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A Congratulatory Poem
While my sad Muse the darkest Covert Sought,To give a loose to Melancholy Thought;Opprest, and sighing with the Heavy WeightOf an Unhappy dear Lov'd Monarch's Fate;A lone retreat, on Thames's Brink she found,With Murmering Osiers fring'd, and bending Willows Crown'd,Thro' the thick Shade cou'd dart no Chearful Ray,Nature dwelt here as in disdain of Day:Content, and Pleas'd with Nobler Solitude,No Wood-Gods, Fawns, nor Loves did here Intrude,Nor Nests for wanton Birds, the Glade allows;Scarce the soft Winds were heard amongst the Boughs.While thus She lay resolv'd to tune no moreHer fruitless Songs on Brittains Faithless Shore,All on a suddain thro' the Woods there Rung,Loud Sounds of Joy that Jo Peans Sung.Maria! Blest Maria! was the Thea...
Aphra Behn
Fragments On The Poet And The Poetic Gift
IThere are beggars in Iran and Araby,SAID was hungrier than all;Hafiz said he was a flyThat came to every festival.He came a pilgrim to the MosqueOn trail of camel and caravan,Knew every temple and kioskOut from Mecca to Ispahan;Northward he went to the snowy hills,At court he sat in the grave Divan.His music was the south-wind's sigh,His lamp, the maiden's downcast eye,And ever the spell of beauty cameAnd turned the drowsy world to flame.By lake and stream and gleaming hallAnd modest copse and the forest tall,Where'er he went, the magic guideKept its place by the poet's side.Said melted the days like cups of pearl,Served high and low, the lord and the churl,Loved harebells nodding on a rock,A cabin hun...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Happiest Day
IThe happiest day the happiest hourMy seared and blighted heart hath known,The highest hope of pride and power,I feel hath flown.IIOf power! said I? Yes! such I weenBut they have vanished long, alas!The visions of my youth have beenBut let them pass.IIIAnd pride, what have I now with thee?Another brow may ev'n inheritThe venom thou hast poured on meBe still my spirit!IVThe happiest day the happiest hourMine eyes shall see have ever seenThe brightest glance of pride and powerI feel have been:VBut were that hope of pride and powerNow offered with the painEv'n then I felt that brightest hourI would not live again:
Edgar Allan Poe
'Stablished
The well-built house with walls of brick, or stone,May tremble some if struck by the cyclone;The most established saint may trials feel,As flint may turn the edge of finest steel.Satanic hosts may rush in like a flood,Allied with foes of our own flesh and blood,The elements of earth and hell combine,Yet tho' he trembles, stands in strength divine;He rests secure on the unyielding rock.The top may sway, but base feels not the shock;His heart is fixed, nor earth nor hell can move;They wrench not loose, but his allegiance prove.Christ wept with Mary at her brother's grave;Laid down His life a rebel world to save;Tried, like ourselves, and like us too, infirm,Yet knew no sin in either root or germ;Let us be like Him while we sojourn here,Then...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Duty's Path
Out from the harbour of youth's bay There leads the path of pleasure;With eager steps we walk that way To brim joy's largest measure.But when with morn's departing beam Goes youth's last precious minute,We sigh "'Twas but a fevered dream - There's nothing in it."Then on our vision dawns afar The goal of glory, gleamingLike some great radiant solar star, And sets us longing, dreaming.Forgetting all things left behind, We strain each nerve to win it,But when 'tis ours -alas! we find There's nothing in it.We turn our sad, reluctant gaze Upon the path of duty;Its barren, uninviting ways Are void of bloom and beauty.Yet in that road, though dark and cold, It seems as we begin...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Honour's Martyr.
The moon is full this winter night;The stars are clear, though few;And every window glistens brightWith leaves of frozen dew.The sweet moon through your lattice gleams,And lights your room like day;And there you pass, in happy dreams,The peaceful hours away!While I, with effort hardly quellingThe anguish in my breast,Wander about the silent dwelling,And cannot think of rest.The old clock in the gloomy hallTicks on, from hour to hour;And every time its measured callSeems lingering slow and slower:And, oh, how slow that keen-eyed starHas tracked the chilly gray!What, watching yet! how very farThe morning lies away!Without your chamber door I stand;Love, are you slumbering still?My ...
