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Lines Written In The Bay Of Lerici.
She left me at the silent timeWhen the moon had ceased to climbThe azure path of Heaven's steep,And like an albatross asleep,Balanced on her wings of light,Hovered in the purple night,Ere she sought her ocean nestIn the chambers of the West.She left me, and I stayed aloneThinking over every toneWhich, though silent to the ear,The enchanted heart could hear,Like notes which die when born, but stillHaunt the echoes of the hill;And feeling ever - oh, too much! -The soft vibration of her touch,As if her gentle hand, even now,Lightly trembled on my brow;And thus, although she absent were,Memory gave me all of herThat even Fancy dares to claim: -Her presence had made weak and tameAll passions, and I lived alone
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Trust In Immortality.
The dead has risen here, to live through endless ages;This I with firmness trust and know.I was first led to guess it by the sages,The knaves convince me that 'tis really so.
Friedrich Schiller
Pan and Thalassius
A Lyrical IdylTHALASSIUSPan!PANO sea-stray, seed of Apollo,What word wouldst thou have with me?My ways thou wast fain to followOr ever the years hailed theeMan.NowIf August brood on the valleys,If satyrs laugh on the lawns,What part in the wildwood alleysHast thou with the fleet-foot faunsThou?See!Thy feet are a man's not clovenLike these, not light as a boy's:The tresses and tendrils inwovenThat lure us, the lure of them cloysThee.UsThe joy of the wild woods neverLeaves free of the thirst it slakes:The wild love throbs in us everThat burns in the dense hot brakesThus.Life,Eternal, passionate, awless,Insatiable, mutable, dear,Makes all men's l...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Sonnet C. Written December 1790.
Lyre of the Sonnet, that full many a time Amus'd my lassitude, and sooth'd my pains, When graver cares forbade the lengthen'd strains, To thy brief bound, and oft-returning chimeA long farewell! - the splendid forms of Rhyme When Grief in lonely orphanism reigns, Oppress the drooping Soul. - DEATH's dark domains Throw mournful shadows o'er the Aonian clime;For in their silent bourne my filial bands Lie all dissolv'd; - and swiftly-wasting pour From my frail glass of life, health's sparkling sands.Sleep then, my LYRE, thy tuneful tasks are o'er, Sleep! for my heart bereav'd, and listless hands Wake with rapt touch thy glowing strings no more!
Anna Seward
Famine And Harvest
[PLYMOUTH PLANTATION: 1622]The strong and the tender,The young and the old,Unto Death we must render; -Our silver, our gold.To break their long sleepingNo voice may avail:They hear not our weeping -Our famished love's wail.Yea, those whom we cherishDepart, day by day.Soon we, too, shall perishAnd crumble to clay.And the vine and the berryAbove us will bloom;The wind shall make merryWhile we lie in gloom.Fear not! Though thou starvest,Provision is made:God gathers His harvestWhen our hopes fade!
George Parsons Lathrop
Henry Layton
Whoever thou art who passest by Know that my father was gentle, And my mother was violent, While I was born the whole of such hostile halves, Not intermixed and fused, But each distinct, feebly soldered together. Some of you saw me as gentle, Some as violent, Some as both. But neither half of me wrought my ruin. It was the falling asunder of halves, Never a part of each other, That left me a lifeless soul.
Edgar Lee Masters
For Annie
Thank Heaven! the crisis,The danger is past,And the lingering illnessIs over at last,And the fever called "Living"Is conquered at last.Sadly, I knowI am shorn of my strength,And no muscle I moveAs I lie at full length,But no matter! I feelI am better at length.And I rest so composedly,Now, in my bedThat any beholderMight fancy me dead,Might start at beholding me,Thinking me dead.The moaning and groaning,The sighing and sobbing,Are quieted now,With that horrible throbbingAt heart:- ah, that horrible,Horrible throbbing!The sickness- the nausea,The pitiless pain,Have ceased, with the feverThat maddened my brain,With the fever called "Living"That b...
Edgar Allan Poe
Duality
"From me spring good and evil."Who gave thee such a ruby flaming heart,And such a pure cold spirit? Side by sideI know these must eternally abideIn intimate war, and each to each impartLife from their pain, with every joy a dartTo wound with grief or death the self-allied.Red life within the spirit crucified,The eyes eternal pity thee, thou artFated with deathless powers at war to be,Not less the martyr of the world than heWhose thorn-crowned brow usurps the due of tearsWe would pay to thee, ever ruddy life,Whose passionate peace is still to be at strife,O'erthrown but in the unconflicting spheres.--March 15, 1896(This is unsigned, but in AE's "Collected Poems")
George William Russell
Ode
written on the first of January, 1794Come melancholy Moralizer--come!Gather with me the dark and wintry wreath; With me engarland now The SEPULCHRE OF TIME!Come Moralizer to the funeral song!I pour the dirge of the Departed Days, For well the funeral song Befits this solemn hour.But hark! even now the merry bells ring roundWith clamorous joy to welcome in this day, This consecrated day, To Mirth and Indolence.Mortal! whilst Fortune with benignant handFills to the brim thy cup of happiness, Whilst her unclouded sun Illumes thy summer day,Canst thou rejoice--rejoice that Time flies fast?That Night shall shadow soon thy summer sun? That s...
