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Rhymes On The Road. Extract I. Geneva.
View of the Lake of Geneva from the Jura.[1]--Anxious to reach it before the Sun went down.--Obliged to proceed on Foot.--Alps.--Mont Blanc.--Effect of the Scene.'Twas late--the sun had almost shoneHis last and best when I ran onAnxious to reach that splendid viewBefore the daybeams quite withdrewAnd feeling as all feel on first Approaching scenes where, they are told,Such glories on their eyes will burst As youthful bards in dreams behold.'Twas distant yet and as I ran Full often was my wistful gazeTurned to the sun who now began To call in all his out-posts rays,And form a denser march of light,Such as beseems a hero's flight.Oh, how I wisht for JOSHUA'S power,To stay the brightness of that hour...
Thomas Moore
Power of Love
Love, indeed thy strength is mightyThus, alone, such strife to bear,Three 'gainst one, and never ceasing,Death, and Madness, and Despair!'Tis not my own strength has saved me;Health, and hope, and fortitude,But for love, had long since failed me;Heart and soul had sunk subdued.Often, in my wild impatience,I have lost my trust in Heaven,And my soul has tossed and struggled,Like a vessel tempest-driven;But the voice of my belovedIn my ear has seemed to say,'O, be patient if thou lov'st me!'And the storm has passed away.When outworn with weary thinking,Sight and thought were waxing dim,And my mind began to wander,And my brain began to swim,Then those hands outstretched to save meSeemed to...
Anne Bronte
To M. C. N.
Thou hast no wealth, nor any pride of power,Thy life is offered on affection's altar.Small sacrifices claim thee, hour by hour,Yet on the tedious path thou dost not falter.To the unknowing, well thy days might seemCircled by solitude and tireless duty,Yet is thy soul made radiant by a dreamOf delicate and rainbow-coloured beauty.Never a flower trembles in the wind,Never a sunset lingers on the sea,But something of its fragrance joins thy mind,Some sparkle of its light remains with thee.Thus when thy spirit enters on its rest,Thy lips shall say, "I too have known the best!"
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
God Is Good
I faced a future all unknown,No opening could I see,I heard without the night wind moan,The ways were dark to me,--"I cannot face it all aloneO be Thou near to me!"I had done sums, and sums, and sums,Inside my aching head.I'd tried in vain to pierce the gloomsThat lay so thick ahead.But two and two will not make five,Nor will do when I'm dead.And then I thought of Him who fedFive thousand hungry men,With five small casual loaves of bread,--Would he were here again!--Dear God! hast Thou still miraclesFor the troubled sons of men?He has, He will, He worketh still,In ways most wonderful.He drew me from the miry clay,He filled my cup quite full.And while my heart can speak I'll tellHis lov...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
The Theologian's Tale - The Wayside Inn - Part Second
THE LEGEND BEAUTIFUL"Hads't thou stayed, I must have fled!"That is what the Vision said.In his chamber all alone,Kneeling on the floor of stone,Prayed the Monk in deep contritionFor his sins of indecision,Prayed for greater self-denialIn temptation and in trial;It was noonday by the dial,And the Monk was all alone.Suddenly, as if it lightened,An unwonted splendor brightenedAll within him and without himIn that narrow cell of stone;And he saw the Blessed VisionOf our Lord, with light ElysianLike a vesture wrapped about him,Like a garment round him thrown.Not as crucified and slain,Not in agonies of pain,Not with bleeding hands and feet,Did the Monk his Master see;But as in the vil...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Of Good In Things Evil. From Proverbial Philosophy
I Heard the man of sin reproaching the goodness of Jehovah,Wherefore, if he be Almighty Love, permitteth he misery and pain?I saw the child of hope vexed in the labyrinth of doubt,Wherefore, O holy One and just, is the horn of thy foul foe so high exalted? And, alas! for this our groaning world, for that grief and guilt are here;Alas! for that Earth is the battle-field, where good must combat with evil:Angels look on and hold their breath, burning to mingle in the conflict,But the troops of the Captain of Salvation may be none but the soldiers of the cross:And that slender band must fight alone, and yet shall triumph gloriously.Enough shall they be for conquest, and the motto of their standard is, Enough.Thou art sad, denizen of earth, for pains and diseases and death,But ...