Emily Bronte
In a Rosary
Through the low grey archway children's feet that passQuicken, glad to find the sweetest haunt of all.Brightest wildflowers gleaming deep in lustiest grass,Glorious weeds that glisten through the green sea's glass,Match not now this marvel, born to fade and fall.Roses like a rainbow wrought of roses riseRight and left and forward, shining toward the sun.Nay, the rainbow lit of sunshine droops and diesEre we dream it hallows earth and seas and skies;Ere delight may dream it lives, its life is done.Round the border hemmed with high deep hedges roundGo the children, peering over or betweenWhere the dense bright oval wall of box inwound,Reared about the roses fast within it bound,Gives them grace to glance at glories else unseen.Flower outlightening flow...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
In The Sugar Bush.
I halted at the margin of the wood,For tortuous was the path, and overheadLow branches hung, and roots and fragments rudeOf rock hindered the tardy foot. I ledMy timid horse, that started at our treadAnd looked about on every side in fear,Until, arising from the jocund shed,The voice of laughter broke upon our ear,And through the chinks the light shone out as we drew near.I tied the bridle rain about a tree,And on the ample flatness of a stoneAwhile I lay. 'Tis very sweet to beIn social mirth's domain, unseen, alone,Sweet to make others' happiness one's own:And he who views the dance from still recess,Or reads a love tale in a meadow, prone,Secures the joy without the weariness.And fills with love's delight, nor feels its sore distr...
W. M. MacKeracher
The Happy Isles
Oh, come with me to the Happy IslesIn the golden haze off yonder,Where the song of the sun-kissed breeze beguilesAnd the ocean loves to wander.Fragrant the vines that mantle those hills,Proudly the fig rejoices,Merrily dance the virgin rills,Blending their myriad voices.Our herds shall suffer no evil there,But peacefully feed and rest them;Never thereto shall prowling bearOr serpent come to molest them.Neither shall Eurus, wanton bold,Nor feverish drought distress us,But he that compasseth heat and coldShall temper them both to bless us.There no vandal foot has trod,And the pirate hordes that wanderShall never profane the sacred sodOf those beautiful isles out yonder.Never a spell shall blig...
Eugene Field
Presage Of Victory
IThen first I knew, seeing that bent grey head,How England honours all her thousand dead.Then first I knew how faith through black grief burns,Until the ruined heart glows while it yearnsFor one that never more returns--Glows in the spent embers of its prideFor one that careless lived and fearless died.And then I knew, then first,How everywhere Hope from her prison had burst--On every hill, wide dale, soft valley's lap,In lonely cottage clutch'd between huge downs,And streets confused with streets in clanging towns--Like spring from winter's jail pouring her sapInto the idle wood of last year's trees.Then first I knew how the vast world-diseaseWould die away, and England upon her seasShake every scab of sickness; toward new sk...
John Frederick Freeman
A Passing Glimpse
To Ridgely TorrenceOn Last Looking into His 'Hesperides'I often see flowers from a passing carThat are gone before I can tell what they are.I want to get out of the train and go backTo see what they were beside the track.I name all the flowers I am sure they weren't;Not fireweed loving where woods have burnt,Not bluebells gracing a tunnel mouth,Not lupine living on sand and drouth.Was something brushed across my mindThat no one on earth will ever find?Heaven gives it glimpses only to thoseNot in position to look too close.
Robert Lee Frost
Ode on the Insurrection in Candia
STR. 1I laid my laurel-leafAt the white feet of grief,Seeing how with covered face and plumeless wings,With unreverted headVeiled, as who mourns his dead,Lay Freedom couched between the thrones of kings,A wearied lion without lair,And bleeding from base wounds, and vexed with alien air.STR. 2Who was it, who, put poison to thy mouth,Who lulled with craft or chant thy vigilant eyes,O light of all men, lamp to north and south,Eastward and westward, under all mens skies?For if thou sleep, we perish, and thy nameDies with the dying of our ephemeral breath;And if the dust of death oergrows thy flame,Heaven also is darkened with the dust of death.If thou be mortal, if thou change or cease,If thine hand...
