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To The New Yeere
Rich Statue, double-faced,With Marble Temples graced, To rayse thy God-head hyer,In flames where Altars shining,Before thy Priests diuining, Doe od'rous Fumes expire.Great IANVS, I thy pleasure,With all the Thespian treasure, Doe seriously pursue;To th' passed yeere returning,As though the old adiourning, Yet bringing in the new.Thy ancient Vigils yeerely,I haue obserued cleerely, Thy Feasts yet smoaking bee;Since all thy store abroad is,Giue something to my Goddesse, As hath been vs'd by thee.Giue her th' Eoan brightnesse,Wing'd with that subtill lightnesse, That doth trans-pierce the Ayre;The Roses of the MorningThe rising Heau'n adorning, To mesh with flames ...
Michael Drayton
Philosophy
I.His eyes found nothing beautiful and bright,Nor wealth nor, honour, glory nor delight,Which he could grasp and keep with might and right.Flowers bloomed for maidens, swords outflashed for boys,The worlds big children had their various toys;He could not feel their sorrows and their joys.Hills held a secret they would not unfold,In careless scorn of him the ocean rolled,The stars were alien splendours high and cold.He felt himself a king bereft of crown,Defrauded from his birthright of renown,Bred up in littleness with churl and clown.II.How could he vindicate himself? His eyes,That found not anywhere their proper prize,Looked through and through the specious earth and skies,They prob...
James Thomson
Miracles.
Love met a worldling on the way, And softly crept into his breast. Straight Self and Greed refused to stay Where Love had dared to make his nest. Love met a mourner on the road, And said: "I'll bear thee company." Full soon the mourner lost his load Of grief, and care, and misery. Into a grim and cheerless home Love forced his way through barriers tall; Fled wretchedness, and chill, and gloom - The golden sunshine flooded all.
Jean Blewett
The Unseen City.
Not far away does that bright city stand,'Tis but the mist o'er its dividing stream,That wraps the glory of its glitt'ring strand,Its radiant skies, and mountains silvery gleam;Oh, often in the blindness of our fateWe wander very near the city's gate.We love that unseen city, and we yearnEver within our earthly homes to seeIts golden towers, that in the sunset burn,Its white walls rising from the quiet sea;Its mansions gleaming with immortal glow,Filled with the treasure lost to us below.Yes, dear ones that we loved and lost are there;Bright in that fair clime beam those sweet eyes now;Fanned by its soft breeze floats the shining hair,Hair we have smoothed back from the gentlest brow;Softest white hands we kissed and clasped in ours...
Marietta Holley
The Sin.
That haunting air had some far strain of it,That morning rose hath flung it back to metThe wind of spring, the ancient, awful sea. Bid me remember it.And looking back against the look of Love,I feel the old shame start again and sting;Such eyes are Love's they will not ask the thing, But I remember it!So this one dream of heaven I dare not dream :We two in your familiar ways and high.While you and God forget, and even I Cannot remember it!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Fairhaven Bay.
I push on through the shaggy wood,I round the hill: 't is here it stood;And there, beyond the crumbled walls,The shining Concord slowly crawls,Yet seems to make a passing stay,And gently spreads its lilied bay,Curbed by this green and reedy shore,Up toward the ancient homestead's door.But dumbly sits the shattered house,And makes no answer: man and mouseLong since forsook it, and decayChokes its deep heart with ashes gray.On what was once a garden-groundDull red-bloomed sorrels now abound;And boldly whistles the shy quailWithin the vacant pasture's pale.Ah, strange and savage, where he shines,The sun seems staring through those pinesThat once the vanished home could blessWith intimate, sweet loneliness....
George Parsons Lathrop
Woman's Help.
Sometimes I long to write an ode And magnify his name,The man of honor, on the road To opulence and fame,On whom was never aid bestowed By any helpful dame.To all the world I fain would show That talent widely known,Rare eloquence, of burning glow To melt a heart of stone,That all his gifts, a dazzling row, Are his, and his alone.But him, of character and mind Superb, alert, and strong,I never study but to find The subject of my song,Some paragon of womankind, Has helped him all along.He may not know, he may not guess, How much to her he owes,How every scion of success That in his nature grows,Developed by her watchfulness, Becomes a blooming rose.
Hattie Howard
In Utrumque Paratus
If, in the silent mind of One all-pure,At first imagind layThe sacred world; and by procession sureFrom those still deeps, in form and colour drest,Seasons alternating, and night and day,The long-musd thought to north south east and westTook then its all-seen way:O waking on a world which thus-wise springs!Whether it needs thee countBetwixt thy waking and the birth of thingsAges or hours: O waking on Lifes stream!By lonely pureness to the all-pure Fount(Only by this thou canst) the colourd dreamOf Life remount.Thin, thin the pleasant human noises grow;And faint the city gleams;Rare the lone pastoral huts: marvel not thou!The solemn peaks but to the stars are known,But to the stars, and the cold lunar beams:Alon...
Matthew Arnold
Lines In Memory Of Edmund Morris
Dear Morris - here is your letter -Can my answer reach you now?Fate has left me your debtor,You will remember how;For I went away to Nantucket,And you to the Isle of Orleans,And when I was dawdling and dreamingOver the ways and meansOf answering, the power was denied me,Fate frowned and took her stand;I have your unanswered letterHere in my hand.This - in your famous scribble,It was ever a cryptic fist,Cuneiform or ChaldaicMeanings held in a mist.Dear Morris, (now I'm inditingAnd poring over your script)I gather from the writing,The coin that you had flipt,Turned tails; and so you compel meTo meet you at Touchwood Hills:Or, mayhap, you are trying to tell meThe sum of a painter's ills:Is that...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Nearly Bedtime.
