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Johnnie Sayre
Father, thou canst never know The anguish that smote my heart For my disobedience, the moment I felt The remorseless wheel of the engine Sink into the crying flesh of my leg. As they carried me to the home of widow Morris I could see the school-house in the valley To which I played truant to steal rides upon the trains. I prayed to live until I could ask your forgiveness - And then your tears, your broken words of comfort! From the solace of that hour I have gained infinite happiness. Thou wert wise to chisel for me: "Taken from the evil to come."
Edgar Lee Masters
To My Mother
Gentlest of critics, does your memory hold (I know it does) a record of the days When I, a schoolboy, earned your generous praiseFor halting verse and stories crudely told?Over these childish scrawls the years have rolled, They might not know the world's unfriendly gaze; But still your smile shines down familiar ways,Touches my words and turns their dross to gold.More dear to-day than in that vanished time Comes your nigh praise to make me proud and strong.In my poor notes you hear Love's splendid chime, So unto you does this, my work belong.Take, then, a little gift of fragile rhyme: Your heart will change it to authentic song.
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
I Hid My Love
I hid my love when young till ICouldnt bear the buzzing of a fly;I hid my love to my despiteTill I could not bear to look at light:I dare not gaze upon her faceBut left her memory in each place;Whereer I saw a wild flower lieI kissed and bade my love good-bye.I met her in the greenest dells,Where dewdrops pearl the wood bluebells;The lost breeze kissed her bright blue eye,The bee kissed and went singing by,A sunbeam found a passage there,A gold chain round her neck so fair;As secret as the wild bees songShe lay there all the summer long.I hid my love in field and townTill een the breeze would knock me down;The bees seemed singing ballads oer,The flys bass turned a lions roar;And even silence found a to...
John Clare
A Dream Of Life.
When I was young long, long agoI dreamed myself among the flowers;And fancy drew the picture so,They seemed like Fairies in their bowers.The rose was still a rose, you knowBut yet a maid. What could I do?You surely would not have me go,When rosy maidens seem to woo?My heart was gay, and 'mid the throngI sported for an hour or two;We danced the flowery paths along,And did as youthful lovers do.But sports must cease, and so I dreamedTo part with these, my fairy flowersBut oh, how very hard it seemedTo say good-by 'mid such sweet bowers!And one fair Maid of modest airGazed on me with her eye of blue;I saw the tear-drop gathering thereHow could I say to her, Adieu!I fondly gave my hand and heart...
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
On The Death Of His Majesty (George The Third)
Ward of the Law! dread Shadow of a King!Whose realm had dwindled to one stately room;Whose universe was gloom immersed in gloom,Darkness as thick as life o'er life could fling,Save haply for some feeble glimmeringOf Faith and Hope if thou, by nature's doom,Gently hast sunk into the quiet tomb,Why should we bend in grief, to sorrow cling,When thankfulness were best? Fresh-flowing tears,Or, where tears flow not, sigh succeeding sigh,Yield to such after-thought the sole replyWhich justly it can claim. The Nation hearsIn this deep knell, silent for threescore years,An unexampled voice of awful memory!
William Wordsworth
Year Of Meteors, 1859 '60
Year of meteors! brooding year!I would bind in words retrospective, some of your deeds and signs;I would sing your contest for the 19th Presidentiad;I would sing how an old man, tall, with white hair, mounted the scaffold in Virginia;(I was at hand, silent I stood, with teeth shut close, I watch'd;I stood very near you, old man, when cool and indifferent, but trembling with age and your unheal'd wounds, you mounted the scaffold;)I would sing in my copious song your census returns of The States,The tables of population and products, I would sing of your ships and their cargoes,The proud black ships of Manhattan, arriving, some fill'd with immigrants, some from the isthmus with cargoes of gold;Songs thereof would I sing, to all that hitherward comes would I welcome give;And you wou...
Walt Whitman
Pax Vobiscum.
1 Her violets in thine eyes The Springtide stained I know, Two bits of mystic skies On which the green turf lies, Whereon the violets blow. 2 I know the Summer wrought From thy sweet heart that rose, With that faint fragrance fraught, Its sad poetic thought Of peace and deep repose. 3 That Autumn, like some god, From thy delicious hair-- Lost sunlight 'neath the sod Shot up this golden-rod To toss it everywhere. 4 That Winter from thy breast The snowdrop's whiteness stole-- Much kinder than the rest-- Thy innocence confessed, The pureness of...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Fugitives
O fugitive fragrances That tremble heavenward Unceasing, or if ye linger, Halt but as memories On the verge of forgetfulness, Why must ye pass so fleetly On wings that are less than wind, To a death unknowable? Soon ye are gone, and the air Forgets your faint unrest In the garden's breathlessness, Where fall the snows of silence.
Clark Ashton Smith
Bad Weather
A frozen moon stands waxen,White shadows,Dead face,Above me and the dullEarth.Throws green lightLike a garment,A wrinkled one,On bluish land.But from the edgeOf the city,Like a soft hand without fingers,Gently risesAnd fearfully threatening like deathDark, nameless...RisingWithout sound,An empty slow sea swells towards us -At first it was only like a wearyMoth, which crawled over the last houses.Now it is a black bleeding hole.It has already buried the city and half the sky.Ah, had I flown -Now it is too late.My head falls intoDesolate hands.On the horizon an apparition like a shriekAnnouncesTerror and imminent end.
