Which leaves them orphans of the heart no less.The next are 'only children', as they are styled, Who grow up children only, since the old sawPronounces that an 'only' 's a spoilt child. But not to go too far, I hold it lawThat where their education, harsh or mild, 'Transgresses the great bounds of love or awe,The sufferers, be't in heart or intellect,Whate'er the cause are orphans in effect.But to re...
George Gordon Byron
Rest In Heaven
When tossed on time's tempestuous tide, By angry storms resistless driven,One hope can bid our fears subside - It is the hope of rest in Heaven.With trusting heart we lift our eyes Above the dark clouds, tempest-driven,And view, beyond those troubled skies, The peaceful, stormless rest of Heaven.No more to shed the exile's tears, - No more the heart by anguish riven, -No longer bent 'neath toilful years, - How sweet will be the rest of Heaven
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Countess
The pig's head omelette - something akin to a tatoo buried squarely on the upper torso of the man wielding an axe, chopping wood. Shoulders drooped, the bizarre rendition had a female counterpart - a snake, fitted like a fish-net stocking, coating the upper leg of the dancer writhing to music, so soporific, near the copper shield of the table, ever-molten ash, air-borne with the foetid smear & puff of cigarette smoke.
Paul Cameron Brown
Mockery.
Why do we grudge our sweets so to the living Who, God knows, find at best too much of gall, And then with generous, open hands kneel, giving Unto the dead our all? Why do we pierce the warm hearts, sin or sorrow, With idle jests, or scorn, or cruel sneers, And when it cannot know, on some to-morrow, Speak of its woe through tears? What do the dead care, for the tender token - The love, the praise, the floral offerings? But palpitating, living hearts are broken For want of just these things.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Sonnets: Idea LVIII
In former times, such as had store of coin,In wars at home or when for conquests bound,For fear that some their treasure should purloin,Gave it to keep to spirits within the ground; And to attend it them as strongly tiedTill they returned. Home when they never came,Such as by art to get the same have tried,From the strong spirit by no means force the same. Nearer men come, that further flies away,Striving to hold it strongly in the deep.Ev'n as this spirit, so you alone do playWith those rich beauties Heav'n gives you to keep; Pity so left to th' coldness of your blood, Not to avail you nor do others good.
Michael Drayton
Satires Of Circumstances In Fifteen Glimpses - VI In The Cemetery
"You see those mothers squabbling there?"Remarks the man of the cemetery.One says in tears, ''Tis mine lies here!'Another, 'Nay, mine, you Pharisee!'Another, 'How dare you move my flowersAnd put your own on this grave of ours!'But all their children were laid thereinAt different times, like sprats in a tin."And then the main drain had to cross,And we moved the lot some nights ago,And packed them away in the general fossWith hundreds more. But their folks don't know,And as well cry over a new-laid drainAs anything else, to ease your pain!"
Thomas Hardy
When Thou Must Home To Shades Of Underground
When thou must home to shades of underground,And there arrived, a new admirèd guest,The beauteous spirits do engirt thee round,White Iope, blithe Helen, and the rest,To hear the stories of thy finished loveFrom that smooth tongue whose music hell can move,Then wilt thou speak of banqueting delights,Of masques and revels which sweet youth did make,Of tourneys and great challenges of knights,And all these triumphs for thy beauty's sake;When thou hast told these honors done to thee,Then tell, Oh tell, how thou didst murther me.
Thomas Campion
I Would I Were A Careless Child.
1I would I were a careless child,Still dwelling in my Highland cave,Or roaming through the dusky wild,Or bounding o'er the dark blue wave;The cumbrous pomp of Saxon [1] pride,Accords not with the freeborn soul,Which loves the mountain's craggy side,And seeks the rocks where billows roll.2.Fortune! take back these cultur'd lands,Take back this name of splendid sound!I hate the touch of servile hands,I hate the slaves that cringe around:Place me among the rocks I love,Which sound to Ocean's wildest roar;I ask but this - again to roveThrough scenes my youth hath known before.3.Few are my years, and yet I feelThe World was ne'er design'd for me:Ah! why do dark'ning s...
Translation From Vittorelli. - On A Nun.
Sonnet composed in the name of a father, whose daughter had recently died shortly after her marriage; and addressed to the father of her who had lately taken the veil.Of two fair virgins, modest, though admired,Heaven made us happy; and now, wretched sires,Heaven for a nobler doom their worth desires,And gazing upon either, both required.Mine, while the torch of Hymen newly firedBecomes extinguished, - soon - too soon expires;But thine, within the closing grate retired,Eternal captive, to her God aspires.But thou at least from out the jealous door,Which shuts between your never-meeting eyes,May'st hear her sweet and pious voice once more:I to the marble, where my daughter lies,Rush, - the swoln flood of bitterness I p...
Wasted Love
What shall be done for sorrowWith love whose race is run?Where help is none to borrow,What shall be done?In vain his hands have spunThe web, or drawn the furrow:No rest their toil hath won.His task is all gone thorough,And fruit thereof is none:And who dare say to-morrowWhat shall be done?
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Other Man
When the earth was sick and the skies were grey,And the woods were rotted with rain,The Dead Man rode through the autumn dayTo visit his love again.His love she neither saw nor heard,So heavy was her shame;And tho' the babe within her stirredShe knew not that he came.
Rudyard
Intimations
I.Is it uneasy moonlightOn the restless field, that stirs?Or wild white meadow-blossomsThe night-wind bends and blurs?Is it the dolorous water,That sobs in the woods and sighs?Or heart of an ancient oak-tree,That breaks and, sighing, dies?The wind is vague with the shadowsThat wander in No-Man's Land;The water is dark with the voicesThat weep on the Unknown strand.O ghosts of the winds that call me!O ghosts of the whispering waves!As sad as forgotten flowersThat die upon nameless graves!What is this thing you tell meIn tongues of a twilight race,Of death, with the vanished features,Mantled, of my own face?II.The old enigmas of the deathless dawnsAnd riddles of the all immortal ev...
Madison Julius Cawein