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The Grave Of Keats
Rid of the world's injustice, and his pain,He rests at last beneath God's veil of blue:Taken from life when life and love were newThe youngest of the martyrs here is lain,Fair as Sebastian, and as early slain.No cypress shades his grave, no funeral yew,But gentle violets weeping with the dewWeave on his bones an ever-blossoming chain.O proudest heart that broke for misery!O sweetest lips since those of Mitylene!O poet-painter of our English Land!Thy name was writ in water it shall stand:And tears like mine will keep thy memory green,As Isabella did her Basil-tree.ROME.
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
The Elleree.[1]
A SONG OF SECOND SIGHT.Elleree! O Elleree!Seeing what none else may see,Dost thou see the man in grey?Dost thou hear the night hounds bay?Elleree! O Elleree!Seventh son of seventh son,All thy thread of life is spun,Thy little race is nearly run,And death awaits for thee!Elleree! O Elleree!Coronach shall wail for thee;Get thee shrived and get thee blest,Get thee ready for thy rest,Elleree! O Elleree!That thou owest quickly give,What thou ownest thou must leave,And those thou lovest best shall grieve,But all in vain for thee!"Bodach Glas!"[2] the chieftain said,"All my debts but one are paid,All I love have long been dead,All my hopes on Heaven are stay'd,Death to me can...
Juliana Horatia Ewing
The Beggar Family
Within the court, before the judge,There stand six wretched creatures,They're lame and weary, one and all,With pinched and pallid features.The father is a broken man,The mother weak and ailing,The little children, skin and bone,With fear and hunger wailing.Their sins are very great, and callAloud for retribution,For their's (maybe you guess!) the crimeOf hopeless destitution.They look upon the judge's face,They know what judges ponder,They know the punishment that waitsOn those that beg and wander.For months from justice they have fledAlong the streets and highways,From farm to farm, from town to town,Along the lanes and byways.They've slept full oftentimes in jail,They're known in many places;Yet...
Morris Rosenfeld
The Old Year
It passed like the breath of the night-wind away,It fled like a mist at the dawn of the day;It lasted its moment, then backward was hurled,Another increase to the age of the world.It passed with its shadows, its smiles and its tears,It passed as a stream to the ocean of years;Years that were coming were here and are oer,The ages departed to visit no more.It passed, but the bark on its billowy trackLeaves an impression on waters aback:The glow of the gloaming remains on the sky,Unwilling to leave us unwilling to die.It fled; but away and away in its wakeThere lingers a something that time cannot break.The past and the future are joined by a chain,And memories live that must ever remain.
Henry Kendall
Flowers, dear flowers, farewell!
"We are sending you, dear flowers,Forth alone to die,Where your gentle sisters may not weepO'er the cold graves where you lie;But you go to bring them fadeless lifeIn the bright homes where they dwell,And you softly smile that 't is so,As we sadly sing farewell.O plead with gentle words for us,And whisper tenderlyOf generous love to that cold heart,And it will answer ye;And though you fade in a dreary home,Yet loving hearts will tellOf the joy and peace that you have given:Flowers, dear flowers, farewell!"
Louisa May Alcott
Ghazal Of Sayyid Kamal
I am burning, I am crumbled into powder,I stand to the lips in a tossing sea of tears.Like a stone falling in Hamun lake I vanish;I return no more, I am counted among the dead.I am consumed like yellow straw on red flames;You have drawn a poisoned sword along my throat to-day.People have come to see me from far towns,Great and small, arriving with bare heads,For I have become one of the great historical lovers.In the desire of your red lipsMy heart has become a red kiln, like a terrace of roses.It is because she does not trouble about the bee on the roseThat my heart is taken."I have blackened my eyes to kill you, Sayyid Kamal.I kill you with my eyelids; I am Natarsa, the Panjabie, the pitiless."From the ...
Edward Powys Mathers
To J. D. H.
(Killed at Surrey C. H., October, 1866.). . . . .Dear friend, forgive a wild lamentInsanely following thy flight.I would not cumber thine ascentNor drag thee back into the night;But the great sea-winds sigh with me,The fair-faced stars seem wrinkled, old,And I would that I might lie with theeThere in the grave so cold, so cold!Grave walls are thick, I cannot see thee,And the round skies are far and steep;A-wild to quaff some cup of Lethe,Pain is proud and scorns to weep.My heart breaks if it cling about thee,And still breaks, if far from thine.O drear, drear death, to live without thee,O sad life - to keep thee mine.
Sidney Lanier
Work.
Mine is the shape forever set betweenThe thought and form, the vision and the deed;The hidden light, the glory all unseen,I bring to mortal senses, mortal need.Who loves me not, my sorrowing slave is he,Bent with the burden, knowing oft the rod;But he who loves me shall my master be,And use me with the joyance of a god.Man's lord or servant, still I am his friend;Desire for me is simple as his breath;Yea, waiting, old and patient, for the end,He prays that he may find me after death!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Father Ryan.
