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Sonnet CLXXVIII.
Grazie ch' a pochi 'l ciel largo destina.THE ENCHANTMENTS THAT ENTHRALL HIM Graces, that liberal Heaven on few bestows;Rare excellence, scarce known to human kind;With youth's bright locks age's ripe judgment join'd;Celestial charms, which a meek mortal shows;An elegance unmatch'd; and lips, whence flowsMusic that can the sense in fetters bind;A goddess step; a lovely ardent mind,That breaks the stubborn, and the haughty bows;Eyes, whose refulgence petrifies the heart,To glooms, to shades that can a light impart,Lift high the lover's soul, or plunge it low;Speech link'd by tenderness and dignity;With many a sweetly-interrupted sigh;Such are the witcheries that transform me so.NOTT. Graces w...
Francesco Petrarca
Love Is Strength
Love alone is great in might,Makes the heavy burden light,Smooths rough ways to weary feet,Makes the bitter morsel sweet:Love alone is strength!Might that is not born of LoveIs not Might born from above,Has its birthplace down belowWhere they neither reap nor sow:Love alone is strength!Love is stronger than all force,Is its own eternal source;Might is always in decay,Love grows fresher every day:Love alone is strength!Little ones, no ill can chance;Fear ye not, but sing and dance;Though the high-heaved heaven should fallGod is plenty for us all:God is Love and Strength!
George MacDonald
To Henry the Fifth
My youth was passing, Sire, whilst you amongThe cradle-wrappings slept; my morning-songSung oer your pillow. Winds of heaven have thrownUs both, since then, on heights apart and lone.Heights! For misfortune drear, our destined land,So thunder-scarred, a-nigh to heaven must stand!The north and south are nearer than our waysAre near to one another; and Fate laysThe purple round you, and has not withheldOur Frances sceptre-dazzlements of eld.I, crowned with silver hairs, say, praising you,Well done! That man is to his manhood trueWho bravely, at his own behest, will doHigh deeds of self -undoing; will foregoAll, all, save immemorial Honour; thoughShe seem to earthlier eyes a phantom, moreWill follow her (as erst in ElsinoreOne faithful h...
Mary Hannay Foott
Retrospection
I look down the lengthening distance Far back to youth's valley of hope.How strange seemed the ways of existence, How infinite life and its scope!What dreams, what ambitions came thronging To people a world of my own!How the heart in my bosom was longing, For pleasures and places unknown.But the hill-tops of pleasure and beauty Were covered with mist at the dawn;And only the rugged road Duty Shone clear, as my feet wandered on.I loved not the path and its leading, I hated the rocks and the dust;But a Voice from the Silence was pleading, It spoke but one syllable - "Trust."I saw, as the morning grew older, The fair flowered hills of delight;And the feet of my comrades grew bolder,
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Rose In The Garden.
Thirty years have come and gone,Melting away like Southern Snows,Since, in the light of a summer's night,I went to the garden to seek my Rose.Mine! Do you hear it, silver moon,Flooding my heart with your mellow shine?Mine! Be witness, ye distant stars,Looking on me with eyes divine!Tell me, tell me, wandering winds,Whisper it, if you may not speak--Did you ever, in all your round,Fan a lovelier brow or cheek?Long I nursed in my heart the love,Love which felt, but dared not tell,Till, I scarcely know how or when--It found wild words,- and all was well!I can hear her sweet voice even now--It makes my pulses leap and thrill--"I owe you more than I well can pay;You may take me, Robert, if you will!"
Horatio Alger, Jr.
The Mother
There will be a singing in your heart, There will be a rapture in your eyes; You will be a woman set apart, You will be so wonderful and wise. You will sleep, and when from dreams you start, As of one that wakes in Paradise, There will be a singing in your heart, There will be a rapture in your eyes. There will be a moaning in your heart, There will be an anguish in your eyes; You will see your dearest ones depart, You will hear their quivering good-byes. Yours will be the heart-ache and the smart, Tears that scald and lonely sacrifice; There will be a moaning in your heart, There will be an anguish in your eyes. There will come a glory in your eyes, There will come a peac...
