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Exmoor Verses III. Dereliction
O'er the tears that we shed, dear The bitter vines twist,And the hawk and the red deer They keep where we kiss'd:All broken lies the shieling That sheltered from rain,With a star to pierce the ceiling, And the dawn an empty pane.Thro' the mist, up the moorway, Fade hunters and pack;From the ridge to thy doorway Happy voices float back ...O, between the threads o' mist, love, Reach your hands from the house.Only mind that we kiss'd, love, And forget the broken vows!
Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
The Bridge Of Sighs.
"Drown'd! drown'd!" - Hamlet.One more Unfortunate,Weary of breath,Rashly importunate,Gone to her death!Take her up tenderly,Lift her with care;Fashion'd so slenderly,Young, and so fair!Look at her garmentsClinging like cerements;Whilst the wave constantlyDrips from her clothing;Take her up instantly,Loving, not loathing. -Touch her not scornfully;Think of her mournfully,Gently and humanly;Not of the stains of her,All that remains of herNow is pure womanly.Make no deep scrutinyInto her mutinyBash and undutiful:Past all dishonor,Death has left on herOnly the beautiful.Still, for all slips of hers,One of Eve's family -Wipe...
Thomas Hood
Absence
When she had left us but a little whileMethought I sensed her spirit here and thereAbout my house: upon the empty stairHer robe brusht softly; o'er her chamber stillThere lay her fragrant presence to beguileNumb heart, dead heart. I knelt before her chair,And praying felt her hand laid on my hair,Felt her sweet breath, and guess'd her wistful smile.Then thro' my tears I lookt about the room,But she was gone. I heard my heart beat fast;The street was silent; I could not see her now.Sorrow and I took up our load, and pastTo where our station was with heads bent low,And autumn's death-moan shiver'd thro' the gloom.
Maurice Henry Hewlett
Bereft, She Thinks She Dreams
I dream that the dearest I ever knew Has died and been entombed.I am sure it's a dream that cannot be true, But I am so overgloomedBy its persistence, that I would gladly Have quick death take me,Rather than longer think thus sadly; So wake me, wake me!It has lasted days, but minute and hour I expect to get arousedAnd find him as usual in the bower Where we so happily housed.Yet stays this nightmare too appalling, And like a web shakes me,And piteously I keep on calling, And no one wakes me!
Thomas Hardy
Dead Love
God let me listen to your voice,And look upon you for a space,And then he took your voice away,And dropped a veil before your face.God let me look within your eyes,And touch for once your clinging hand,And then he left me all alone,And took you to the Silent Land.I cannot weep, I cannot pray,My heart has very silent grown,I only watch how God gives love,And then leaves lovers all alone.
Sara Teasdale
Stanzas.[1]
Is there a bitter pang for love removed,O God! The dead love doth not cost more tearsThan the alive, the loving, the beloved -Not yet, not yet beyond all hopes and fears! Would I were laid Under the shadeOf the calm grave, and the long grass of years, -That love might die with sorrow: - I am sorrow;And she, that loves me tenderest, doth pressMost poison from my cruel lips, and borrowOnly new anguish from the old caress; Oh, this world's grief Hath no reliefIn being wrung from a great happiness.Would I had never filled thine eyes with love,For love is only tears: would I had neverBreathed such a curse-like blessing as we prove;Now, if "Farewell" could bless thee, I would sever! Wo...
The Convent Threshold
There's blood between us, love, my love,There's father's blood, there's brother's blood;And blood's a bar I cannot pass:I choose the stairs that mount above,Stair after golden skyward stair,To city and to sea of glass.My lily feet are soiled with mud,With scarlet mud which tells a taleOf hope that was, of guilt that was,Of love that shall not yet avail;Alas, my heart, if I could bareMy heart, this selfsame stain is there:I seek the sea of glass and fireTo wash the spot, to burn the snare;Lo, stairs are meant to lift us higher:Mount with me, mount the kindled stair. Your eyes look earthward, mine look up.I see the far-off city grand,Beyond the hills a watered land,Beyond the gulf a gleaming strandOf mansions wher...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Tones.
I.A woman, fair to look upon,Where waters whiten with the moon;While down the glimmer of the lawnThe white moths swoon.A mouth of music; eyes of love;And hands of blended snow and scent,That touch the pearl-pale shadow ofAn instrument.And low and sweet that song of sleepAfter the song of love is hushed;While all the longing, here, to weep,Is held and crushed.Then leafy silence, that is muskWith breath of the magnolia-tree,While dwindles, moon-white, through the duskHer drapery.Let me remember how a heart,Romantic, wrote upon that night!My soul still helps me read each partOf it aright.And like a dead leaf shut betweenA book's dull chapters, stained and dark,That page,...
Madison Julius Cawein
Isolation - To Marguerite
We were apart; yet, day by day,I bade my heart more constant be.I bade it keep the world away,And grow a home for only thee;Nor fear'd but thy love likewise grew,Like mine, each day, more tried, more true.The fault was grave! I might have known,What far too soon, alas! I learn'dThe heart can bind itself alone,And faith may oft be unreturn'd.Self-sway'd our feelings ebb and swellThou lov'st no more; Farewell! Farewell!Farewell! and thou, thou lonely heart,Which never yet without remorseEven for a moment didst departFrom thy remote and spherèd courseTo haunt the place where passions reignBack to thy solitude again!Back! with the conscious thrill of shameWhich Luna felt, that summer-night,Flash through her...