To The Memory Of Charles B. Storrs
Thou hast fallen in thine armor,Thou martyr of the LordWith thy last breath crying "Onward!"And thy hand upon the sword.The haughty heart derideth,And the sinful lip reviles,But the blessing of the perishingAround thy pillow smiles!When to our cup of tremblingThe added drop is given,And the long-suspended thunderFalls terribly from Heaven,When a new and fearful freedomIs proffered of the LordTo the slow-consuming Famine,The Pestilence and Sword!When the refuges of FalsehoodShall be swept away in wrath,And the temple shall be shaken,With its idol, to the earth,Shall not thy words of warningBe all remembered then?And thy now unheeded messageBurn in the hearts of men?Oppression's ha...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Death
Out of the shadows of sadness,Into the sunshine of gladness,Into the light of the blest;Out of a land very dreary,Out of a world very weary,Into the rapture of rest.Out of to-day's sin and sorrow,Into a blissful to-morrow,Into a day without gloom;Out of a land filled with sighing,Land of the dead and the dying,Into a land without tomb.Out of a life of commotion,Tempest-swept oft as the ocean,Dark with the wrecks drifting o'er;Into a land calm and quiet,Never a storm cometh nigh it,Never a wreck on its shore.Out of a land in whose bowersPerish and fade all the flowers:Out of the land of decay,Into the Eden where fairestOf flowerets, and sweetest and rarest,Never shall wither away....
Abram Joseph Ryan
A Thunder Storm.
The day was hot and the day was dumb,Save for cricket's chirr or the bee's low hum,Not a bird was seen or a butterfly,And ever till noon was over, the sunGlared down with a yellow and terrible eye;Glared down in the woods, where the breathless boughsHung heavy and faint in a languid drowse,And the ferns were curling with thirst and heat;Glared down on the fields where the sleepy cowsStood munching the grasses, dry and sweet.Then a single cloud rose up in the west,With a base of gray and a white, white crest;It rose and it spread a mighty wing.And swooped at the sun, though he did his bestAnd struggled and fought like a wounded thing.And the woods awoke, and the sleepers heard,Each heavily hanging leaflet stirredWith a li...
Susan Coolidge
Mirth And Mourning
'O cast away your sorrow;A while, at least, be gay!If grief must come tomorrow,At least, be glad today!'How can you still be sighingWhen smiles are everywhere?The little birds are flyingSo blithely through the air;'The sunshine glows so brightlyO'er all the blooming earth;And every heart beats lightly,Each face is full of mirth.''I always feel the deepest gloomWhen day most brightly shines:When Nature shows the fairest bloom,My spirit most repines;'For, in the brightest noontide glow,The dungeon's light is dim;Though freshest winds around us blow,No breath can visit him.'If he must sit in twilight gloom,Can I enjoy the sightOf mountains clad in purple bloom,And rocks in sun...
Anne Bronte
The Fly-Away Horse
Oh, a wonderful horse is the Fly-Away Horse -Perhaps you have seen him before;Perhaps, while you slept, his shadow has sweptThrough the moonlight that floats on the floor.For it's only at night, when the stars twinkle bright,That the Fly-Away Horse, with a neighAnd a pull at his rein and a toss of his mane,Is up on his heels and away!The Moon in the sky,As he gallopeth by,Cries: "Oh! what a marvelous sight!"And the Stars in dismayHide their faces awayIn the lap of old Grandmother Night.It is yonder, out yonder, the Fly-Away HorseSpeedeth ever and ever away -Over meadows and lanes, over mountains and plains,Over streamlets that sing at their play;And over the sea like a ghost sweepeth he,While the ships they go sail...
Submission.
O Lord, my best desire fulfil,And help me to resignLife, health, and comfort to thy will,And make thy pleasure mine.Why should I shrink at thy command,Whose love forbids my fears?Or tremble at the gracious handThat wipes away my tears?No, let me rather freely yieldWhat most I prize to thee;Who never hast a good withheld,Or wilt withhold, from me.Thy favour, all my journey through,Thou art engaged to grant;What else I want, or think I do,Tis better still to want.Wisdom and mercy guide my way,Shall I resist them both?A poor blind creature of a day,And crushd before the moth!But ah! my inward spirit cries,Still bind me to thy sway;Else the next cloud ...
William Cowper