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Song
I peeled bits of straws and I got switches tooFrom the grey peeling willow as idlers do,And I switched at the flies as I sat all aloneTill my flesh, blood, and marrow was turned to dry bone.My illness was love, though I knew not the smart,But the beauty of love was the blood of my heart.Crowded places, I shunned them as noises too rudeAnd fled to the silence of sweet solitude.Where the flower in green darkness buds, blossoms, and fades,Unseen of all shepherds and flower-loving maids--The hermit bees find them but once and away.There I'll bury alive and in silence decay.I looked on the eyes of fair woman too long,Till silence and shame stole the use of my tongue:When I tried to speak to her I'd nothing to say,So I turned myself round and she wan...
John Clare
The Old Burying-Ground
Our vales are sweet with fern and rose,Our hills are maple-crowned;But not from them our fathers choseThe village burying-ground.The dreariest spot in all the landTo Death they set apart;With scanty grace from Natures hand,And none from that of Art.A winding wall of mossy stone,Frost-flung and broken, linesA lonesome acre thinly grownWith grass and wandering vines.Without the wall a birch-tree showsIts drooped and tasselled head;Within, a stag-horned sumach grows,Fern-leafed, with spikes of red.There, sheep that graze the neighboring plainLike white ghosts come and go,The farm-horse drags his fetlock chain,The cow-bell tinkles slow.Low moans the river from its bed,The distant pines re...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The First Rain
The first rain reminds meOf the rising summer dust.The rain doesn't remember the rain of yesteryear.A year is a trained beast with no memories.Soon you will again wear your harnesses,Beautiful and embroidered, to holdSheer stockings: youMare and harnesser in one body.The white panic of soft fleshIn the panic of a sudden visionOf ancient saints.
Yehuda Amichai
The Heart's House
My heart is but a little houseWith room for only three or four,And it was filled before you knockedUpon the door.I longed to bid you come within,I knew that I should love you well,But if you came the rest must goElsewhere to dwell.For you would never be contentWith just a corner in my room,Yea, if you came the rest must goInto the gloom.And so, farewell, O friend, my friend!Nay, I could weep a little too,But I shall only smile and sayFarewell to you.
Sara Teasdale
Tenebræ
At the chill high tide of the night,At the turn of the fluctuant hours,When the waters of time are at height,In a vision arose on my sightThe kingdoms of earth and the powers.In a dream without lightening of eyesI saw them, children of earth,Nations and races arise,Each one after his wise,Signed with the sign of his birth.Sound was none of their feet,Light was none of their faces;In their lips breath was not, or heat,But a subtle murmur and sweetAs of water in wan waste places.Pale as from passionate years,Years unassuaged of desire,Sang they soft in mine ears,Crowned with jewels of tears,Girt with girdles of fire.A slow song beaten and broken,As it were from the dust and the dead,As o...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Farewell To The Reader.
A maiden blush o'er every feature straying,The Muse her gentle harp now lays down here,And stands before thee, for thy judgment praying,She waits with reverence, but not with fear;Her last farewell for his kind smile delaying.Whom splendor dazzles not who holds truth dear.The hand of him alone whose soaring spiritWorships the beautiful, can crown her merit.These simple lays are only heard resounding,While feeling hearts are gladdened by their tone,With brighter phantasies their path surrounding,To nobler aims their footsteps guiding on.Yet coming ages ne'er will hear them sounding,They live but for the present hour alone;The passing moment called them into being,And, as the hours dance on, they, too, are fleeing.The spring returns, ...
Friedrich Schiller
Sappho
She lay among the myrtles on the cliff;Above her glared the noon; beneath, the sea.Upon the white horizon Atho's peakWeltered in burning haze; all airs were dead;The cicale slept among the tamarisk's hair;The birds sat dumb and drooping. Far belowThe lazy sea-weed glistened in the sun;The lazy sea-fowl dried their steaming wings;The lazy swell crept whispering up the ledge,And sank again. Great Pan was laid to rest;And Mother Earth watched by him as he slept,And hushed her myriad children for a while.She lay among the myrtles on the cliff;And sighed for sleep, for sleep that would not hear,But left her tossing still; for night and dayA mighty hunger yearned within her heart,Till all her veins ran fever; and her cheek,Her long thin h...
Charles Kingsley
Launa Dee.
Weary, oh, so wearyWith it all!Sunny days or dreary--How they pall!Why should we be heroes,Launa Dee,Striving to no winning?Let the world be Zero's!As in the beginningLet it be!What good comes of toiling,When all's done?Frail green sprays for spoilingOf the sun;Laurel leaf or myrtle,Love or fame--Ah, what odds what spray, sweet?Time, that makes life fertile,Makes its blooms decay, sweet,As they came.Lie here with me dreaming,Cheek to cheek,Lithe limbs twined and gleaming,Brown and sleek;Like two serpents coilingIn their lair.Where's the good of wreathingSprays for Time's despoiling?Let me feel your breathingIn my hair.You and I together--...
Bliss Carman
I've Often Laughed
I've often laughed and oftener still have wept,A sighing always through my laughter crept,Tears were not far away...What is there to say?I've spoken much and oftener held by tongue,For still the most was neither said nor sung.Could I but tell it so...What is there to know?I've hated much and loved, oh so much more!Fierce contrasts at my very heartstrings tore...I tried to fight them--well...What is there to tell?