Robert William Service
Terminus
It is time to be old,To take in sail:--The god of bounds,Who sets to seas a shore,Came to me in his fatal rounds,And said: 'No more!No farther shootThy broad ambitious branches, and thy root.Fancy departs: no more invent;Contract thy firmamentTo compass of a tent.There's not enough for this and that,Make thy option which of two;Economize the failing river,Not the less revere the Giver,Leave the many and hold the few.Timely wise accept the terms,Soften the fall with wary foot;A little whileStill plan and smile,And,--fault of novel germs,--Mature the unfallen fruit.Curse, if thou wilt, thy sires,Bad husbands of their fires,Who, when they gave thee breath,Failed to bequeathThe needful sin...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Our Own Again.
I.Let the coward shrink aside,We'll have our own again;Let the brawling slave deride--Here's for our own again!Let the tyrant bribe and lie,March, threaten, fortify,Loose his lawyer and his spy--Yet we'll have our own again!Let him soothe in silken tone,Scold from a foreign throne:Let him come with bugles blown--We shall have our own again!Let us to our purpose bide,We'll have our own again!Let the game be fairly tried,We'll have our own again!II.Send the cry throughout the land,"Who's for our own again?"Summon all men to our band,--Why not our own again?Rich and poor, and old and young,Sharp sword, and fiery tongue,Soul and sinew firmly strung--All to get our own aga...
Thomas Osborne Davis
September Month. (Prose)
Blackberries are ripe in September, an' we may consider th' year's ripe, for when this month gets turned, things 'll begin o' gooin' th' back way. Its vany wonderful when we look reight at it. This world's a wonderful spot, an' ther's a deal o' wonderful things in it. Ther's some things at it's varry wonderful to see, an' ther's some things' at it's wonderful net to see. Aw thowt it wor varry wonderful, a week or two sin', when aw pass'd Stanninley Station, 'at ther worn't a chap wi' a dog under his arm; it's th' furst time aw iver pass'd an' didn't see one. But aw niver think it's wonderful for ther to be a fooil in a company; an' aw dooant think its wonderful when aw find 'at th' biggest fooil has allus th' mooast to say.Nah, its a varry nice time o'th' year is this for fowk to have a bit of a pic-nic; - aw dooant know owt '...
John Hartley
Buried Treasure
When the musicians hide away their faces,And all the petals of the rose are shed,And snow is drifting through the happy places,And the last cricket's heart is cold and dead;O Joy, where shall we find thee? O Love, where shall we seek?For summer is behind thee, And cold is winter's cheek.Where shall I find me violets in December?O tell me where the wood-thrush sings to-day!Ah! heart, our summer-love dost thou rememberWhere it lies hidden safe and warm away?When woods once more are ringing With sweet birds on the bough,And brooks once more are singing, Will it be there - thinkst thou?When Autumn came through bannered woodlands sighing,We found a place of moonlight and of tears,And there, with yellow leaves for ...
Richard Le Gallienne
Sonnet XXXV. Spring.
In April's gilded morn when south winds blow, And gently shake the hawthorn's silver crown, Wafting its scent the forest-glade adown, The dewy shelter of the bounding Doe,Then, under trees, soft tufts of primrose show Their palely-yellowing flowers; - to the moist Sun Blue harebells peep, while cowslips stand unblown, Plighted to riper May; - and lavish flowThe Lark's loud carols in the wilds of air. O! not to Nature's glad Enthusiast cling Avarice, and pride. - Thro' her now blooming sphereCharm'd as he roves, his thoughts enraptur'd spring To HIM, who gives frail Man's appointed time These cheering hours of promise, and of prime.April 29th, 1782.
Anna Seward
Inevitable Change
Young as the Spring seemed life when sheCame from her silent East to me;Unquiet as Autumn was my breastWhen she declined into her West.Such tender, such untroubling thingsShe taught me, daughter of all Springs;Such dusty deathly lore I learnedWhen her last embers redly burned.How should it hap (Love, canst thou say?)Such end should be to so pure day?Such shining chastity give placeTo this annulling grave's disgrace?Such hopes be quenched in this despair,Grace chilled to granite everywhere?How should--in vain I cry--how shouldThat be, alas, which only could!
John Frederick Freeman
To Mr. and Mrs. A. M. T.
