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Monody On The Death Of The Right Hon. R. B. Sheridan, Spoken At Drury-Lane Theatre, London.
When the last sunshine of expiring DayIn Summer's twilight weeps itself away,Who hath not felt the softness of the hourSink on the heart, as dew along the flower?With a pure feeling which absorbs and awesWhile Nature makes that melancholy pause -Her breathing moment on the bridge where TimeOf light and darkness forms an arch sublime -Who hath not shared that calm, so still and deep,The voiceless thought which would not speak but weep,A holy concord, and a bright regret,A glorious sympathy with suns that set?[98]'Tis not harsh sorrow, but a tenderer woe,Nameless, but dear to gentle hearts below,Felt without bitterness - but full and clear,A sweet dejection - a transparent tear,Unmixed with worldly grief or selfish stain -Shed wi...
George Gordon Byron
The Tear.
On beds of snow the moonbeam slept, And chilly was the midnight gloom,When by the damp grave Ellen wept-- Fond maid! it was her Lindor's tomb!A warm tear gushed, the wintry air, Congealed it as it flowed away:All night it lay an ice-drop there, At morn it glittered in the ray.An angel, wandering from her sphere, Who saw this bright, this frozen gem,To dew-eyed Pity brought the tear And hung it on her diadem!
Thomas Moore
The Child's Dream.
Buried in childhood's cloudless dreams, a fair-haired nursling lay,A soft smile hovered round the lips as if still oped to pray;And then a vision came to him, of beauty, strange and mild,Such as may only fill the dreams of a pure sinless child.Stood by his couch an angel fair, with radiant, glitt'ring wingsOf hues as bright as the living gems the fount to Heaven flings;With loving smile he bent above the fair child cradled there,While sounds of sweet seraphic power stole o'er the fragrant air."Child, list to me," he softly said, "on mission high I'm here:Sent by that Glorious One to whom Heav'n bows in loving fear;I seek thee now, whilst thou art still on the threshold of earth's strife,To speak of what thou knowest not yet, this new and wond'rous life.
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Upon His Departure Hence.
Thus IPass by,And die:As oneUnknownAnd gone:I'm madeA shade,And laidI' th' grave:There haveMy cave,Where tellI dwell.Farewell.
Robert Herrick
Not Always Glad When We Smile
We are not always glad when we smile:Though we wear a fair face and are gay, And the world we deceive May not ever believeWe could laugh in a happier way. -Yet, down in the deeps of the soul,Ofttimes, with our faces aglow, There's an ache and a moan That we know of alone,And as only the hopeless may know.We are not always glad when we smile, -For the heart, in a tempest of pain, May live in the guise Of a smile in the eyesAs a rainbow may live in the rain;And the stormiest night of our woeMay hang out a radiant star Whose light in the sky Of despair is a lieAs black as the thunder-clouds are.We are not always glad when we smile! -But the conscience is quick to record, Al...
James Whitcomb Riley
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXXV.
Amor che meco al buon tempo ti stavi.HE VENTS HIS SORROW TO ALL WHO WITNESSED HIS FORMER FELICITY. Love, that in happier days wouldst meet me hereAlong these meads that nursed our kindred strains;And that old debt to clear which still remains,Sweet converse with the stream and me wouldst share:Ye flowers, leaves, grass, woods, grots, rills, gentle air,Low valleys, lofty hills, and sunny plains:The harbour where I stored my love-sick pains,And all my various chance, my racking care:Ye playful inmates of the greenwood shade;Ye nymphs, and ye that in the waves pursueThat life its cool and grassy bottom lends:--My days were once so fair; now dark and dreadAs death that makes them so. Thus the world throughOn each as soon as bo...
Francesco Petrarca
A Serenade At The Villa
I.That was I, you heard last night,When there rose no moon at all,Nor, to pierce the strained and tightTent of heaven, a planet small:Life was dead and so was light.II.Not a twinkle from the fly,Not a glimmer from the worm;When the crickets stopped their cry,When the owls forbore a term,You heard music; that was I.III.Earth turned in her sleep with pain,Sultrily suspired for proof:In at heaven and out again,Lightning! where it broke the roof,Bloodlike, some few drops of rain.IV.What they could my words expressed,O my love, my all, my one!Singing helped the verses best,And when singings best was done,To my lute I left the rest.V.So wore night; the East was gray,...
Robert Browning
Cold Passion
Some dead undid undid their bushy jaws, and bags of blood let out their flies.. . ? Dylan Thomas The land is barren wears straw wisps as an unkempt man might razor stubble. The land is dry, a faded yellow in its barrenness. A sky broods from afar, a stalactite sun accounts merely a jot above that thin road into despair. Grass lies everywhere dead, faded tongues above an earth afflicted with scleroderma, deadliest of skin disturbances, forerunner of deeper pestilence. An erasing wind whips the fields further into bereavement; turns tiny bits of chaff to pursue themselves in a mad St. Vitus dance of cold...
Paul Cameron Brown
Heaven Is But The Hour
Eyes wide for wisdom, calm for joy or pain,Bright hair alloyed with silver, scarcely gold.And gracious lips flower pressed like buds to holdThe guarded heart against excess of rain.Hands spirit tipped through which a genius playsWith paints and clays,And strings in many keys -Clothed in an aura of thought as soundless as a floodOf sun-shine where there is no breeze.So is it light in spite of rhythm of blood,Or turn of head, or hands that move, unite -Wind cannot dim or agitate the light.From Plato's idea stepping, wholly wroughtFrom Plato's dream, made manifest in hair,Eyes, lips and hands and voice,As if the stored up thoughtFrom the earth sphereHad given down the being of your choiceConjured by the dream long sought. ...
