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Before Parting
A month or twain to live on honeycombIs pleasant; but one tires of scented time,Cold sweet recurrence of accepted rhyme,And that strong purple under juice and foamWhere the wines heart has burst;Nor feel the latter kisses like the first.Once yet, this poor one time; I will not prayEven to change the bitterness of it,The bitter taste ensuing on the sweet,To make your tears fall where your soft hair layAll blurred and heavy in some perfumed wiseOver my face and eyes.And yet who knows what end the scythèd wheatMakes of its foolish poppies mouths of red?These were not sown, these are not harvested,They grow a month and are cast under feetAnd none has care thereof,As none has care of a divided love.I know each shadow ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Lotos-Eaters
Courage! he said, and pointed toward the land,This mounting wave will roll us shoreward soon.In the afternoon they came unto a landIn which it seemed always afternoon.All round the coast the languid air did swoon,Breathing like one that hath a weary dream.Full-faced above the valley stood the moon;And like a downward smoke, the slender streamAlong the cliff to fall and pause and fall did seem.A land of streams! some, like a downward smoke,Slow-dropping veils of thinnest lawn, did go;And some thro wavering lights and shadows broke,Rolling a slumbrous sheet of foam below.They saw the gleaming river seaward flowFrom the inner land: far off, three mountain-tops,Three silent pinnacles of aged snow,Stood sunset-flushd: and, dewd with sho...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Lonely Days
Lonely her fate was,Environed from sightIn the house where the gate wasPast finding at night.None there to share it,No one to tell:Long she'd to bear it,And bore it well.Elsewhere just so sheSpent many a day;Wishing to go sheContinued to stay.And people withoutBasked warm in the air,But none sought her out,Or knew she was there.Even birthdays were passed so,Sunny and shady:Years did it last soFor this sad lady.Never declaring it,No one to tell,Still she kept bearing it -Bore it well.The days grew chillier,And then she wentTo a city, familiarIn years forespent,When she walked gailyFar to and fro,But now, moving frailly,Could nowhere go.The...
Thomas Hardy
Upon A Child. An Epitaph.
But born, and like a short delight,I glided by my parents' sight.That done, the harder fates deniedMy longer stay, and so I died.If, pitying my sad parents' tears,You'll spill a tear or two with theirs,And with some flowers my grave bestrew,Love and they'll thank you for't. Adieu.
Robert Herrick
Discord
Unreconciled by life's fleet years, that fledWith changeful clang of pinions wide and wild,Though two great spirits had lived, and hence had spedUnreconciled;Though time and change, harsh time's imperious child,That wed strange hands together, might not wedHigh hearts by hope's misprision once beguiled;Faith, by the light from either's memory shed,Sees, radiant as their ends were undefiled,One goal for each, not twain among the deadUnreconciled.
Sonnets on Separation IV.
Lovers that drug themselves for ecstasy Seek love too closely in an overdose, When the sweet spasm turns to agony And the quick limbs are still and the eyes close. I too, a fool, desired, to make love strong, Absence and parting but the measure's brimmed, The dose is over-poured, the time's too long Already, though two nights have hardly dimmed My lonely eyes with the elusive sleep. O I'll remember, I'll not wish again To go with ardent limbs into this deep Sea of dejection, this dull mere of pain: We'll love our safer loves upon the shore And quest for inexperienced joys no more.
Edward Shanks
Hell Fire.
The fire of hell this strange condition hath,To burn, not shine, as learned Basil saith.
When I Remember
When I remember that the day will come For this our love to quit his land of birth, And bid farewell to all the ways of earthWith lips that must for evermore be dumb,Then creep I silent from the stirring hum, And shut away the music and the mirth, And reckon up what may be left of worthWhen hearts are cold and love's own body numb.Something there must be that I know not here,Or know too dimly through the symbol dear; Some touch, some beauty, only guessed by this---If He that made us loves, it shall replace,Beloved, even the vision of thy face And deep communion of thine inmost kiss.
