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To The Daisy
Sweet Flower! belike one day to haveA place upon thy Poet's grave,I welcome thee once more:But He, who was on land, at sea,My Brother, too, in loving thee,Although he loved more silently,Sleeps by his native shore.Ah! hopeful, hopeful was the dayWhen to that Ship he bent his way,To govern and to guide:His wish was gained: a little timeWould bring him back in manhood's primeAnd free for life, these hills to climb;With all his wants supplied.And full of hope day followed dayWhile that stout Ship at anchor layBeside the shores of Wight;The May had then made all things green;And, floating there, in pomp serene,That Ship was goodly to be seen,His pride and his delight!Yet then, when called ashore, he s...
William Wordsworth
The Enemy
My youth was nothing but a black stormCrossed now and then by brilliant suns.The thunder and the rain so ravage the shoresNothing's left of the fruit my garden held once.I should employ the rake and the plow,Having reached the autumn of ideas,To restore this inundated groundWhere the deep grooves of water form tombs in the lees.And who knows if the new flowers you dreamedWill find in a soil stripped and cleanedThe mystic nourishment that fortifies?O Sorrow O Sorrow Time consumes Life,And the obscure enemy that gnaws at my heartUses the blood that I lose to play my part.
Charles Baudelaire
An Epitaph On A Child Of Queen Elizabeth's Chapel
Weep with me, all you that readThis little story;And know, for whom a tear you shedDeaths self is sorry.Twas a child that so did thriveIn grace and feature,As heaven and nature seemed to striveWhich owned the creature.Years he numbered scarce thirteenWhen fates turned cruel,Yet three filled zodiacs had be beenThe stages jewel;And did act what now we moan,Old men so duly,As, sooth, the parcae thought him one,He played so truly.So by error, so his fateThey all consented;But viewing him since, alas too late,They have repented,And have sought to give new birth,In baths to steep him;But being so much too good for earth,Heaven vows to keep him.
Ben Jonson
Moonlight
As a pale phantom with a lamp Ascends some ruin's haunted stair,So glides the moon along the damp Mysterious chambers of the air.Now hidden in cloud, and now revealed, As if this phantom, full of pain,Were by the crumbling walls concealed, And at the windows seen again.Until at last, serene and proud In all the splendor of her light,She walks the terraces of cloud, Supreme as Empress of the Night.I look, but recognize no more Objects familiar to my view;The very pathway to my door Is an enchanted avenue.All things are changed. One mass of shade, The elm-trees drop their curtains down;By palace, park, and colonnade I walk as in a foreign town.The very ground b...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
A Basket Of Flowers - From Dawn To Dusk
DawnOn skies still and starlitWhite lustres take hold,And grey flushes scarlet,And red flashes gold.And sun-glories coverThe rose shed above her,Like lover and loverThey flame and unfold.- - - - -Still bloom in the gardenGreen grass-plot, fresh lawn,Though pasture lands hardenAnd drought fissures yawn.While leaves not a few fall,Let rose leaves for you fall,Leaves pearl-strung with dew-fall,And gold shot with dawn.Does the grass-plot rememberThe fall of your feetIn autumns red ember,When drought leagues with heat,When the last of the rosesDespairingly closesIn the lull that reposesEre storm winds wax fleet?Loves melodies languish...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
The sigh that heaves the grasses
The sigh that heaves the grassesWhence thou wilt never riseIs of the air that passesAnd knows not if it sighs.The diamond tears adorningThy low mound on the lea,Those are the tears of morning,That weeps, but not for thee.
Alfred Edward Housman
Song. "There Was A Time, When Love's Young Flowers"
There was a time, when love's young flowersWith many a joy my bosom prest:Sweet hours of bliss!--but short are hours,Those hours are fled--and I'm distrest.I would not wish, in reason's spite;I would not wish new joy to gain;I only wish for one delight,--To see those hours of bliss again.There was a day, when love was young,And nought but bliss did there belong;When blackbirds nestling o'er us sung,Ah me! what sweetness wak'd his song.I wish not springs for ever fled;I wish not birds' forgotten strain;I only wish for feelings deadTo warm, and wake, and feel again.But ah! what once was joy is past:The time's gone by; the day and hourAre whirring fled on trouble's blast,As winter nips the summer flower.A shadow...
John Clare
After Long Grief And Pain.
There is a place hung o'er with summer boughsAnd drowsy skies wherein the gray hawk sleeps;Where waters flow, within whose lazy deeps,Like silvery prisms that the winds arouse,The minnows twinkle; where the bells of cowsTinkle the stillness, and the bob-white keepsCalling from meadows where the reaper reaps,And children's laughter haunts an old-time house;A place where life wears ever an honest smellOf hay and honey, sun and elder-bloom -Like some dear, modest girl - within her hair:Where, with our love for comrade, we may dwellFar from the city's strife whose cares consume -Oh, take my hand and let me lead you there.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Wrathful
O pupils of Gaza...Teach us...A little of what you haveFor we have forgotten...Teach us...To be menFor we have men...dough they become...Teach us...How the rocks becomein the children's hands,precious diamond...How it becomesThe child's bicycle, a mineAnd the silk ribbon...An ambush...How the feeding bottle nipple...If detained notTurns into a knife....O pupils of GazaCare not...about our broadcasts...And hear us not...Strike...Strike...With all your powersAnd firmly in your hands take mattersAnd ask us not...We the people of arithmetic...And of addition...And of subtraction...Your wars do carry onAnd abstain from us...We're the deserters...
Nizar Qabbani
Discontent.
The sun comes up in the east And the sun goes down in the west, And man to me is a heartless beast And the world has only a savage breast. How thoughts rush over my soul As the waves walk over the sea! Their forms flee soon and the sorrows roll In the deep distress that is over me. How hopes arise in my heart, As the roses bloom over the plain! But time is tearing their sweets apart And they die in darkness and awful pain. Ambitions burn in my breast, As the fires in a city rage; But damp creeps over their fervid zest And they sink away into ashen age. If there was pleasure for pain I could well be happy awhile, And,...
Freeman Edwin Miller
The Apparition.
(A Retrospect.)Convulsions came; and, where the fieldLong slept in pastoral green,A goblin-mountain was upheaved(Sure the scared sense was all deceived),Marl-glen and slag-ravine.The unreserve of Ill was there,The clinkers in her last retreat;But, ere the eye could take it in,Or mind could comprehension win,It sunk! - and at our feet.So, then, Solidity's a crust -The core of fire below;All may go well for many a year,But who can think without a fearOf horrors that happen so?
Herman Melville