Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 21 of 33
Previous
Next
Veils
Veils, everywhere float veils; veils long and black,Framing white faces, oft-times young and fair,But, like a rose touched by untimely frost,Showing the blighting marks of sorrow's track.Veils, veils, veils everywhere. They tell the costOf man-made war. They show the awful tollPaid by the hearts of women for the crimes,The age-old crimes by selfishness ill-named'Justice' and 'Honour' and 'The call of Fate' -High words men use to hide their low estate.About the joy and beauty of this worldA long black veil is furled.Even the face of Heaven itself seems lostBehind a veil. It takes a fervent soulIn these tense timesTo visualise a God so long defamedBy insolent lips, that send out prayers, and prateOf God's collaboration in dar...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Solitude
This is the maiden Solitude, too fairFor mortal eyes to gaze on, she who dwellsIn the lone valley where the water wellsClear from the marble, where the mountain airIs resinous with pines, and white peaks bareTheir unpolluted bosoms to the stars,And holy Reverence the passage barsTo meaner souls who seek to enter there;Only the worshipper at Nature's shrineMay find that maiden waiting to be won,With broad calm brow and meek eyes of the dove,May drink the rarer ether all divine,And, earthly toils and earthly troubles done,May win the longed-for sweetness of her love.
James Lister Cuthbertson
Immortal Love, Forever Full
Immortal love, forever full,Forever flowing free,Forever shared, forever whole,A never ebbing sea!Our outward lips confess the nameAll other names above;Love only knoweth whence it came,And comprehendeth love.Blow, winds of God, awake and blowThe mists of earth away:Shine out, O Light divine, and showHow wide and far we stray.We may not climb the heavenly steepsTo bring the Lord Christ down;In vain we search the lowest deeps,For Him no depths can drown.But warm, sweet, tender, even yet,A present help is He;And faith still has its Olivet,And love its Galilee.The healing of His seamless dressIs by our beds of pain;We touch Him in lifes throng and press,And we are whole again...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Big Bear Creek
The waters of the Big Bear creekGlide slowly on their way;The western lakes they surely seek,Which they will reach some day;But sluggishly they seek their end--They scarcely seem to move;Yet through the fields and round each bendTheir progress daily prove.By debris borne upon their breast,And strewn along each shore,They slowly move, but never rest,Yet turbid evermore.But when they reach the Johnson bendAnd the Sni Chartna meet,The turbid and the sky-blue blend--The union is complete.And soon is lost all trace of mud;Of azure tint the whole;With heaven's own hue the rolling floodHas gained the long-sought goal.So is it with the soul renewedWhile on its heaven-bound way,With grace...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Culture
Can rules or tutors educateThe semigod whom we await?He must be musical,Tremulous, impressional,Alive to gentle influenceOf landscape and of sky,And tender to the spirit-touchOf man's or maiden's eye:But, to his native centre fast,Shall into Future fuse the Past,And the world's flowing fates in his own mould recast.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Fragments On Nature And Life - The Heavens
Wisp and meteor nightly falling,But the Stars of God remain.
In A Whispering Gallery
That whisper takes the voiceOf a Spirit's compassioningsClose, but invisible,And throws me under a spellAt the kindling vision it brings;And for a moment I rejoice,And believe in transcendent thingsThat would mould from this muddy earthA spot for the splendid birthOf everlasting lives,Whereto no night arrives;And this gaunt gray galleryA tabernacle of worthOn this drab-aired afternoon,When you can barely seeAcross its hazed lacuneIf opposite aught there beOf fleshed humanityWherewith I may commune;Or if the voice so nearBe a soul's voice floating here.
Thomas Hardy
In The Night. (Translations From The Hebrew Poets Of Medaeval Spain.)
Unto the house of prayer my spirit yearns,Unto the sources of her being turns,To where the sacred light of heaven burns,She struggles thitherward by day and night.The splendor of God's glory blinds her eyes,Up without wings she soareth to the skies,With silent aspiration seeks to rise,In dusky evening and in darksome night.To her the wonders of God's works appear,She longs with fervor Him to draw anear,The tidings of His glory reach her ear,From morn to even, and from night to night.The banner of thy grace did o'er me rest,Yet was thy worship banished from my breast.Almighty, thou didst seek me out and testTo try and to instruct me in the night.I dare not idly on my pillow lie,With winged fe...
Emma Lazarus
The Diary Of An Old Soul. - August.
1. SO shall abundant entrance me be given Into the truth, my life's inheritance. Lo! as the sun shoots straight from out his tomb, God-floated, casting round a lordly glance Into the corners of his endless room, So, through the rent which thou, O Christ, hast riven, I enter liberty's divine expanse. 2. It will be so--ah, so it is not now! Who seeks thee for a little lazy peace, Then, like a man all weary of the plough, That leaves it standing in the furrow's crease, Turns from thy presence for a foolish while, Till comes again the rasp of unrest's file, From liberty is distant many a mile. 3.
George MacDonald
To Mystics.