I.In Southern sunny clime there is a hallowed tomb, Where rest the ashes of a minstrel priest;And soft winds that are laden with a sweet perfume Their requiems for him have never ceased.II.We read his songs, and hear again the tread Of armed battalions, marching to the fray,Or see once more the features of belovèd dead Whose life blood crimsoned uniforms of gray!III.We see the tattered banner that he loved so well Again unfurled and fluttering in the breeze,And once again we hear the "rebel yell" Triumphant wafted o'er the riven trees!IV.O, may thy minstrel spirit find eternal rest In some fair clime where nothing can be lost!Where anguish never more ca...
George W. Doneghy
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
Incantation In Oedipus.
TIR. Choose the darkest part o' th' grove, Such as ghosts at noonday love. Dig a trench, and dig it nigh Where the bones of Laius lie; Altars raised, of turf or stone, Will th' infernal powers have none, Answer me, if this be done? ALL PR. 'Tis done. TIR. Is the sacrifice made fit? Draw her backward to the pit: Draw the barren heifer back; Barren let her be, and black. Cut the curl'd hair that grows Full betwixt her horns and brows: And turn your faces from the sun, Answer me, if this be done? ALL PR. 'Tis done. TIR. Pour in blood, and blood-like wine, To Mother Earth and Proserpine: Mingle milk into the stream; Feast the ghosts...
John Dryden
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
The Song Of Hiawatha - IX - The Ghosts
Never stoops the soaring vultureOn his quarry in the desert,On the sick or wounded bison,But another vulture, watchingFrom his high aerial look-out,Sees the downward plunge, and follows;And a third pursues the second,Coming from the invisible ether,First a speck, and then a vulture,Till the air is dark with pinions. So disasters come not singly;But as if they watched and waited,Scanning one another's motions,When the first descends, the othersFollow, follow, gathering flock-wiseRound their victim, sick and wounded,First a shadow, then a sorrow,Till the air is dark with anguish. Now, o'er all the dreary North-land,Mighty Peboan, the Winter,Breathing on the lakes and rivers,Into stone had changed their waters.<...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Breaking It Gently
All was up with Richard TannerWait-a-Bit we called him. Dead?Yes. The braceman dropped a spanner,Landed Richard on the head;Cracked his skull, sir, like a teacup,Down the pump-shaft in the well.Braceman hadnt time to speak up,Tanner never knew what fell.Tell the widow? Whod go through it?No one on the shift would stir;But Pat Ryan said hed do itNately break the news to her.Pats a splitter, and a kinderHeart I never wish to know.Stephens told him where to find her,Begged him gently deal the blow.In a very solemn mannerRyan met the dead mans wifeMornin to yez, Widdy Tanner!Says he gravely, Such is life!Im no widow! says she, pryingFor the joke in Ryans eye.Scuse me, mum, says Pa...
Edward
A Dream Of Waking
A child was born in sin and shame, Wronged by his very birth, Without a home, without a name, One over in the earth. No wifely triumph he inspired, Allayed no husband's fear; Intruder bare, whom none desired, He had a welcome drear. Heaven's beggar, all but turned adrift For knocking at earth's gate, His mother, like an evil gift, Shunned him with sickly hate. And now the mistress on her knee The unloved baby bore, The while the servant sullenly Prepared to leave her door. Her eggs are dear to mother-dove, Her chickens to the hen; All young ones bring with them their love, Of sheep, or goats, or men! This one lone child shall no...
George MacDonald
A Place Of Burial In The South Of Scotland
Part fenced by man, part by a rugged steepThat curbs a foaming brook, a Grave-yard lies;The hare's best couching-place for fearless sleep;Which moonlit elves, far seen by credulous eyes,Enter in dance. Of church, or sabbath ties,No vestige now remains; yet thither creepBereft Ones, and in lowly anguish weepTheir prayers out to the wind and naked skies.Proud tomb is none; but rudely-sculptured knights,By humble choice of plain old times, are seenLevel with earth, among the hillocks green:Union not sad, when sunny daybreak smitesThe spangled turf, and neighbouring thickets ringWith 'jubilate' from the choirs of spring!
William Wordsworth
In Memoriam. - Mr. George Beach,
Died at Hartford, May 4th, 1860.Aye, robe yourselves in black, light messengersWhose letter'd faces to the people tellThe pulse and pressure of the passing hour.'Tis fitting ye should sympathize with them,And tint your tablets with a sable hueWho bring them tidings of a loss so great.What have they lost? An upright man, who scorn'dAll subterfuge, who faithful to his trustGuarded the interests they so highly prized,With power and zeal unchang'd, from youth to age.Yet there's a sadder sound of bursting tearsFrom woe-worn helpless ones, from widow'd formsO'er whom he threw a shelter, for his nameLong mingled with their prayers, both night and morn.The Missionary toward the setting sunWill miss his l...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
Ode On Indolence
1.One morn before me were three figures seen,I With bowed necks, and joined hands, side-faced;And one behind the other stepp'd serene,In placid sandals, and in white robes graced;They pass'd, like figures on a marble urn,When shifted round to see the other side;They came again; as when the urn once moreIs shifted round, the first seen shades return;And they were strange to me, as may betideWith vases, to one deep in Phidian lore.2.How is it, Shadows! that I knew ye not?How came ye muffled in so hush a masque?Was it a silent deep-disguised plotTo steal away, and leave without a taskMy idle days? Ripe was the drowsy hour;The blissful cloud of summer-indolenceBenumb'd my eyes; my pulse grew less and less;Pain ha...
John Keats