Edgar Lee Masters
To Sir George Howland Beaumont, Bart From The South-West Coast Or Cumberland 1811
Far from our home by Grasmere's quiet Lake,From the Vale's peace which all her fields partake,Here on the bleakest point of Cumbria's shoreWe sojourn stunned by Ocean's ceaseless roar;While, day by day, grim neighbour! huge Black CombFrowns deepening visibly his native gloom,Unless, perchance rejecting in despiteWhat on the Plain 'we' have of warmth and light,In his own storms he hides himself from sight.Rough is the time; and thoughts, that would be freeFrom heaviness, oft fly, dear Friend, to thee;Turn from a spot where neither sheltered roadNor hedge-row screen invites my steps abroad;Where one poor Plane-tree, having as it mightAttained a stature twice a tall man's height,Hopeless of further growth, and brown and sereThrough half the summer...
William Wordsworth
The Return
I have been where the roses blow, Where the orange ripens its gold,And the mountains stand with their peaks of snow, To fence away the cold,Where the lime and the myrtle lent Their fragrance to the air,To make the land of my banishment More exquisitely fair.And I heard the ring dove call To his mate in the blossoming trees,And I saw the white waves heave and fall. Far away over southern seas.I listened along the beach, By the shore of the shifting sea,To the waves, till I knew their murmured speech, And the message they bore to me.And I watched the great sails furled. Like the wings of some ocean bird,That brought me, out of another world, A warning, and a word;For still beside m...
Kate Seymour Maclean
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"
The Mirror.
An antique mirror this,I like it not at all,In this lonely room where the goblin gloomScowls from the arrased wall.A mystic mirror framedIn ebon, wildly carved;And the prisoned air in the crevice thereMoans like a man that's starved.A truthful mirror where,In the broad, chaste light of day,From the window's arches, like fairy torches,Red roses swing and sway.They blush and bow and gaze,Proud beauties desolate,In their tresses cold the sunlight's gold,In their hearts a jealous hate.A small green worm that gnaws,For the nightingale that lowEach eve doth rave, the passionate slaveOf the wild white rose below.The night-bird wails below;The stars creep out above;And the roses soon in ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Address To My Infant Daughter, Dora On Being Reminded That She Was A Month Old That Day, September 1
Hast thou then survivedMild Offspring of infirm humanity,Meek Infant! among all forlornest thingsThe most forlor, none life of that bright star,The second glory of the Heavens?Thou hast,Already hast survived that great decay,That transformation through the wide earth felt,And by all nations. In that Being's sightFrom whom the Race of human kind proceed,A thousand years are but as yesterday;And one day's narrow circuit is to HimNot less capacious than a thousand years.But what is time? What outward glory? neitherA measure is of Thee, whose claims extendThrough "heaven's eternal year."Yet hail to Thee,Frail, feeble Monthling! by that name, methinks,Thy scanty breathing-time is portioned outNot idly.Hadst thou been of Indian birth,Couc...
A Ballad Of Boding.
There are sleeping dreams and waking dreams;What seems is not always as it seems.I looked out of my window in the sweet new morning,And there I saw three barges of manifold adorningWent sailing toward the East:The first had sails like fire,The next like glittering wire,But sackcloth were the sails of the least;And all the crews made music, and two had spread a feast.The first choir breathed in flutes,And fingered soft guitars;The second won from lutesHarmonious chords and jars,With drums for stormy bars:But the third was all of harpers and scarlet trumpeters;Notes of triumph, thenAn alarm again,As for onset, as for victory, rallies, stirs,Peace at last and glory to the vanquishers.The first barge showed for f...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
A Rainy Day.
Oh, what a blessed interval A rainy day may be!No lightning flash nor tempest roar,But one incessant, steady pour Of dripping melody;When from their sheltering retreatGo not with voluntary feetThe storm-beleaguered family, Nor bird nor animal.When business takes a little lull, And gives the merchantmanA chance to seek domestic scenes,To interview the magazines, Convoke his growing clan,The boys and girls almost unknown,And get acquainted with his own;As well the household budget scan, Or write a canticle.When farmer John ransacks the barn, Hunts up the harness old -Nigh twenty years since it was new -Puts in an extra thong or two, And hopes the thing will holdWithout ...
Hattie Howard
The Sonnets LXIV - When I have seen by Times fell hand defacd
When I have seen by Times fell hand defacdThe rich-proud cost of outworn buried age;When sometime lofty towers I see down-razd,And brass eternal slave to mortal rage;When I have seen the hungry ocean gainAdvantage on the kingdom of the shore,And the firm soil win of the watery main,Increasing store with loss, and loss with store;When I have seen such interchange of state,Or state itself confounded, to decay;Ruin hath taught me thus to ruminateThat Time will come and take my love away.This thought is as a death which cannot chooseBut weep to have, that which it fears to lose.
William Shakespeare
Shadow and Light
Cease, empty Faith, the Spectrum saith,I was, and lo, have been;I, God, am nought: a shade of thought,Which, but by darkness seen,Upon the unknown yourselves have thrown,Placed it and light between.At mornings birth on darkened earth,And as the evening sinks,Awfully vast abroad is castThe lengthened form that shrinksAnd shuns the sight in midday light,And underneath you slinks.From barren strands of wintry landsAcross the seas of time,Borne onward fast ye touch at lastAn equatorial clime;In equatorial noon sublimeAt zenith stands the sun,And lo, around, far, near, are foundYourselves, and Shadow none.A moment! yea! but when the dayAt length was perfect day!A moment! so! and light we k...
Arthur Hugh Clough