Martin Farquhar Tupper
Will
You will be what you will to be;Let failure find its false contentIn that poor word "environment," But spirit scorns it, and is free, It masters time, it conquers space,It cows that boastful trickster Chance,And bids the tyrant Circumstance Uncrown and fill a servant's place. The human Will, that force unseen,The offspring of a deathless Soul,Can hew the way to any goal, Though walls of granite intervene. Be not impatient in delay,But wait as one who understands;When spirit rises and commands, The gods are ready to obey. The river seeking for the seaConfronts the dam and precipice,Yet knows it cannot fail or miss; You will be what you will to be!
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
A Home.
What is a home? A guarded space,Wherein a few, unfairly blest,Shall sit together, face to face,And bask and purr and be at rest?Where cushioned walls rise up betweenIts inmates and the common air,The common pain, and pad and screenFrom blows of fate or winds of care?Where Art may blossom strong and free,And Pleasure furl her silken wing,And every laden moment beA precious and peculiar thing?And Past and Future, softly veiledIn hiding mists, shall float and lieForgotten half, and unassailedBy either hope or memory,While the luxurious Present weavesHer perfumed spells untried, untrue,Broiders her garments, heaps her sheaves,All for the pleasure of a few?Can it be this, the longed-for thing
Susan Coolidge
We Must Believe
"Lord, I believe: help Thou mine unbelief."We must believe -Being from birth endowed with love and trust -Born unto loving; - and how simply justThat love - that faith! - even in the blossom-faceThe babe drops dreamward in its resting-place,Intuitively conscious of the sureAwakening to rapture ever pureAnd sweet and saintly as the mother's own,Or the awed father's, as his arms are thrownO'er wife and child, to round about them weaveAnd wind and bind them as one harvest-sheafOf love - to cleave to, and forever cleave.... Lord, I believe: Help Thou mine unbelief.We must believe -Impelled since infancy to seek some clearFulfillment, still withheld all seekers here; -For never have we se...
James Whitcomb Riley
A Merognostic
I know in part, but know not all,The part I know is known;What know I not I hope with PaulTo know before the throne.Till then where knowledge fails I trustThe truth God has revealed,As known by me, forever mustBe like the truth concealed.I know God is, tho' hid from sight,And know He cares for me;In blessing me He takes delight,And I by faith can seeHis skilful hand and loving heart,In all my life's affairs,And feel content to know but partIf He knows all my cares.I know God gave His Son to dieA sacrifice for man,And live all who on Him rely,And meet His claims I can,Yet I know not how in Him meetThe human and divine;But God He is, and at His feetI fall, and feel Him mine.Nor do ...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Written After A Visit To The Institution For The Deaf And Dumb.
I thought those youthful hearts were bleak and bare,That not a germ had ever flourished there,Unless perchance the night-shade of despair,Which blooms amid the sunless wilderness.But I was told that flowers of fairest kindGraced what I deemed a desert of the mind,That for these hapless beings man had twinedA fadeless wreath to make their sorrows less.And then I feared, like sunbeams of the mornWhich spoil the frost-work they awhile adorn,That rays of light might render more forlornThe expanding bosoms they were meant to cheer.I feared those glittering beams would vainly showThat the best charms of life they ne'er could know,"The feast of reason and the soul's calm flow,"The witchery of sound, the bliss to hear.But when I...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
A Memorial Tribute
Read At The Meeting Held At Music Hall, February 8, 1876, In Memory Of Dr. Samuel G. HoweI.Leader of armies, Israel's God,Thy soldier's fight is won!Master, whose lowly path he trod,Thy servant's work is done!No voice is heard from Sinai's steepOur wandering feet to guide;From Horeb's rock no waters leap;No Jordan's waves divide;No prophet cleaves our western skyOn wheels of whirling fire;No shepherds hear the song on highOf heaven's angelic choir.Yet here as to the patriarch's tentGod's angel comes a guest;He comes on heaven's high errand sent,In earth's poor raiment drest.We see no halo round his browTill love its own recalls,And, like a leaf that quits the bough,The mort...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
John Bede Polding
With reverent eyes and bowed, uncovered head,A son of sorrow kneels by fanes you knew;But cannot say the words that should be saidTo crowned and winged divinities like you.The perfect speech of superhuman spheresMan has not heard since He of Nazareth,Slain for the sins of twice two thousand years,Saw Godship gleaming through the gates of Death.And therefore he who in these latter daysHas lost a Father falling by the shrine,Can only use the worlds ephemeral phrase,Not, Lord, the faultless language that is Thine.But he, Thy son upon whose shoulders shoneSo long Elishas gleaming garments, mayBe pleased to hear a pleading human toneTo sift the spirit of the words I say.O, Master, since the gentle Stenhouse diedAnd le...
