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Sunset And Shore
Birds that like vanishing visions go winging,White, white in the flame of the sunset's burning,Fly with the wild spray the billows are flinging,Blend, blend with the nightfall, and fade, unreturning!Fire of the heaven, whose splendor all-glowingSoon, soon shall end, and in darkness must perish;Sea-bird and flame-wreath and foam lightly blowing; -Soon, soon tho' we lose you, your beauty we cherish.Visions may vanish, the sweetest, the dearest;Hush'd, hush'd be the voice of love's echo replying;Spirits may leave us that clung to us nearest: -Love, love, only love dwells with us undying!
George Parsons Lathrop
Sonnet XCVII.
Dicesett' anni ha già rivolto il cielo.E'EN IN OUR ASHES LIVE OUR WONTED FIRES. The seventeenth summer now, alas! is gone,And still with ardour unconsumed I glow;Yet find, whene'er myself I seek to know,Amidst the fire a frosty chill come on.Truly 'tis said, 'Ere Habit quits her throne,Years bleach the hair.' The senses feel life's snow,But not less hot the tides of passion flow:Such is our earthly nature's malison!Oh! come the happy day, when doom'd to smartNo more, from flames and lingering sorrows free,Calm I may note how fast youth's minutes flew!Ah! will it e'er be mine the hour to see,When with delight, nor duty nor my heartCan blame, these eyes once more that angel face may view?WRANGHAM.
Francesco Petrarca
Fragments Of Ancient Poetry, Fragment VIII
By the side of a rock on the hill, beneaththe aged trees, old Osciansat on the moss; the last of the race ofFingal. Sightless are his aged eyes;his beard is waving in the wind. Dullthrough the leafless trees he heard thevoice of the north. Sorrow revived inhis soul: he began and lamented thedead.How hast thou fallen like an oak,with all thy branches round thee! Whereis Fingal the King? where is Oscur myson? where are all my race? Alas! inthe earth they lie. I feel their tombswith my hands. I hear the river belowmurmuring hoarsely over the stones.What dost thou, O river, to me? Thoubringest back the memory of the past.The race of Fingal stood on thybanks, like a wood in a fertile soil.Keen were their spears of...
James Macpherson
Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part III. - XXXIII - Regrets
Would that our scrupulous Sires had dared to leaveLess scanty measure of those graceful ritesAnd usages, whose due return invitesA stir of mind too natural to deceive;Giving to Memory help when she would weaveA crown for Hope! I dread the boasted lightsThat all too often are but fiery blights,Killing the bud o'er which in vain we grieve.Go, seek, when Christmas snows discomfort bring,The counter Spirit found in some gay churchGreen with fresh holly, every pew a perchIn which the linnet or the thrush might sing,Merry and loud and safe from prying search,Strains offered only to the genial Spring.
William Wordsworth
To My Sister
Lines written by the late A. L. GordonOn 4th August, 1853,Being three days before he sailed for Australia.Across the trackless seas I go,No matter when or where,And few my future lot will know,And fewer still will care.My hopes are gone, my time is spent,I little heed their loss,And if I cannot feel content,I cannot feel remorse.My parents bid me cross the flood,My kindred frowned at me;They say I have belied my blood,And stained my pedigree.But I must turn from those who chide,And laugh at those who frown;I cannot quench my stubborn pride,Nor keep my spirits down.I once had talents fit to winSuccess in lifes career,And if I chose a part of sin,My choice has cost me dear.But th...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The Star-Treader
I A voice cried to me in a dawn of dreams, Saying, "Make haste: the webs of death and birth Are brushed away, and all the threads of earth Wear to the breaking; spaceward gleams Thine ancient pathway of the suns, Whose flame is part of thee; And deeps outreach immutably Whose largeness runs Through all thy spirit's mystery. Go forth, and tread unharmed the blaze Of stars where through thou camest in old days; Pierce without fear each vast Whose hugeness crushed thee not within the past. A hand strikes off the chains of Time, A hand swings back the door of years; Now fall earth's bonds of gladness and of tears, And opens the strait dream to space sublime." II...