Alfred Lichtenstein
The Statue
A granite rock in the mountain sideGazed on the world and was satisfied.It watched the centuries come and go.It welcomed the sunlight, yet loved the snow.It grieved when the forest was forced to fall,Yet joyed when steeples rose, white and tall,In the valley below it, and thrilled to hearThe voice of the great town roaring near.When the mountain stream from its idle playWas caught by the mill wheel and borne awayAnd trained to labour, the grey rock mused'Trees and verdure and stream are usedBy Man the Master; but I remainFriend of the mountain, and star, and plain,Unchanged forever by God's decree,While passing centuries bow to me.'Then all unwarned, with a mighty shockOut of the mountain was wrenched the rock.Bruised an...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Growing Gray.
"On a l'âge de son coeur."--A. d'Houdetot.A little more toward the light;--Me miserable! Here's one that's white;And one that's turning;Adieu to song and "salad days;"My Muse, let's go at once to Jay's,And order mourning.We must reform our rhymes, my Dear,--Renounce the gay for the severe,--Be grave, not witty;We have, no more, the right to findThat Pyrrha's hair is neatly twined,--That Chloe's pretty.Young Love's for us a farce that's played;Light canzonet and serenadeNo more may tempt us;Gray hairs but ill accord with dreams;From aught but sour didactic themesOur years exempt us.Indeed! you really fancy so?You think for one white streak we growAt once satiric?A fiddlestick! Eac...
Henry Austin Dobson
The Old Tramp
A Old Tramp slep' in our stable wunst,An' The Raggedy Man he caughtAn' roust him up, an' chased him offClean out through our back lot!An' th' Old Tramp hollered back an' said, -"You're a purty man! - You air! -With a pair o' eyes like two fried eggs,An' a nose like a Bartlutt pear!"
James Whitcomb Riley
Monody, Written At Matlock.
Matlock! amid thy hoary-hanging views,Thy glens that smile sequestered, and thy nooksWhich yon forsaken crag all dark o'erlooks;Once more I court the long neglected Muse,As erst when by the mossy brink and fallsOf solitary Wainsbeck, or the sideOf Clysdale's cliffs, where first her voice she tried,I strayed a pensive boy. Since then, the thrallsThat wait life's upland road have chilled her breast,And much, as much they might, her wing depressed.Wan Indolence, resigned, her deadening handLaid on her heart, and Fancy her cold wandDropped at the frown of fortune; yet once moreI call her, and once more her converse sweet,'Mid the still limits of this wild retreat,I woo; if yet delightful as of yoreMy heart she may revisit, nor denyThe soothin...
William Lisle Bowles
She Sung Of Love.
She sung of Love, while o'er her lyre The rosy rays of evening fell,As if to feed with their soft fire The soul within that trembling shell.The same rich light hung o'er her cheek, And played around those lips that sungAnd spoke, as flowers would sing and speak, If Love could lend their leaves a tongue.But soon the West no longer burned, Each rosy ray from heaven withdrew;And, when to gaze again I turned, The minstrel's form seemed fading too.As if her light and heaven's were one, The glory all had left that frame;And from her glimmering lips the tone, As from a parting spirit, came.Who ever loved, but had the thought That he and all he loved must part?Filled with this fear, I flew and c...
Thomas Moore
Song.
Red gleams the mountain ridge, Slow the stream creepsUnder the old bent bridge, And labor sleeps.There are no restless birds, No leaves that stir,Dusk her gray mantle girds, Night's harbinger.The storm-soul's change and start Pause, lull, and cease;In my unquiet heart Is born a peace.
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Lines
1.Unfelt unheard, unseen,I've left my little queen,Her languid arms in silver slumber lying:Ah! through their nestling touch,Who, who could tell how muchThere is for madness, cruel, or complying?2.Those faery lids how sleek!Those lips how moist! they speak,In ripest quiet, shadows of sweet sounds:Into my fancy's earMelting a burden dear,How "Love doth know no fullness, nor no bounds."3.True, tender monitors!I bend unto your laws:This sweetest day for dalliance was born!So, without more ado,I'll feel my heaven anew,For all the blushing of the hasty morn.
John Keats
His Request To Julia
Julia, if I chance to dieEre I print my poetry,I most humbly thee desireTo commit it to the fire:Better 'twere my book were dead,Than to live not perfected.
Robert Herrick
The River Path
No bird-song floated down the hill,The tangled bank below was still;No rustle from the birchen stem,No ripple from the waters hem.The dusk of twilight round us grew,We felt the falling of the dew;For, from us, ere the day was done,The wooded hills shut out the sun.But on the rivers farther sideWe saw the hill-tops glorified,A tender glow, exceeding fair,A dream of day without its glare.With us the damp, the chill, the gloomWith them the sunsets rosy bloom;While dark, through willowy vistas seen,The river rolled in shade between.From out the darkness where we trod,We gazed upon those hills of God,Whose light seemed not of moon or sun.We spake not, but our thought was one....
John Greenleaf Whittier