Henry John Newbolt
In Memoriam. - Colonel Samuel Colt,
Died at Hartford, on Friday morning, January 10th, 1862.And hath he fallen,--whom late we saw In manly vigor bold?That stately form,--that noble face, Shall we no more behold?--Not now of the renown we speak That gathers round his name,For other climes beside our own Bear witness to his fame;Nor of the high inventive power That stretched from zone to zone,And 'neath the pathless ocean wrought,-- For these to all are known;--Nor of the love his liberal soul His native City bore,For she hath monuments of this Till memory is no more;Nor of the self-reliant force By which his way he told,Nor of the Midas-touch that turn'd All enterprise to gold,And made the indignan...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
Life
A baby played with the surplice sleeveOf a gentle priest; while in accents low,The sponsors murmured the grand "I believe,"And the priest bade the mystic waters to flowIn the name of the Father, and the Son,And Holy Spirit -- Three in One.Spotless as a lily's leaf,Whiter than the Christmas snow;Not a sign of sin or grief,And the babe laughed, sweet and low.A smile flitted over the baby's face:Or was it the gleam of its angel's wingJust passing then, and leaving a traceOf its presence as it soared to sing?A hymn when words and waters winTo grace and life a child of sin.Not an outward sign or token,That a child was saved from woe;But the bonds of sin were broken,And the babe laughed, sweet and low.A...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Elegy
I vaguely wondered what you were about, But never wrote when you had gone away; Assumed you better, quenched the uneasy doubt You might need faces, or have things to say. Did I think of you last evening? Dead you lay. O bitter words of conscience I hold the simple message, And fierce with grief the awakened heart cries out: "It shall not be to-day; It is still yesterday; there is time yet!" Sorrow would strive backward to wrench the sun, But the sun moves. Our onward course is set, The wake streams out, the engine pulses run Droning, a lonelier voyage is begun. It is all too late for turning, You are past all mortal signal, There will be time for nothing but reg...
John Collings Squire, Sir
Fragment: 'When A Lover Clasps His Fairest'.
1.When a lover clasps his fairest,Then be our dread sport the rarest.Their caresses were like the chaffIn the tempest, and be our laughHis despair - her epitaph!2.When a mother clasps her child,Watch till dusty Death has piledHis cold ashes on the clay;She has loved it many a day -She remains, - it fades away.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Let them bury your big eyes In the secret earth securely, Your thin fingers, and your fair, Soft, indefinite-colored hair,-- All of these in some way, surely, From the secret earth shall rise; Not for these I sit and stare, Broken and bereft completely; Your young flesh that sat so neatly On your little bones will sweetly Blossom in the air. But your voice,--never the rushing Of a river underground, Not the rising of the wind In the trees before the rain, Not the woodcock's watery call, Not the note the white-throat utters, Not the feet of children pushing Yellow leaves along the gutters ...
Edna St. Vincent Millay
One Hundred And Three
With the frame of a man, and the face of a boy, and a manner strangely wild,And the great, wide, wondering, innocent eyes of a silent-suffering child;With his hideous dress and his heavy boots, he drags to Eternity,And the Warder says, in a softened tone: Keep step, One Hundred and Three.Tis a ghastly travesty of drill, or a ghastly farce of work,But One Hundred and Three, he catches step with a start, a shuffle and jerk.Tis slow starvation in separate cells, and a widows son is he,And the widow, she drank before he was born, (Keep step, One Hundred and Three!)They shut a man in the four-by-eight, with a six-inch slit for air,Twenty-three hours of the twenty-four, to brood on his virtues there.And the dead stone walls and the iron door close in as an iron band
Henry Lawson
The New Ghost
'And he, casting away his garment, rose and came to Jesus.'And he cast it down, down, on the green grass,Over the young crocuses, where the dew was -He cast the garment of his flesh that was full of death,And like a sword his spirit showed out of the cold sheath.He went a pace or two, he went to meet his Lord,And, as I said, his spirit looked like a clean sword,And seeing him the naked trees began shivering,And all the birds cried out aloud as it were late spring.And the Lord came on, He came down, and sawThat a soul was waiting there for Him, one without flaw,And they embraced in the churchyard where the robins play,And the daffodils hang down their heads, as they burn away.The Lord held his head fast, and you could seeThat h...
Fredegond Shove
Life Is Bitter
Life is bitter. All the faces of the years,Young and old, are grey with travail and with tears.Must we only wake to toil, to tire, to weep?In the sun, among the leaves, upon the flowers,Slumber stills to dreamy death the heavy hours . . .Let me sleep.Riches won but mock the old, unable years;Fame's a pearl that hides beneath a sea of tears;Love must wither, or must live alone and weep.In the sunshine, through the leaves, across the flowers,While we slumber, death approaches though the hours! . . .Let me sleep.1872
William Ernest Henley
"Upon The Gallows Hung A Wretch,"
Upon the gallows hung a wretch,Too sullied for the hellTo which the law entitled him.As nature's curtain fellThe one who bore him tottered in,For this was woman's son.''T was all I had,' she stricken gasped;Oh, what a livid boon!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Grant's Dirge
IAh, who shall sound the hero's funeral march?And what shall be the music of his dirge?No single voice may chant the Nation's grief,No formal strain can give its woe relief.The pent-up anguish of the loyal wife,The sobs of those who, nearest in this life,Still hold him closely in the life beyond; -These first, with threnody of memories fond.But look! Forth press a myriad mourners thronging,With hearts that throb in sorrow's exaltation,Moved by a strange, impassioned, hopeless longingTo serve him with their love's last ministration.Make way! Make way, from wave-bound verge to vergeOf all our land, that this great multitudeWith lamentation proud albeit subdued,Deep murmuring like the ocean's mighty surge,May pass beneath the heavens' ...
George Parsons Lathrop