Henry Kendall
Astræa at the Capitol
ABOLITION OF SLAVERY IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,When first I saw our banner waveAbove the nations council-hall,I heard beneath its marble wallThe clanking fetters of the slave!In the foul market-place I stood,And saw the Christian mother sold,And childhood with its locks of gold,Blue-eyed and fair with Saxon blood.I shut my eyes, I held my breath,And, smothering down the wrath and shameThat set my Northern blood aflame,Stood silent, where to speak was death.Beside me gloomed the prison-cellWhere wasted one in slow declineFor uttering simple words of mine,And loving freedom all too well.The flag that floated from the domeFlapped menace in the morning air;I stood a perilled stranger w...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Ministers Daughter
In the minister's morning sermonHe had told of the primal fall,And how thenceforth the wrath of GodRested on each and all.And how of His will and pleasure,All souls, save a chosen few,Were doomed to the quenchless burning,And held in the way thereto.Yet never by faith's unreasonA saintlier soul was tried,And never the harsh old lessonA tenderer heart belied.And, after the painful serviceOn that pleasant Sabbath day,He walked with his little daughterThrough the apple-bloom of May.Sweet in the fresh green meadowsSparrow and blackbird sung;Above him their tinted petalsThe blossoming orchards hung.Around on the wonderful gloryThe minister looked and smiled;"How good is the Lord who g...
Elevation
Above the ponds, beyond the valleys,The woods, the mountains, the clouds, the seas,Farther than the sun, the distant breeze,The spheres that wilt to infinityMy spirit, you move with agilityAnd, like a good swimmer who swoons in the waveYou groove the depths immensity gave,The inexpressible and male ecstasy.>From this miasma of waste,You will be purified in superior airAnd drink a pure and divine liqueur,A clear fire to replace the limpid spaceBehind this boredom and fatigue, this vast chagrinWhose weight moves the mists of existence,Happy is he who vigorously fans the sensesToward serene and luminous fields - wincing!The one whose thoughts are like skylarks taken wingAcross the heavens mornings in full flight
Charles Baudelaire
The Beacons
Ubens, oblivious garden of indolence,Pillow of cool flesh where no man dreams of love,Where life flows forth in troubled opulence,As airs in heaven and seas in ocean move.Leonard Da Vinci, sombre and fathomless glass,Where lovely angels with calm lips that smile,Heavy with mystery, in the shadow pass,Among the ice and pines that guard some isle.Rembrandt, sad hospital that a murmuring fills,Where one tall crucifix hangs on the walls,Where every tear-drowned prayer some woe distils,And one cold, wintry ray obliquely falls.Strong Michelangelo, a vague far placeWhere mingle Christs with pagan Hercules;Thin phantoms of the great through twilight pace,And tear their shroud with clenched hands void of ease.The fighter's anger,...
Lines
Within the world of every man's desireThree things have power to lift his soul above,Through dreams, religion, and ecstatic fire,The star-like shapes of Beauty, Truth, and Love.I never hoped that, this side far-off Heaven,These three,--whom all exalted souls pursue,--I e'er should see; until to me 't was given,Lady, to meet the three, made one, in you.
Madison Julius Cawein