That is the only true secret, which in the presence of all menLies, and surrounds thee for ay, but which is witnessed by none.
Friedrich Schiller
Friendship
O thou most holy Friendship! wheresoeerThy dwelling befor in the courts of manBut seldom thine all-heavenly voice we hear,Sweetning the moments of our narrow span;And seldom thy bright foot-steps do we scanAlong the weary waste of life unblest,For faithless is its frail and wayward plan,And perfidy is mans eternal guest,With dark suspicion linkd and shameless interest!Tis thine, when life has reachd its final goal,Ere the last sigh that frees the mind be givn,To speak sweet solace to the parting soul,And pave the bitter path that leads to heavn:Tis thine, wheneer the heart is rackd and rivnBy the hot shafts of baleful calumny,When the dark spirit to despair is drivn,To teach its lonely grief to lean on thee,And ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Beyond The Shadows.
Thou hast entered the land without shadows, Thou who, 'neath the shadow, so longHast sat with thy white hands close-folded, And lips that could utter no song;Through a rift in the cloud, for an instant, Thine eyes caught a glimpse of that shore,And Earth with its gloom was forgotten, And Heaven is thine own evermore!We see not the glorious vision, Nor the welcoming melodies hear,That, from bowers of beauty Elysian, Float tenderly sweet to thine ear;Round us, lie Earth's desolate midnight, Her winter-plains bare and untrod, -Round thee, is the glad, morning sunlight That beams from the City of God!Our eyes have grown heavy with weeping, - Thine, "the King in his beauty" beholdAnd thou leanest th...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
To Sincerity
O sweet sincerity! -Where modern methods beWhat scope for thine and thee?Life may be sad past saying,Its greens for ever graying,Its faiths to dust decaying;And youth may have foreknown it,And riper seasons shown it,But custom cries: "Disown it:"Say ye rejoice, though grieving,Believe, while unbelieving,Behold, without perceiving!"- Yet, would men look at true things,And unilluded view things,And count to bear undue things,The real might mend the seeming,Facts better their foredeeming,And Life its disesteeming.February 1899.
Reverence Waking Hope
A power is on me, and my soul must speakTo thee, thou grey, grey man, whom I beholdWith those white-headed children. I am boldTo commune with thy setting, and to wreakMy doubts on thy grey hair; for I would seekThee in that other world, but I am toldThou goest elsewhere and wilt never holdThy head so high as now. Oh I were weak,Weak even to despair, could I foregoThe tender vision which will give somehowThee standing brightly one day even as now!Thou art a very grey old man, and soI may not pass thee darkly, but bestowA look of reverence on thy wrinkled brow.
Epiphany
There is nothing that eases my heart so muchAs the wind that blows from the purple hills;'Tis a hand of balsam whose healing touchUnburdens my bosom of ills.There is nothing that causes my soul to rejoiceLike the sunset flaming without a flaw:'Tis a burning bush whence God's own voiceAddresses my spirit with awe.There is nothing that hallows my mind, meseems,Like the night with its moon and its stars above;'Tis a mystical lily whose golden gleamsFulfill my being with love.There is nothing, no, nothing, we see and feel,That speaks to our souls some beautiful thought,That was not created to help us, and healOur lives that are overwrought.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto II
All ye, who in small bark have following sail'd,Eager to listen, on the advent'rous trackOf my proud keel, that singing cuts its way,Backward return with speed, and your own shoresRevisit, nor put out to open sea,Where losing me, perchance ye may remainBewilder'd in deep maze. The way I passNe'er yet was run: Minerva breathes the gale,Apollo guides me, and another NineTo my rapt sight the arctic beams reveal.Ye other few, who have outstretch'd the neck.Timely for food of angels, on which hereThey live, yet never know satiety,Through the deep brine ye fearless may put outYour vessel, marking, well the furrow broadBefore you in the wave, that on both sidesEqual returns. Those, glorious, who pass'd o'erTo Colchos, wonder'd not as ye will do,...
Dante Alighieri
A Glimpse Of Heaven
As the caged eagle neared the mountain range,O'er which he oft had soared on pinions strong,He clapped his wings, moved by some impulse strange,And then fell dead his prison floor along.So Moses stood on Pisgah's heights alone,With sight undimmed, and unabated strength;He gazed with rapture on the vision shown,Of the fair land in all its breadth and length;He saw the vale of Eschol clad with vine,Mount Libbanus adorned with lordly trees,Gilead and Achor, with their lowing kine,And verdant Sharon swept by the sea breeze;He saw the spot where Jacob's ladder stood,The oaks at Mamre where their father prayed,Saw Bashan with its pastures and its wood,And the rude cave where Abram Sarah laid.Saw the whole land--its hills and v...
Psyche
The butterfly the ancient Grecians madeThe soul's fair emblem, and its only nameBut of the soul, escaped the slavish tradeOf mortal life! For in this earthly frameOurs is the reptile's lot, much toil, much blame,Manifold motions making little speed,And to deform and kill the things whereon we feed.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge