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Crickets on a Strike
The foolish queen of fairylandFrom her milk-white throne in a lily-bell,Gave command to her cricket-bandTo play for her when the dew-drops fell.But the cold dew spoiled their instrumentsAnd they play for the foolish queen no more.Instead those sturdy malcontentsPlay sharps and flats in my kitchen floor.
Vachel Lindsay
As Winds That Blow Against A Star
(For Aline)Now by what whim of wanton chance Do radiant eyes know sombre days?And feet that shod in light should dance Walk weary and laborious ways?But rays from Heaven, white and whole, May penetrate the gloom of earth;And tears but nourish, in your soul, The glory of celestial mirth.The darts of toil and sorrow, sent Against your peaceful beauty, areAs foolish and as impotent As winds that blow against a star.
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
The Shrubbery. Written In A Time Of Affliction.
Oh, happy shadesto me unblest!Friendly to peace, but not to me!How ill the scene that offers rest,And heart that cannot rest, agree!This glassy stream, that spreading pine,Those alders, quivering to the breeze,Might soothe a soul less hurt than mine,And please, if any thing could please.But fixd unalterable CareForegoes not what she feels within,Shows the same sadness everywhere,And slights the season and the scene.For all that pleased in wood or lawn,While Peace possessd these silent bowers,Her animating smile withdrawn,Has lost its beauties and its powers.The saint or moralist should treadThis moss-grown alley musing, slow;They seek like me the secret shade,But not like me t...
William Cowper
By Broad Potomac's Shore
By broad Potomac's shore--again, old tongue!(Still uttering--still ejaculating--canst never cease this babble?)Again, old heart so gay--again to you, your sense, the full flush spring returning;Again the freshness and the odors--again Virginia's summer sky, pellucid blue and silver,Again the forenoon purple of the hills,Again the deathless grass, so noiseless, soft and green,Again the blood-red roses blooming.Perfume this book of mine, O blood-red roses!Lave subtly with your waters every line, Potomac!Give me of you, O spring, before I close, to put between its pages!O forenoon purple of the hills, before I close, of you!O smiling earth--O summer sun, give me of you!O deathless grass, of you!
Walt Whitman
Occasioned By Some Verses Of His Grace The Duke Of Buckingham.
Muse, 'tis enough: at length thy labour ends,And thou shalt live, for Buckingham commends,Let crowds of critics now my verse assail,Let Dennis write, and nameless numbers rail:This more than pays whole years of thankless pain;Time, health, and fortune are not lost in vain,Sheffield approves, consenting Phoebus bends,And I and Malice from this hour are friends.
Alexander Pope
Holger Drachmann
(See Note 70)Spring's herald, hail! You've rent the forest's quiet?Your hair is wet, and you are leaf-strewn, dusty ...With your powers lustyHave you raised a riot?What noise about you of the flood set free,That follows at your heels, - turn back and see:It spurts upon you! - Was it that you fought for?You were in there where stumps and trunks are rottingWhere long the winter-graybeards have been plottingTo prison safe that which a lock they wrought for.But power gave you Pan, the ancient god!They cried aloud and cursed your future lot?Your gallant feat they held a robber's fraud?- Each spring it happens; but is soon forgot.You cast you down beside the salt sea's wave.It too is free; dances with joy to find you.You know the mu...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
The Country Life:
TO THE HONOURED MR ENDYMION PORTER, GROOM OFTHE BED-CHAMBER TO HIS MAJESTYSweet country life, to such unknown,Whose lives are others', not their own!But serving courts and cities, beLess happy, less enjoying thee.Thou never plough'st the ocean's foamTo seek and bring rough pepper home:Nor to the Eastern Ind dost roveTo bring from thence the scorched clove:Nor, with the loss of thy loved rest,Bring'st home the ingot from the West.No, thy ambition's master-pieceFlies no thought higher than a fleece:Or how to pay thy hinds, and clearAll scores: and so to end the year:But walk'st about thine own dear bounds,Not envying others' larger grounds:For well thou know'st, 'tis not th' extentOf land makes life, but sweet content.
Robert Herrick
Brave Schill! By Death Delivered
Brave Schill! by death delivered, take thy flightFrom Prussia's timid region. Go, and restWith heroes, 'mid the islands of the Blest,Or in the fields of empyrean light.A meteor wert thou crossing a dark night:Yet shall thy name, conspicuous and sublime,Stand in the spacious firmament of time,Fixed as a star: such glory is thy right.Alas! it may not be: for earthly fameIs Fortune's frail dependant; yet there livesA Judge, who, as man claims by merit, gives;To whose all-pondering mind a noble aim,Faithfully kept, is as a noble deed;In whose pure sight all virtue doth succeed.