Morris Rosenfeld
Upon The Loss Of His Mistresses
I have lost, and lately, theseMany dainty mistresses:Stately Julia, prime of all;Sapho next, a principal:Smooth Anthea, for a skinWhite, and heaven-like crystalline:Sweet Electra, and the choiceMyrha, for the lute and voice.Next, Corinna, for her wit,And the graceful use of it;With Perilla: All are gone;Only Herrick's left alone,For to number sorrow byTheir departures hence, and die.
Robert Herrick
My Birthday.
Who is this who gently slipsThrough my door, and stands and sighs,Hovering in a soft eclipse,With a finger on her lipsAnd a meaning in her eyes?Once she came to visit meIn white robes with festal airs,Glad surprises, songs of glee;Now in silence cometh she,And a sombre garb she wears.Once I waited and was tired,Chid her visits as too few;Crownless now and undesired,She to seek me is inspiredOftener than she used to do.Grave her coming is and still,Sober her appealing mien,Tender thoughts her glances fill;But I shudder, as one willWhen an open grave is seen.Wherefore, friend,--for friend thou art,--Should I wrong thee thus and grieve?Wherefore push thee from my heart?Of my morning...
Susan Coolidge
A Man Young And Old:- His Memories
We should be hidden from their eyes,Being but holy showsAnd bodies broken like a thornWhereon the bleak north blows,To think of buried HectorAnd that none living knows.The women take so little stockIn what I do or sayTheyd sooner leave their cossetingTo hear a jackass bray;My arms are like the twisted thornAnd yet there beauty lay;The first of all the tribe lay thereAnd did such pleasure take,She who had brought great Hector downAnd put all Troy to wreck,That she cried into this ear,Strike me if I shriek.
William Butler Yeats
In Vain.
I CANNOT live with you,It would be life,And life is over thereBehind the shelfThe sexton keeps the key to,Putting upOur life, his porcelain,Like a cupDiscarded of the housewife,Quaint or broken;A newer Sevres pleases,Old ones crack.I could not die with you,For one must waitTo shut the other's gaze down, --You could not.And I, could I stand byAnd see you freeze,Without my right of frost,Death's privilege?Nor could I rise with you,Because your faceWould put out Jesus',That new graceGlow plain and foreignOn my homesick eye,Except that you, than heShone closer by.They'd judge us -- how?For you served Heaven, you know,Or soug...
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Margery.
"Truth lights our minds as sunrise lights the world.The heart that shuts out truth, excludes the lightThat wakes the love of beauty in the soul;And being foe to these, despises God,The sole Dispenser of the gracious blissThat brings us nearer the celestial gate.They who might feed on rose-leaves of the True,And grow in loveliness of heart and soul,Catch at Deception's airy gossamers,As children clutch at stars. To some, the worldIs a bleak desert, parched with blinding sand,With here and there a mirage, fair to view,But insubstantial as the visions bornOf Folly and Despair. Could we but knowHow nigh we are to the true light of heaven;In what a world of love we live and breathe;On what a tide of truth our souls are borne!Yet we're bu...
Charles Sangster
Comfort In Calamity.
'Tis no discomfort in the world to fall,When the great crack not crushes one, but all.
The Mother.
There is a land whereon the sun's warm gaze, God-like, all-seeing, falls right down through space,And the weak Earth, quite smitten by its rays, Lies scorch'd and powerless with mute silent face,Like a tranced body, where no changing glowTells that the life-streams through its channels flow.Peopled it is by nations scant and few, Set far apart among the trackless sands,Unlearn'd, uncultured, wild and swart of hue, Roaming the deserts in divided bands,Where the green pastures call them, and the deerTroop yet within the range of bow and spear.Unhappy Afric! can thy boundless plains, Where the royal lion snuffs the free pure air,And every breeze laughs at the tyrant's chains, Be but the nest of slavery and despair,Rea...
Walter R. Cassels
A Character
I marvel how Nature could ever find spaceFor so many strange contrasts in one human face:There's thought and no thought, and there's paleness and bloomAnd bustle and sluggishness, pleasure and gloom.There's weakness, and strength both redundant and vain;Such strength as, if ever affliction and painCould pierce through a temper that's soft to disease,Would be rational peace, a philosopher's ease.There's indifference, alike when he fails or succeeds,And attention full ten times as much as there needs;Pride where there's no envy, there's so much of joy;And mildness, and spirit both forward and coy.There's freedom, and sometimes a diffident stareOf shame scarcely seeming to know that she's there,There's virtue, the title it surely may claim,<...
William Wordsworth
To G. M. T
The sun is sinking in the west, Long grow the shadows dim; Have patience, sister, to be blest, Wait patiently for Him. Thou knowest love, much love hast had, Great things of love mayst tell, Ought'st never to be very sad For thou too hast lov'd well. His house thou know'st, who on the brink Of death loved more than thou, Loved more than thy great heart can think, And just as then loves now-- In that great house is one who waits For thy slow-coming foot; Glad is he with his angel-mates Yet often listens mute, For he of all men loves thee best: He haunts the heavenly clock; Ah, he has long been up and drest To open to thy knock! F...
George MacDonald