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No Message
She heard the story of the end,Each message, too, she heard;And there was one for every friend;For her alone, no word.And shall she bear a heavier heart,And deem his love was fled;Because his soul from earth could partLeaving her name unsaid?No, No! Though neither sign nor soundA parting thought expressed,Not heedless passed the Homeward-BoundOf her he loved the best.Of voyage-perils, bravely borne,He would not tell the tale;Of shattered planks and canvas torn,And war with wind and gale.He waited, till the light-house starShould rise against the sky;And from the mainland, looming far,The forest scents blow by.He hoped to tell, assurance sweet!That pain and grief were oer,What bl...
Mary Hannay Foott
Youth.
Sweet empty sky of June without a stain, Faint, gray-blue dewy mists on far-off hills,Warm, yellow sunlight flooding mead and plain, That each dark copse and hollow overfills; The rippling laugh of unseen, rain-fed rills,Weeds delicate-flowered, white and pink and gold,A murmur and a singing manifold.The gray, austere old earth renews her youth With dew-lines, sunshine, gossamer, and haze.How still she lies and dreams, and veils the truth, While all is fresh as in the early days! What simple things be these the soul to raiseTo bounding joy, and make young pulses beat,With nameless pleasure finding life so sweet.On such a golden morning forth there floats, Between the soft earth and the softer sky,In ...
Emma Lazarus
At The Mill.
The water-wheel goes 'round and 'round With heavy sighs of mournful sound, While dismal cries and weary moans Unite with sad and tearful groans, And weeping waves of water throw Afar the echoes of their sadness, And cadences of plaintive woe Dispel each little note of gladness. My daily life goes 'round and 'round, And rest for me is never found; The sobbing dirges of distress Are more than songs of happiness; The shadows of despairing doom Condemn to-day and curse to-morrow, And muffled terrors fill the gloom Which offers anguish to my sorrow. But hope, O, heart, for future weal! The waters rest beyond the wheel; So life may sing when toil is done...
Freeman Edwin Miller
Shadows
Shadows are but for the moment--Quickly past;And then the sun the brighter shinesThat it was overcast.For Light is Life!Gracious and sweet,The fair life-giving sun doth scatter blessingsWith his light and heat,--And shadows.But the shadows that come of the life-giving sunCrouch at his feet.No mortal life but has its shadowed times--Not one!Life without shadow could not taste the fullSweet glory of the sun.No shadow falls, but there, behind it, standsThe LightBehind the wrongs and sorrows of life's troublous waysStands RIGHT.
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Twenty Years Ago
I am growing old and wearyEre yet my locks are gray;Before me lies eternity,Behind me but a day.How fast the years are vanishing!They melt like April snow:It seems to me but yesterdayTwenty years ago.There's the school-house on the hill-side,And the romping scholars all;Where we used to con our daily tasks,And play our games of ball.They rise to me in visionsIn sunny dreams and ho'I sport among the boys and girlsTwenty years ago.We played at ball in summer timeWe boys with hearty will;With merry shouts in winter timeWe coasted on the hill.We would choose our chiefs, divide in bands,And build our forts of snow,And storm those forts right gallantlyTwenty years ago.Last year in June...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Sonnets V
Once more into my arid days like dew, Like wind from an oasis, or the sound Of cold sweet water bubbling underground, A treacherous messenger, the thought of you Comes to destroy me; once more I renew Firm faith in your abundance, whom I found Long since to be but just one other mound Of sand, whereon no green thing ever grew. And once again, and wiser in no wise, I chase your colored phantom on the air, And sob and curse and fall and weep and rise And stumble pitifully on to where, Miserable and lost, with stinging eyes, Once more I clasp,--and there is nothing there.
