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The Widow.
One widow at a grave will sobA little while, and weep, and sigh!If two should meet on such a job,They'll have a gossip by and by.If three should come together - why,Three widows are good company!If four should meet by any chance,Four is a number very nice,To have a rubber in a trice -But five will up and have a dance!Poor Mrs. C - - (why should I notDeclare her name? - her name was Cross)Was one of those the "common lot"Had left to weep "no common loss";For she had lately buried thenA man, the "very best of men,"A lingering truth, discovered firstWhenever men "are at the worst."To take the measure of her woe,It was some dozen inches deep -I mean in crape, and hung so low,It hid the drops she did <...
Thomas Hood
Isaura.
Dost thou not tire, Isaura, of this play? "What play?" Why, this old play of winning hearts! Nay, now, lift not thine eyes in that feigned way: 'Tis all in vain - I know thee and thine arts. Let us be frank, Isaura. I have made A study of thee; and while I admire The practised skill with which thy plans are laid, I can but wonder if thou dost not tire. Why, I tire even of Hamlet and Macbeth! When overlong the season runs, I find Those master-scenes of passion, blood, and death, After a time do pall upon my mind. Dost thou not tire of lifting up thine eyes To read the story thou hast read so oft - Of ardent glances and deep quivering sighs, Of haughty fa...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
One Who Died Young
With her 't is well now. She died young,With all her hope and faith unmarred,Nor lived to see the pearls, Love strung,Without regard,Cast, lost amongThe disillusions that make life so hard.Time on her body now can layNo soiling hand and spoil what's fair:He shall not turn the gold hair gray,Nor bring crabbed Care,Day after day,To line the white brow with the heart's despair.Far better thus. Yea, even so,To die before faith turns to dust,Before the heart has learned to know,As learn it must,Of love the woe,And of all human life the deep disgust.
Madison Julius Cawein
Claribel
Where Claribel low-liethThe breezes pause and die,Letting the rose-leaves fall:But the solemn oak-tree sigheth,Thick-leaved, ambrosial,With an ancient melodyOf an inward agony,Where Claribel low-lieth.At eve the beetle boomethAthwart the thicket lone:At noon the wild bee hummethAbout the moss'd headstone:At midnight the moon cometh,And looketh down alone.Her song the lintwhite swelleth,The clear-voiced mavis dwelleth,The callow throstle lispeth,The slumbrous wave outwelleth,The babbling runnel crispeth,The hollow grot repliethWhere Claribel low-lieth.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
A Youth's Suicide.
He handed his life a poisoned draught,With a scornful smile and a cold, cold glance,And the merry bystanders loudly laughed(For the rollicking world was gay!).He thought she knew not the juice, perchance;But her tears fell down to her sobbing lipsWhile the merry-makers turned to the dance(The world was mocking fate that day!).To his life he kissed his finger-tips:"Drink deep the beaker, and so farewell!"Then slowly the poisoned draught she sips(How they laugh at her meek dismay!).He sprang to her arm, which loosely fell,Crying: "No! not yet that dire eclipse!"Now loud laughed the dancers, and whirled pell-mell(While the echoes hurried away!).The mad world clustered, it seemed, around."Farewell!" she sighed, sinking...
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Skim-Milk
A small part only of my grief I write; And if I do not give you all the tale It is because my gloom gets some respite By just a small bewailing: I bewail That I with sly and stupid folk must bide Who steal my food and ruin my inside. Once I had books, each book beyond compare, But now no book at all is left to me, And I am spied and peeped on everywhere, And my old head, stuffed with latinity, And with the poet's load of grave and gay Will not get me skim-milk for half a day. Wild horse or quiet, not a horse have I, But to the forest every day I go Bending beneath a load of wood, that high! Which raises on my back a sorry row Of raw, red blisters; so I cry, ...
James Stephens
Sonnet XXXI.
I am older than Nature and her TimeBy all the timeless age of Consciousness,And my adult oblivion of the climeWhere I was born makes me not countryless.Ay, and dim through my daylight thoughts escapeYearnings for that land where my childhood dreamed,Which I cannot recall in colour or shapeBut haunts my hours like something that hath gleamedAnd yet is not as light remembered,Nor to the left or to the right conceived;And all round me tastes as if life were deadAnd the world made but to be disbelieved. Thus I my hope on unknown truth lay; yet How but by hope do I the unknown truth get?
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
Voices Of The Night. Prelude.
Pleasant it was, when woods were green, And winds were soft and low,To lie amid some sylvan scene,Where, the long drooping boughs between,Shadows dark and sunlight sheen Alternate come and go;Or where the denser grove receives No sunlight from above,But the dark foliage interweavesIn one unbroken roof of leaves,Underneath whose sloping eaves The shadows hardly move.Beneath some patriarchal tree I lay upon the ground;His hoary arms uplifted he,And all the broad leaves over meClapped their little hands in glee, With one continuous sound--A slumberous sound,--a sound that brings The feelings of a dream--As of innumerable wings,As, when a bell no longer swings,Paint the holl...
William Henry Giles Kingston
Shadows
Shadows! the only shadows that I knowAre happy shadows of the light of you,The radiance immortal shining throughYour sea-deep eyes up from the soul below;Your shadow, like a rose's, on the grassWhere your feet pass.The shadow of the dimple in your chin,The shadow of the lashes of your eyes,As on your cheek, soft as a moth, it lies;And, as a church, I softly enter inThe solemn twilight of your mighty hair,Down falling there.These are Love's shadows, Love knows none but these:Shadows that are the very soul of light,As morning and the morning blossom bright,Or jewelled shadows of moon-haunted seas;The darkest shadows in this world of oursAre made of flowers.