Robert Southey
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto IX
After solution of my doubt, thy Charles,O fair Clemenza, of the treachery spakeThat must befall his seed: but, "Tell it not,"Said he, "and let the destin'd years come round."Nor may I tell thee more, save that the meedOf sorrow well-deserv'd shall quit your wrongs.And now the visage of that saintly lightWas to the sun, that fills it, turn'd again,As to the good, whose plenitude of blissSufficeth all. O ye misguided souls!Infatuate, who from such a good estrangeYour hearts, and bend your gaze on vanity,Alas for you!--And lo! toward me, next,Another of those splendent forms approach'd,That, by its outward bright'ning, testifiedThe will it had to pleasure me. The eyesOf Beatrice, resting, as before,Firmly upon me, manifested forth
Dante Alighieri
On the Death of Sir Henry Taylor
Fourscore and five times has the gradual yearRisen and fulfilled its days of youth and eldSince first the child's eyes opening first beheldLight, who now leaves behind to help us hereLight shed from song as starlight from a sphereSerene as summer; song whose charm compelledThe sovereign soul made flesh in ArteveldeTo stand august before us and austere,Half sad with mortal knowledge, all sublimeWith trust that takes no taint from change or time,Trust in man's might of manhood. Strong and sage,Clothed round with reverence of remembering hearts,He, twin-born with our nigh departing age,Into the light of peace and fame departs.
In midnights of November,
In midnights of November,When Dead Mans Fair is nigh,And danger in the valley,And anger in the sky,Around the huddling homesteadsThe leafless timber roars,And the dead call the dyingAnd finger at the doors.Oh, yonder faltering fingersAre hands I used to hold;Their false companion drowsesAnd leaves them in the cold.Oh, to the bed of ocean,To Africk and to Ind,I will arise and followAlong the rainy wind.The night goes out and underWith all its train forlorn;Hues in the east assembleAnd cocks crow up the morn.The living are the livingAnd dead the dead will stay,And I will sort with comradesThat face the beam of day.
Alfred Edward Housman
Sonnet To George Keats: Written In Sickness
Brother belov'd if health shall smile again,Upon this wasted form and fever'd cheek:If e'er returning vigour bid these weakAnd languid limbs their gladsome strength regain,Well may thy brow the placid glow retainOf sweet content and thy pleas'd eye may speakThe conscious self applause, but should I seekTo utter what this heart can feel, Ah! vainWere the attempt! Yet kindest friends while o'erMy couch ye bend, and watch with tendernessThe being whom your cares could e'en restore,From the cold grasp of Death, say can you guessThe feelings which these lips can ne'er express;Feelings, deep fix'd in grateful memory's store.
John Keats
The Youth Of Nature
Raisd are the dripping oarsSilent the boat: the lake,Lovely and soft as a dream,Swims in the sheen of the moon.The mountains stand at its headClear in the pure June night,But the valleys are flooded with haze.Rydal and Fairfield are there;In the shadow Wordsworth lies dead.So it is, so it will be for aye.Nature is fresh as of old,Is lovely: a mortal is dead.The spots which recall him survive,For he lent a new life to these hills.The Pillar still broods oer the fieldsWhich border Ennerdale Lake,And Egremont sleeps by the sea.The gleam of The Evening StarTwinkles on Grasmere no more,But ruind and solemn and greyThe sheepfold of Michael survives,And far to the south, the heathStill blows in the Quantock...
Matthew Arnold
Written In Emersons Essays
O monstrous, dead, unprofitable world,That thou canst hear, and hearing, hold thy way.A voice oracular hath peald to-day,To-day a heros banner is unfurld.Hast thou no lip for welcome? So I said.Man after man, the world smild and passd by:A smile of wistful incredulityAs though one spike of noise unto the dead:Scornful, and strange, and sorrowful; and fullOf bitter knowledge. Yet the Will is free:Strong is the Soul, and wise, and beautiful:The seeds of godlike power are in us still:Gods are we, Bards, Saints, Heroes, if we will.Dumb judges, answer, truth or mockery
The Waterfall
The song of the waterDoomed ever to roam,A beautiful exile,Afar from its home.The cliffs on the mountain,The grand and the gray,They took the bright creatureAnd hurled it away!I heard the wild downfall,And knew it must spillA passionate heart outAll over the hill.Oh! was it a daughterOf sorrow and sin,That they threw it so madlyDown into the lynn?. . . . .And listen, my Sister,For this is the songThe Waterfall taught meThe ridges among:Oh where are the shadowsSo cool and so sweetAnd the rocks, saith the water,With the moss on their feet?Oh, where are my playmatesThe wind and the flowersThe golden and purpleOf honey-s...
Henry Kendall
The Gods Are Dead?
The gods are dead? Perhaps they are! Who knows?Living at least in Lempriere undeleted,The wise, the fair, the awful, the jocose,Are one and all, I like to think, retreatedIn some still land of lilacs and the rose.Once high they sat, and high o'er earthly showsWith sacrificial dance and song were greeted.Once . . . long ago. But now, the story goes,The gods are dead.It must be true. The world, a world of prose,Full-crammed with facts, in science swathed and sheeted,Nods in a stertorous after-dinner doze!Plangent and sad, in every wind that blowsWho will may hear the sorry words repeated:-'The Gods are Dead!'
William Ernest Henley
Lamentation
(WALTER AND FREDDIE.)From morn to eve, from evening unto morning, I mourn and cannot rest;So mourns the mother bird when home returning She finds an empty nest.I mourn the little children of my dwelling, That are forever gone,Sorrows that mothers feel my heart is swelling, And so I make my moan.One little blossom on my bosom faded, And passed from me away,But near my door the drooping willows shaded My little boys at playMy boys that came with flying feet to meet me, And questions wondrous wise,And bits of news which they had brought to greet me, And see my glad surpriseBitter for sweet no human hand can alter Nor bid one sorrow pass,With sudden stroke our darling ...
Nora Pembroke