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Indian Summer
Lyric night of the lingering Indian summer,Shadowy fields that are scentless but full of singing,Never a bird, but the passionless chant of insects,Ceaseless, insistent.The grasshoppers horn, and far off, high in the maplesThe wheel of a locust slowly grinding the silence,Under a moon waning and warn and broken,Tired with summer.Let me remember you, voices of little insects,Weeds in the moonlight, fields that are tangled with asters,Let me remember you, soon the winter will be on us,Snow-hushed and heartless.Over my soul murmur your mute benedictionWhile I gaze, oh fields that rest after harvest,As those who part look long in the eyes they lean to,Lest they forget them.
Sara Teasdale
Anticipation.
Let us peer forward through the dusk of years And force the silent future to reveal Her store of garnered joys; we may not kneelFor ever, and entreat our bliss with tears. Somewhere on this drear earth the sunshine lies, Somewhere the air breathes Heaven-blown harmonies.Some day when you and I have fully learned Our waiting-lesson, wondering, hand in hand We shall gaze out upon an unknown land,Our thoughts and our desires forever turned From our old griefs, as swallows, home warding, Sweep ever southward with unwearied wing.We shall fare forth, comrades for evermore. Though the ill-omened bird Time loves to bear Has brushed this cheek and left an impress thereI shall be fierce and dauntless as of yore, ...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
To Sycamores.
I'm sick of love, O let me lieUnder your shades to sleep or die!Either is welcome, so I haveOr here my bed, or here my grave.Why do you sigh, and sob, and keepTime with the tears that I do weep?Say, have ye sense, or do you proveWhat crucifixions are in love?I know ye do, and that's the whyYou sigh for love as well as I.
Robert Herrick
Romneys Remorse
BEAT, little heartI give you this and thisWho are you? What! the Lady Hamilton?Good, I am never weary painting you.To sit once more? Cassandra, Hebe, Joan,Or spinning at your wheel beside the vineBacchante, what you will; and if I failTo conjure and concentrate into formAnd colour all you are, the fault is lessIn me than Art. What Artist ever yetCould make pure light live on the canvas? Art!Why should I so disrelish that short word?Where am I? snow on all the hills! so hot,So feverd! never colt would more delightTo roll himself in meadow grass than ITo wallow in that winter of the hills.Nurse, were you hired? or came of your own willTo wait on one so broken, so forlorn?Have I not met you somewhere long ago?I am all but sure I h...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Evening Of The Holiday.
The night is mild and clear, and without wind, And o'er the roofs, and o'er the gardens round The moon shines soft, and from afar reveals Each mountain-peak serene. O lady, mine, Hushed now is every path, and few and dim The lamps that glimmer through the balconies. Thou sleepest! in thy quiet rooms, how light And easy is thy sleep! No care thy heart Consumes; and little dost thou know or think, How deep a wound thou in my heart hast made. Thou sleepest; I to yonder heaven turn, That seems to greet me with a loving smile, And to that Nature old, omnipotent, That doomed me still to suffer. "I to thee All hope deny," she said, "e'en hope; nor may Those eyes of thine e'er shine, save through their tears."...
Giacomo Leopardi
The Stranger
When trouble haunts me, need I sigh?No, rather smile away despair;For those have been more sad than I,With burthens more than I could bear;Aye, gone rejoicing under careWhere I had sunk in black despair.When pain disturbs my peace and rest,Am I a hopeless grief to keep,When some have slept on torture's breastAnd smiled as in the sweetest sleep,Aye, peace on thorns, in faith forgiven,And pillowed on the hope of heaven?Though low and poor and broken down,Am I to think myself distrest?No, rather laugh where others frownAnd think my being truly blest;For others I can daily seeMore worthy riches worse than me.Aye, once a stranger blest the earthWho never caused a heart to mourn,Whose very voice gave sorrow m...
John Clare
To Mrs. .......