Clark Ashton Smith
Mater Dolorosa.
The nuns sing, "ora pro nobis,"The lancets glitter above;And the beautiful Virgin whose robe isWoven of infinite love,Infinite love and sorrow,Prays for them there on high;Who has most need of her prayers, to-morrowShall tell them, they or I?Up in the hills togetherWe loved, where the world seemed true;Our world of the whin and heather,Our skies of a nearer blue,A blue from which one borrowsA faith that helps one dieO Mother, sweet Mother of Sorrows,None needs such more than I!We lived, we loved unweddedLove's sin and its shame that slays!No ill of the year we dreaded,No day of its coming days;Its coming days, their manyTrials by morn and night,And I know no land, not any,Where love's...
Madison Julius Cawein
A Night Scene.
The lights have faded from the little casement, As though her closing eyes had brought on night; And now she dreams--Ah! dreams supremely bright,While silence reigns around from roof to basement. And slow the moon is mounting up the sky,Drawing Heaven's myriads in her queenly train, Flinging rich largesse, as she passes by,Of beauty freely over hill and plain.Around the lattice creep the pure white roses, And one light bough rests gently on the pane, The diamond pane, through which the angel trainGaze on the sister saint who there reposes; The moonlight silvers softly o'er it now;And round the eaves the south wind whispers lowly, Waving the leaves like curls on maiden's brow;The peace and stillness make the place seem ho...
Walter R. Cassels
Near the Lake.
Near the lake where drooped the willow, Long time ago!--Where the rock threw back the billow Brighter than snow--Dwelt a maid, beloved and cherished By high and low;But with autumn's leaf she perished, Long time ago!Rock and tree and flowing water, Long time ago!--Bee and bird and blossom taught her Love's spell to know!While to my fond words she listened, Murmuring low,Tenderly her dove-eyes glistened, Long time ago!Mingled were our hearts for ever, Long time ago!Can I now forget her?--Never! No--lost one--no!To her grave these tears are given, Ever to flow:She's the star I mis...
George Pope Morris
Go, Dream No More
Go, dream no more of a sun-bright sky With never a cloud to dim! -Thou hast seen the storm in its robes of night,Them hast felt the rush of the whirlwind's might,Thou hast shrunk from the lightning's arrowy flight, When the Spirit of Storms went by! Go, dream no more of a crystal sea Where never a tempest sweeps! -For thy riven bark on a surf-beat shore,Where the wild winds shriek, and the billows roar,A shattered wreck to be launched no more, Will mock at thy dream and thee! Go, dream no more of a fadeless flower With never a cankering blight' -For the queenliest rose in thy garden bed,The pride of the morn, ere the noon is fled,With the worm at its heart, withers cold and dead ...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Johanna
'Twas a balmy day in Autumn,In the drowsy, dreamy Autumn,When from out the quiet woodlandSounds of rustling leaves came only -Leaves that floated softly earthward -And the streamlets had a murmurSuch as wanders through our visionsIn the hushed and starry midnight -Low, soft murmur, full of music.With the small hand of her darlingClasped in her's, there came a motherTo an Artist - fondly askingFor the picture of her pet-lamb -Winsome pet-lamb full of child-life,Full of merry, ringing laughter -Laughter that went up unceasingLike the happy chime of streamletsSinging thro' some mountain valley, -Like the bird-song in the forestIn the time of early roses, -Like the tinkle of sweet watersDripping o'er a marble fou...
Vacilliation
IBetween extremitiesMan runs his course;A brand, or flaming breath.Comes to destroyAll those antinomiesOf day and night;The body calls it death,The heart remorse.But if these be rightWhat is joy?IIA tree there is that from its topmost boughIs half all glittering flame and half all greenAbounding foliage moistened with the dew;And half is half and yet is all the scene;And half and half consume what they renew,And he that Attis' image hangs betweenThat staring fury and the blind lush leafMay know not what he knows, but knows not griefIIIGet all the gold and silver that you can,Satisfy ambition, animateThe trivial days and ram them with the sun,And yet upon t...
William Butler Yeats
Jenny Allen.