Matthew Arnold
The Passer-By
L. H. Recalls Her RomanceHe used to pass, well-trimmed and brushed,My window every day,And when I smiled on him he blushed,That youth, quite as a girl might; aye,In the shyest way.Thus often did he pass hereby,That youth of bounding gait,Until the one who blushed was I,And he became, as here I sate,My joy, my fate.And now he passes by no more,That youth I loved too true!I grieve should he, as here of yore,Pass elsewhere, seated in his view,Some maiden new!If such should be, alas for her!He'll make her feel him dear,Become her daily comforter,Then tire him of her beauteous gear,And disappear!
One Day And Another A Lyrical Eclogue Part IV Late Autumn
Part IVLate AutumnThey who die young are blest. - Should we not envy such?They are Earth's happiest, God-loved and favored much! -They who die young are blest.1Sick and sad, propped among pillows, she sits at her window.'Though the dog-tooth violet comeWith April showers,And the wild-bees' music humAbout the flowers,We shall never wend as whenLove laughed leading us from menOver violet vale and glen,Where the bob-white piped for hours,And we heard the rain-crow's drum.Now November heavens are gray;Autumn killsEvery joy - like leaves of MayIn the rills. -Still I sit and lean and listenTo a voice that has arisenIn my heart - with eyes tha...
Four Points in a Life
ILOVE'S DAWNStill thine eyes haunt me; in the darkness now,The dreamtime, the hushed stillness of the night,I see them shining pure and earnest light;And here, all lonely, may I not avowThe thrill with which I ever meet their glance?At first they gazed a calm abstracted gaze,The while thy soul was floating through some mazeOf beautiful divinely-peopled trance;But now I shrink from them in shame and fear,For they are gathering all their beams of lightInto an arrow, keen, intense and bright,Swerveless and starlike from its deep blue sphere,Piercing the cavernous darkness of my soul,Burning its foul recesses into view,Transfixing with sharp agony through and throughWhatever ls not brave and clean and whole.And yet I w...
James Thomson
Fragment II - Sunset
The day and its delights are done;So all delights and days expire:Down in the dim, sad West the sunIs dying like a dying fire.The fiercest lances of his lightAre spent; I watch him droop and dieLike a great king who falls in fight;None dared the duel of his eyeLiving, but, now his eye is dim,The eyes of all may stare at him.How lovely in his strength at mornHe orbed along the burning blue!The blown gold of his flying hairWas tangled in green-tressèd trees,And netted in the river sandIn gleaming links of amber clear;But all his shining locks are shorn,His brow of its bright crown is bare,The golden sceptre leaves his hand,And deeper, darker, grows the hueOf the dim purple draperiesAnd cloudy banner...
Victor James Daley
Readjustment.
After the earthquake shock or lightning dartComes a recoil of silence o'er the lands,And then, with pulses hot and quivering hands,Earth calls up courage to her mighty heart,Plies every tender, compensating art,Draws her green, flowery veil above the scar,Fills the shrunk hollow, smooths the riven plain,And with a century's tendance heals againThe seams and gashes which her fairness mar.So we, when sudden woe like lightning sped,Finds us and smites us in our guarded place,After one brief, bewildered moment's space,By the same heavenly instinct taught and led,Adjust our lives to loss, make friends with pain,Bind all our shattered hopes and bid them bloom again.
Susan Coolidge
The Flight.
Here in the silent doorway let me lingerOne moment, for the porch is still and lonely;That shadow's but the rose vine in the moonlight;All are asleep in peace, I waken only,And he I wait, by my own heart's beatingI know how slow to him the tide creeps by,Nor life, nor death, could bar our hearts from meeting;Were worlds between, his soul to mine would fly.Oh, shame! to think a heap of paltry metalShould overbalance manhood's noblest graces;A film of gold had gilt his worth and honor,Warming to smiles the coldness of their faces;Gentle to me, they rise in condemnation,And plead with me than words more powerfully.Oh! well I love them - but they have wealth and stationTo fill their hearts, and he has only me.But oh, my roses, how their...
Marietta Holley
Life's Stages.
To the heart of trusting childhood life is all a gilded way,Wherein a beam of sunny bliss forever seems to play;It roams about delightedly through pleasure's roseate bower,And gaily makes a playmate, too, of every bird and flower;Holds with the rushing of the winds companionship awhile,And, on the tempest's darkest brow, discerns a brightening smile,Converses with the babbling waves, as on their way they wend,And sees, in everything it meets, the features of a friend."To-day" is full of rosy joy, "to-morrow" is not here:When, for an uncreated hour, was childhood known to fear?Not until hopes, warm hopes, its heart a treasure-house have made,Like summer flowers to bloom awhile, like them, alas, to fade;Cherished too fondly and too long, for ah! the rich parterre,...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
To Romance.
1.Parent of golden dreams, Romance!Auspicious Queen of childish joys,Who lead'st along, in airy dance,Thy votive train of girls and boys;At length, in spells no longer bound,I break the fetters of my youth;No more I tread thy mystic round,But leave thy realms for those of Truth.2.And yet 'tis hard to quit the dreamsWhich haunt the unsuspicious soul,Where every nymph a goddess seems,Whose eyes through rays immortal roll;While Fancy holds her boundless reign,And all assume a varied hue;When Virgins seem no longer vain,And even Woman's smiles are true.3.And must we own thee, but a name,And from thy hall of clouds descend?Nor find a Sylph in every dame,A Pylades [1]<...
George Gordon Byron
Birthright
Lord Rameses of Egypt sighedBecause a summer evening passed;And little Ariadne criedThat summer fancy fell at lastTo dust; and young Verona diedWhen beauty's hour was overcast.Theirs was the bitterness we knowBecause the clouds of hawthorn keepSo short a state, and kisses goTo tombs unfathomably deep,While Rameses and RomeoAnd little Ariadne sleep.
John Drinkwater