To see thee every day that came,And find thee still each day the same;In pleasure's smile or sorrow's tearTo me still ever kind and dear;--To meet thee early, leave thee late,Has been so long my bliss, my fate,That life, without this cheering ray,Which came, like sunshine, every day,And all my pain, my sorrow chased,Is now a lone, a loveless waste.Where are the chords she used to touch?The airs, the songs she loved so much?Those songs are hushed, those chords are still,And so, perhaps, will every thrillOf feeling soon be lulled to rest,Which late I waked in Anna's breast.Yet, no--the simple notes I playedFrom memory's tablet soon may fade;The songs, which Anna loved to hear,May vanish from her heart and ear;But fri...
Thomas Moore
Sonnet.
Art thou already weary of the way? Thou who hast yet but half the way gone o'er: Get up, and lift thy burthen: lo, beforeThy feet the road goes stretching far away.If thou already faint, who hast but comeThrough half thy pilgrimage, with fellows gay,Love, youth, and hope, under the rosy bloomAnd temperate airs, of early breaking day;Look yonder, how the heavens stoop and gloom,There cease the trees to shade, the flowers to spring,And the angels leave thee; what wilt thou becomeThrough yon drear stretch of dismal wandering,Lonely and dark? I shall take courage, friend,For comes not every step more near the end?
Frances Anne Kemble
To The Leaf-Cricket
I.Small twilight singerOf dew and mist: thou ghost-gray, gossamer wingerOf dusk's dim glimmer,How cool thy note sounds; how thy wings of shimmerVibrate, soft-sighing,Meseems, for Summer that is dead or dying.I stand and listen,And at thy song the garden-beds, that glistenWith rose and lily,Seem touched with sadness; and the tuberose chilly,Breathing around its cold and colorless breath,Fills the pale evening with wan hints of death.II.I see thee quaintlyBeneath the leaf; thy shell-shaped winglets faintlyAs thin as spangleOf cobwebbed rain held up at airy angle;I hear thy tinkle,Thy fairy notes, the silvery stillness sprinkle;Investing whollyThe moonlight with divinest melancholy:...
Madison Julius Cawein
America
IWhere the wings of a sunny Dome expandI saw a Banner in gladsome air--Starry, like Berenice's Hair--Afloat in broadened bravery there;With undulating long-drawn flow,As tolled Brazilian billows goVoluminously o'er the Line.The Land reposed in peace below;The children in their gleeWere folded to the exulting heartOf young Maternity.IILater, and it streamed in fightWhen tempest mingled with the fray,And over the spear-point of the shaftI saw the ambiguous lightning play.Valor with Valor strove, and died:Fierce was Despair, and cruel was Pride;And the lorn Mother speechless stood,Pale at the fury of her brood.IIIYet later, and the silk did windHer fair cold form;Little availed the shinin...
Herman Melville
Rhymes And Rhythms - XXII
Trees and the menace of night;Then a long, lonely, leaden mereBacked by a desolate fellAs by a spectral battlement; and then,Low-brooding, interpenetrating all,A vast, grey, listless, inexpressive sky,So beggared, so incredibly bereftOf starlight and the song of racing worldsIt might have bellied down upon the VoidWhere as in terror Light was beginning to be.Hist! In the trees fulfilled of night(Night and the wretchedness of the sky)Is it the hurry of the rain?Or the noise of a drive of the DeadStreaming before the irresistible WillThrough the strange dusk of this, the Debateable LandBetween their place and ours?Like the forgetfulnessOf the work-a-day world made visible,A mist falls from the melancholy sky:
William Ernest Henley
Lines Written In A Storm At Sea.
That sky of clouds is not the skyTo light a lover to the pillow Of her he loves--The swell of yonder foaming billowResembles not the happy sigh That rapture moves.Yet do I feel more tranquil farAmid the gloomy wilds of ocean, In this dark hour,Than when, in passion's young emotion,I've stolen, beneath the evening star, To Julia's bower.Oh! there's a holy calm profoundIn awe like this, that ne'er was given To pleasure's thrill;'Tis as a solemn voice from heaven,And the soul, listening to the sound, Lies mute and still.'Tis true, it talks of danger nigh,Of slumbering with the dead tomorrow In the cold deep,Where pleasure's throb or tears of sorrow