Just when the gentle hand of springCame fringing the trees with bud and leaf,And when the blades the warm suns bringWere given glad promise of golden sheaf;Just when the birds began to singJoy hymns after their winter's grief,I wandered weary to a place;Tired of toil, I sought for rest,Where Nature wore her mildest grace --I went where I was more than guest.Strange, tall trees rose as if they fainWould wear as crowns the clouds of skies;The sad winds swept with low refrainThrough branches breathing softest sighs;And o'er the field and down the laneSweet flowers, the dreams of Paradise,Bloomed up into this world of pain,Where all that's fairest soonest dies;And 'neath the trees a little streamWent winding slowly round and round...
Abram Joseph Ryan
What The Voice Said
Maddened by Earth's wrong and evil,"Lord!" I cried in sudden ire,"From Thy right hand, clothed with thunder,Shake the bolted fire!"Love is lost, and Faith is dying;With the brute the man is sold;And the dropping blood of laborHardens into gold."Here the dying wail of Famine,There the battle's groan of pain;And, in silence, smooth-faced MammonReaping men like grain."'Where is God, that we should fear Him?'Thus the earth-born Titans say'God! if Thou art living, hear us!'Thus the weak ones pray.""Thou, the patient Heaven upbraiding,"Spake a solemn Voice within;"Weary of our Lord's forbearance,Art thou free from sin?"Fearless brow to Him uplifting,Canst thou for His thunders call,Kno...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Triumphs Of Farce.
Our earth, as it rolls thro' the regions of space, Wears always two faces, the dark and the sunny;And poor human life runs the same sort of race, Being sad on one side--on the other side, funny.Thus oft we, at eve, to the Haymarket hie, To weep o'er the woes of Macready;--but scarceHath the tear-drop of Tragedy past from the eye, When lo! we're all laughing in fits at the Farce.And still let us laugh--preach the world as it may-- Where the cream of the joke is, the swarm will soon follow;Heroics are very grand things in their way, But the laugh at the long run will carry it hollow.For instance, what sermon on human affairs Could equal the scene that took place t'other day'Twixt Romeo and Louis Philippe, on the stairs-...
Thomas Moore
Ode
- Carmina possumusDonare, et pretium dicere muneri.Non incisa notis marmora publicis,Per quae spiritus et vita redit bonisPost mortem ducibus- clarius indicantLaudes, quam - Pierides; neque,Si chartae sileant quod bene feceris,Mercedem tuleris. HOR. Car. 8, Lib. 4.IWhen the soft hand of sleep had closed the latchOn the tired household of corporeal sense,And Fancy, keeping unreluctant watch,Was free her choicest favours to dispense;I saw, in wondrous perspective displayed,A landscape more august than happiest skillOf pencil ever clothed with light and shade;An intermingled pomp of vale and hill,City, and naval stream, suburban grove,And stately forest where the wild deer rove;Nor wanted lurking hamlet, dusky t...
William Wordsworth
A Sign-Seeker
I mark the months in liveries dank and dry,The noontides many-shaped and hued;I see the nightfall shades subtrude,And hear the monotonous hours clang negligently by.I view the evening bonfires of the sunOn hills where morning rains have hissed;The eyeless countenance of the mistPallidly rising when the summer droughts are done.I have seen the lightning-blade, the leaping star,The cauldrons of the sea in storm,Have felt the earthquake's lifting arm,And trodden where abysmal fires and snow-cones are.I learn to prophesy the hid eclipse,The coming of eccentric orbs;To mete the dust the sky absorbs,To weigh the sun, and fix the hour each planet dips.I witness fellow earth-men surge and strive;Assemblies meet, and throb,...
Thomas Hardy
Epilogue
If Luther's day expand to Darwin's year,Shall that exclude the hope--foreclose the fear?Unmoved by all the claims our times avow,The ancient Sphinx still keeps the porch of shade;And comes Despair, whom not her calm may cow,And coldly on that adamantine browScrawls undeterred his bitter pasquinade.But Faith (who from the scrawl indignant turns)With blood warm oozing from her wounded trust,Inscribes even on her shards of broken urnsThe sign o' the cross--the spirit above the dust!Yea, ape and angel, strife and old debate--The harps of heaven and dreary gongs of hell;Science the feud can only aggravate--No umpire she betwixt the chimes and knell:The running battle of the star and clodShall run forever--if there be...
Herman Melville