William Wordsworth
Builders Of Ruins
We build with strength the deep tower-wall That shall be shattered thus and thus.And fair and great are court and hall, But how fair--this is not for us,Who know the lack that lurks in all.We know, we know how all too bright The hues are that our painting wears,And how the marble gleams too white;-- We speak in unknown tongues, the yearsInterpret everything aright,And crown with weeds our pride of towers, And warm our marble through with sun,And break our pavements through with flowers, With an Amen when all is done,Knowing these perfect things of ours.O days, we ponder, left alone, Like children in their lonely hour,And in our secrets keep your own, As seeds the colour of the flower....
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
Elliott Hawkins
I looked like Abraham Lincoln. I was one of you, Spoon River, in all fellowship, But standing for the rights of property and for order. A regular church attendant, Sometimes appearing in your town meetings to warn you Against the evils of discontent and envy And to denounce those who tried to destroy the Union, And to point to the peril of the Knights of Labor. My success and my example are inevitable influences In your young men and in generations to come, In spite of attacks of newspapers like the Clarion; A regular visitor at Springfield When the Legislature was in session To prevent raids upon the railroads And the men building up the state. Trusted by them and by you, Spoon River, equally ...
Edgar Lee Masters
Death
Storm and strife and stress,Lost in a wilderness,Groping to find a way,Forth to the haunts of daySudden a vista peeps,Out of the tangled deeps,Only a point--the rayBut at the end is day.Dark is the dawn and chill,Daylight is on the hill,Night is the flitting breath,Day rides the hills of death.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Lines
Loud is the Vale! the Voice is upWith which she speaks when storms are gone,A mighty unison of streams!Of all her Voices, One!Loud is the Vale; this inland DepthIn peace is roaring like the SeaYon star upon the mountain-topIs listening quietly.Sad was I, even to pain deprest,Importunate and heavy load!The Comforter hath found me here,Upon this lonely road;And many thousands now are sad,Wait the fulfilment of their fear;For he must die who is their stay,Their glory disappear.A Power is passing from the earthTo breathless Nature's dark abyss;But when the great and good departWhat is it more than this.That Man, who is from God sent forth,Doth yet again to God return?Such ebb and flo...
The Proud Farmer
[In memory of E. S. Frazee, Rush County, Indiana] Into the acres of the newborn state He poured his strength, and plowed his ancient name, And, when the traders followed him, he stood Towering above their furtive souls and tame. That brow without a stain, that fearless eye Oft left the passing stranger wondering To find such knighthood in the sprawling land, To see a democrat well-nigh a king. He lived with liberal hand, with guests from far, With talk and joke and fellowship to spare, - Watching the wide world's life from sun to sun, Lining his walls with books from everywhere. He read by night, he built his world by day. The farm and house of God to him were one. For forty years h...
Bo-Peep
1.Little Bo-Peep, she lost her sheep,And didn't know where to find them;Let them alone, they'll all come homeAnd bring their tails behind them.2.Little Bo-Peep fell fast asleep,And dreamt she heard them bleating;But when she awoke, she found it a joke,For they were still a-fleeting.3.Then up she took her little crook,Determined for to find them,She found them indeed, but it made her heart bleedFor they'd left their tails behind them.4.It happened one day as Bo-Peep did strayInto a meadow hard by,There she espied their tails side by side,All hung on a tree to dry.5.She heaved a sigh and wiped her eye,Then went o'er hill and dale,And tried what she could, as a shepherdess should,
Walter Crane
A Proverb
Before you love,Learn to run through snowLeaving no footprint.From the Turkish.
Edward Powys Mathers
The Dying Chauffeur
Wheel me gently to the garage, since my car and I must part,No more for me the record and the run.That cursed left-hand cylinder the doctors call my heartIs pinking past redemption, I am done!They'll never strike a mixture that'll help me pull my load.My gears are stripped, I cannot set my brakes.I am entered for the finals down the timeless untimed RoadTo the Maker of the makers of all makes!
Rudyard
A Year Later (Serenade)
I skimmed the strings; I sang quite low;I hoped she would not come or knowThat the house next door was the one now dittied,Not hers, as when I had played unpitied;- Next door, where dwelt a heart fresh stirred,My new Love, of good will to me,Unlike my old Love chill to me,Who had not cared for my notes when heard:Yet that old Love cameTo the other's nameAs hers were the claim;Yea, the old Love cameMy viol sank mute, my tongue stood still,I tried to sing on, but vain my will:I prayed she would guess of the later, and leave me;She stayed, as though, were she slain by the smart,She would bear love's burn for a newer heart.The tense-drawn moment wrought to bereave meOf voice, and I turned in a dumb despairAt her finding I'd ...
Thomas Hardy
To June
Ah, truant, thou art here again, I see!For in a season of such wretched weatherI thought that thou hadst left us altogether,Although I could not choose but fancy theeSkulking about the hill-tops, whence the gleeOf thy blue laughter peeped at times, or ratherThy bashful awkwardness, as doubtful whetherThou shouldst be seen in such a companyOf ugly runaways, unshapely heapsOf ruffian vapour, broken from restraintOf their slim prison in the ocean deeps.But yet I may not chide: fall to thy books--Fall to immediately without complaint--There they are lying, hills and vales and brooks.
George MacDonald