Only half an hour or so Before nurse calls them to bed,And the ruddy light of a cheerful fire Shines over each curly head.No trouble have they, no sorrow - Their hearts are lighter than air,No fear that a dark to-morrow May bring with it want or care.God send them each on their pathway Many a wayside flower;And grant, in the evening of lifetime, The joy of the evening hour.
Lizzie Lawson
The Path To Faery
I.When dusk falls cool as a rained-on rose,And a tawny tower the twilight shows,With the crescent moon, the silver moon, the curved new moon in a space that glows,A turret window that grows alight;There is a path that my Fancy knows,A glimmering, shimmering path of night,That far as the Land of Faery goes.II.And I follow the path, as Fancy leads,Over the mountains, into the meads,Where the firefly cities, the glowworm cities, the faery cities are strung like beads,Each city a twinkling star:And I live a life of valorous deeds,And march with the Faery King to war,And ride with his knights on milk-white steeds.III.Or it's there in the whirl of their life I sit,Or dance in their houses with starlight lit,<...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Crisis
A man of low degree was sore oppressed,Fate held him under iron-handed sway,And ever, those who saw him thus distressedWould bid him bend his stubborn will and pray.But he, strong in himself and obdurate,Waged, prayerless, on his losing fight with Fate.Friends gave his proffered hand their coldest clasp,Or took it not at all; and Poverty,That bruised his body with relentless grasp,Grinned, taunting, when he struggled to be free.But though with helpless hands he beat the air,His need extreme yet found no voice in prayer.Then he prevailed; and forthwith snobbish Fate,Like some whipped cur, came fawning at his feet;Those who had scorned forgave and called him great--His friends found out that friendship still was sweet.But he, once obd...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Birth Of Manly Virtue
Inscribed To Lord Carteret[1] (Verses Written During Lord Carteret's Administration Of Ireland)1724Gratior et pulcro veniens in corpore virtus. - VIRG., Aen., v, 344.Once on a time, a righteous sage,Grieved with the vices of the age,Applied to Jove with fervent prayer -"O Jove, if Virtue be so fairAs it was deem'd in former days,By Plato and by Socrates,Whose beauties mortal eyes escape,Only for want of outward shape;Make then its real excellence,For once the theme of human sense;So shall the eye, by form confined,Direct and fix the wandering mind,And long-deluded mortals see,With rapture, what they used to flee!" Jove grants the prayer, gives Virtue birth,And bids him bless and mend the earth.Behold him ...
Jonathan Swift
The Fountain Of Youth
The fount the Spaniard sought in vainThrough all the land of flowersLeaps glittering from the sandy plainOur classic grove embowers;Here youth, unchanging, blooms and smiles,Here dwells eternal spring,And warm from Hope's elysian islesThe winds their perfume bring.Here every leaf is in the bud,Each singing throat in tune,And bright o'er evening's silver floodShines the young crescent moon.What wonder Age forgets his staffAnd lays his glasses down,And gray-haired grandsires look and laughAs when their locks were brown!With ears grown dull and eyes grown dimThey greet the joyous dayThat calls them to the fountain's brimTo wash their years away.What change has clothed the ancient sireIn sudden youth? For, ...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Child's Appeal.
An Incident Of The French Revolution And Reign Of Robespierre.Day dawned above a city's mart,Yet not 'mid peace and prayer:The shouts of frenzied multitudesWere on the thrilling air.A guiltless man to death was led,Through crowded streets and wide,And a fairy child, with waving curls,Was clinging to his side.The father's brow with pride was calm,But, trusting and serene,The child's was like the Holy One'sIn Raphael's paintings seen.She shrank not from the heartless throng,Nor from the scaffold high;But now and then, with beaming smile,Addressed her parent's eye.Athwart the golden flood of mornWas poised the wing of Death,As 'neath the fearful guillotineThe doomed one drew his breath.
Mary Gardiner Horsford
Sinai And Calvary.
There are two mountains hallowed By majesty sublime,Which rear their crests unconquered Above the floods of Time.Uncounted generations Have gazed on them with awe, -The mountain of the Gospel, The mountain of the Law.From Sinai's cloud of darkness The vivid lightnings play;They serve the God of vengeance, The Lord who shall repay.Each fault must bring its penance, Each sin the avenging blade,For God upholds in justice The laws that He hath made.But Calvary stands to ransom The earth from utter loss,In shade than light more glorious, The shadow of the Cross.To heal a sick world's trouble, To soothe its woe and pain,On Calvary's sacred summit The Paschal Lam...
John Hay
The River Path
No bird-song floated down the hill,The tangled bank below was still;No rustle from the birchen stem,No ripple from the waters hem.The dusk of twilight round us grew,We felt the falling of the dew;For, from us, ere the day was done,The wooded hills shut out the sun.But on the rivers farther sideWe saw the hill-tops glorified,A tender glow, exceeding fair,A dream of day without its glare.With us the damp, the chill, the gloomWith them the sunsets rosy bloom;While dark, through willowy vistas seen,The river rolled in shade between.From out the darkness where we trod,We gazed upon those hills of God,Whose light seemed not of moon or sun.We spake not, but our thought was one....
John Greenleaf Whittier
Loved And Lost.
I.Sweetly to sleep beneath the fresh green turf They laid the loved and lost away;A chair is vacant by the household hearth, And shadow-vested Sorrow's there to-day.II.The tender hands that guided us in youth Are folded now upon the gentle breast,And those dear eyes whose depths were love and truth Are closed to open in eternal rest.III.Through simple faith and duty well performed, A crown of light forever shall be hers;And though with bitter grief and anguish mourned, A consolation gleams through blinding tears!
George W. Doneghy