I never shall hear your voice again,Your voice so gentle and lowBut the thought of you, Jenny Allen,Will go with me where I go.Your sweet voice drowns the Atlantic waveAnd the rush of the Alpine snow.You were very fair, Jenny Allen,Fair as a woodland rose;Your heart was pure as an angel's heart,Too good for earth and its woes,And I loved you, Jenny Allen,With a sorrowful love, God knows.You loved me, Jenny Allen,My sorrow made me wise;And I read your heart, 'twas an easy task,For within your clear blue eyes,Your pure and innocent thoughts shone outLike stars from the summer skies.He had riches and fame with his seventy yearsWhen he won you for his wife;You were but a child, and poor, and tired,Tir...
Marietta Holley
Recollections After A Ramble.
The rosy day was sweet and young,The clod-brown lark that hail'd the mornHad just her summer anthem sung,And trembling dropped in the corn;The dew-rais'd flower was perk and proud,The butterfly around it play'd;The sky's blue clear, save woolly cloudThat pass'd the sun without a shade.On the pismire's castle hill,While the burnet-buttons quak'd,While beside the stone-pav'd rillCowslip bunches nodding shak'd,Bees in every peep did try,Great had been the honey shower,Soon their load was on their thigh,Yellow dust as fine as flour.Brazen magpies, fond of clack,Full of insolence and pride,Chattering on the donkey's backPerch'd, and pull'd his shaggy hide;Odd crows settled on the path,Dames from milking trot...
John Clare
Sonnet XVI.
Quand' io son tutto volto in quella parte.HE FLIES, BUT PASSION PURSUES HIM. When I reflect and turn me to that partWhence my sweet lady beam'd in purest light,And in my inmost thought remains that lightWhich burns me and consumes in every part,I, who yet dread lest from my heart it partAnd see at hand the end of this my light,Go lonely, like a man deprived of light,Ignorant where to go; whence to depart.Thus flee I from the stroke which lays me dead,Yet flee not with such speed but that desireFollows, companion of my flight alone.Silent I go:--but these my words, though dead,Others would cause to weep--this I desire,That I may weep and waste myself alone.CAPEL LOFFT. When all my mind I tur...
A Pre-Existence.
An intimation of some previous life,Or dark dream, in the present dim-divined,Of some uncertain sleep - or lived or dreamedIn some dead life - between a dusk and dawn;From heathen battles to Toledo's gates,Far off defined, his corselet and camail,Damascened armet, shattered; in an eve'sAnger of brass a galloping glitter, oneRode arrow-wounded. And the city caughtA cry before him and a wail behind,Of walls beleaguered; battles; conquered kings;Triumphant Taric; broken Spain and slaves.And I, a Moslem slave, a miser Jew's,Housed near the Tagus - squalid and aloneSave for his slave, held dear - to beat and starve -Leaner than my lank shadow when the moon,A burning beacon, westerns; and my bonesA visible hunger; famished with the ...
Sleep
Sleep, when a soul that her own clouds coverWails that sorrow should always keepWatch, nor see in the gloom above herSleep,Down, through darkness naked and steep,Sinks, and the gifts of his grace recoverSoon the soul, though her wound be deep.God beloved of us, all men's lover,All most weary that smile or weepFeel thee afar or anear them hover,Sleep.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Verses To The Tomb Of A Friend.
Dearer to me, thou pile of dust!Tho' with the wild flow'r simply crown'd,Than the vast dome or beauteous bust,By genius form'd, by wit renown'd.Wave, thou wild flow'r! for ever wave,O'er my lov'd relic of delight;My tears shall bathe her green-rob'd graveMore than the dews of heav'n by night.Methinks my Delia bids me go,Says, "Florio, dry that fruitless tear!Feed not a wild flow'r with thy woe,Thy long-lov'd Delia is not here."No drop of feeling from her eyeNow starts to hear thy sorrows speak;And, did thy bosom know one joy,No smile would bloom upon her cheek."Pale, wan, and torpid, droops that cheek,Whereon thy lip impress'd its red;Those eyes, which Florio taught to speak,Unnotic'd close amid the dea...
John Carr