Richard Le Gallienne
Memory
I would not that my memory all should die,And pass away with every common lot:I would not that my humble dust should lieIn quite a strange and unfrequented spot,By all unheeded and by all forgot,With nothing save the heedless winds to sigh,And nothing but the dewy morn to weepAbout my grave, far hid from the world's eye:I fain would have some friend to wander nighAnd find a path to where my ashes sleep--Not the cold heart that merely passes by,To read who lies beneath, but such as keepPast memories warm with deeds of other years,And pay to friendship some few friendly tears.
John Clare
Thoughts of Home.1
I watched them from the window, thy children at their play,And I thought of all my own dear friends, who were far, oh, far away,And childish loves, and childish cares, and a childs own buoyant gladnessCame gushing back again to me with a soft and solemn sadness;And feelings frozen up full long, and thoughts of long ago,Seemed to be thawing at my heart with a warm and sudden flow.I looked upon thy children, and I thought of all and each,Of my brother and my sister, and our rambles on the beach,Of my mothers gentle voice, and my mothers beckoning hand,And all the tales she used to tell of the far, far English land;And the happy, happy evening hours, when I sat on my fathers knee,Oh! many a wave is rolling now betwixt that seat and me!And many a day has p...
Arthur Hugh Clough
The Dead Oread
Her heart is still and leaps no moreWith holy passion when the breeze,Her whilom playmate, as before,Comes with the language of the bees,Sad songs her mountain cedars sing,And water-music murmuring.Her calm white feet, erst fleet and fastAs Daphne's when a god pursued,No more will dance like sunlight pastThe gold-green vistas of the wood,Where every quailing floweretSmiled into life where they were set.Hers were the limbs of living light,And breasts of snow; as virginalAs mountain drifts; and throat as whiteAs foam of mountain waterfall;And hyacinthine curls, that streamedLike crag-born mists, and gloomed and gleamed.Her presence breathed such scents as hauntMoist, mountain dells and solitudes;Aromas wi...
To H. C.
SIX YEARS OLDO thou! whose fancies from afar are brought;Who of thy words dost make a mock apparel,And fittest to unutterable thoughtThe breeze-like motion and the self-born carol;Thou faery voyager! that dost floatIn such clear water, that thy boatMay rather seemTo brood on air than on an earthly stream;Suspended in a stream as clear as sky,Where earth and heaven do make one imagery;O blessed vision! happy child!Thou art so exquisitely wild,I think of thee with many fearsFor what may be thy lot in future years.I thought of times when Pain might be thy guest,Lord of thy house and hospitality;And Grief, uneasy lover! never restBut when she sate within the touch of thee.O too industrious folly!O vain and causeless me...
William Wordsworth
The Last Chrysanthemum
Why should this flower delay so longTo show its tremulous plumes?Now is the time of plaintive robin-song,When flowers are in their tombs.Through the slow summer, when the sunCalled to each frond and whorlThat all he could for flowers was being done,Why did it not uncurl?It must have felt that fervid callAlthough it took no heed,Waking but now, when leaves like corpses fall,And saps all retrocede.Too late its beauty, lonely thing,The season's shine is spent,Nothing remains for it but shiveringIn tempests turbulent.Had it a reason for delay,Dreaming in witlessnessThat for a bloom so delicately gayWinter would stay its stress?- I talk as if the thing were bornWith sense to work its mind;<...
Thomas Hardy
Story of Udaipore: Told by Lalla-ji, the Priest
"And when the Summer Heat is great, And every hour intense, The Moghra, with its subtle flowers, Intoxicates the sense."The Coco palms stood tall and slim, against the golden-glow,And all their grey and graceful plumes were waving to and fro.She lay forgetful in the boat, and watched the dying SunSink slowly lakewards, while the stars replaced him, one by one.She saw the marble Temple walls long white reflections make,The echoes of their silvery bells were blown across the lake.The evening air was very sweet; from off the island bowersCame scents of Moghra trees in bloom, and Oleander flowers. "The Moghra flowers that smell so sweet When love's young fancies play; The acrid Moghra flowers, still sweet
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Flowers, dear flowers, farewell!
"We are sending you, dear flowers,Forth alone to die,Where your gentle sisters may not weepO'er the cold graves where you lie;But you go to bring them fadeless lifeIn the bright homes where they dwell,And you softly smile that 't is so,As we sadly sing farewell.O plead with gentle words for us,And whisper tenderlyOf generous love to that cold heart,And it will answer ye;And though you fade in a dreary home,Yet loving hearts will tellOf the joy and peace that you have given:Flowers, dear flowers, farewell!"
Louisa May Alcott
Elegy On The Death Of A Young Man. [5]
Mournful groans, as when a tempest lowers,Echo from the dreary house of woe;Death-notes rise from yonder minster's towers!Bearing out a youth, they slowly go;Yes! a youth unripe yet for the bier,Gathered in the spring-time of his days,Thrilling yet with pulses strong and clear,With the flame that in his bright eye playsYes, a son the idol of his mother,(Oh, her mournful sigh shows that too well!)Yes! my bosom-friend, alas my brother!Up! each man the sad procession swell!Do ye boast, ye pines, so gray and old,Storms to brave, with thunderbolts to sport?And, ye hills, that ye the heavens uphold?And, ye heavens, that ye the suns support!Boasts the graybeard, who on haughty deedsAs on billows, seeks perfection's height?Boasts the ...
Friedrich Schiller
Fragment: Thoughts Come And Go In Solitude.
My thoughts arise and fade in solitude,The verse that would invest them melts awayLike moonlight in the heaven of spreading day:How beautiful they were, how firm they stood,Flecking the starry sky like woven pearl!
Percy Bysshe Shelley