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To G. P. L.
We see the sky, - we love it day by day;We feel the wind of Spring, from blossoms winging;We meet with souls tender as tints in May:For these large ecstasies what are we bringing?There is no price, best friend, for greatest meed.Laid on the altar of our true affection,Wild flowers of love for me must intercede:And lo! I win your unexcelled protection.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part III. - XXXIII - Regrets
Would that our scrupulous Sires had dared to leaveLess scanty measure of those graceful ritesAnd usages, whose due return invitesA stir of mind too natural to deceive;Giving to Memory help when she would weaveA crown for Hope! I dread the boasted lightsThat all too often are but fiery blights,Killing the bud o'er which in vain we grieve.Go, seek, when Christmas snows discomfort bring,The counter Spirit found in some gay churchGreen with fresh holly, every pew a perchIn which the linnet or the thrush might sing,Merry and loud and safe from prying search,Strains offered only to the genial Spring.
William Wordsworth
A Tale, Founded On A Fact, Which Happened In January 1779.
Where Humber pours his rich commercial streamThere dwelt a wretch, who breathed but to blaspheme;In subterraneous caves his life he led,Black as the mine in which he wrought for bread.When on a day, emerging from the deep,A Sabbath-day (such Sabbaths thousands keep!),The wages of his weekly toil he boreTo buy a cockwhose blood might win him more;As if the noblest of the featherd kindWere but for battle and for death designd;As if the consecrated hours were meantFor sport, to minds on cruelty intent;It chanced (such chances Providence obey)He met a fellow-labourer on the way,Whose heart the same desires had once inflamed;But now the savage temper was reclaimd,Persuasion on his lips had taken place;For all plead well who plead the cause...
William Cowper
Pray And Prosper
First offer incense; then, thy field and meadsShall smile and smell the better by thy beads.The spangling dew dredged o'er the grass shall beTurn'd all to mell and manna there for thee.Butter of amber, cream, and wine, and oil,Shall run as rivers all throughout thy soil.Would'st thou to sincere silver turn thy mould?Pray once, twice pray; and turn thy ground to gold.
Robert Herrick
New Year.
If I resolve, with the new year, A better child to be,'Twill do no good at all, I fear, But rather harm to me,Unless I try, with every day, No angry word to speak;Unless, each morn, to God I pray To keep me mild and meek.Then let me try with all my might, And may God help me too,Always to choose the way that's right, Whatever act I do.
H. P. Nichols
Honeymoon Time At An Inn
At the shiver of morning, a little before the false dawn,The moon was at the window-square,Deedily brooding in deformed decay -The curve hewn off her cheek as by an adze;At the shiver of morning a little before the false dawnSo the moon looked in there.Her speechless eyeing reached across the chamber,Where lay two souls opprest,One a white lady sighing, "Why am I sad!"To him who sighed back, "Sad, my Love, am I!"And speechlessly the old moon conned the chamber,And these two reft of rest.While their large-pupilled vision swept the scene there,Nought seeming imminent,Something fell sheer, and crashed, and from the floorLay glittering at the pair with a shattered gaze,While their large-pupilled vision swept the scene there,And th...
Thomas Hardy
Grace
How much, preventing God, how much I oweTo the defences thou hast round me set;Example, custom, fear, occasion slow,--These scorned bondmen were my parapet.I dare not peep over this parapetTo gauge with glance the roaring gulf below,The depths of sin to which I had descended,Had not these me against myself defended.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Future Poetry
No new delights to our desire The singers of the past can yield. I lift mine eyes to hill and field,And see in them your yet dumb lyre, Poets unborn and unrevealed.Singers to come, what thoughts will start To song? what words of yours be sent Through man's soul, and with earth be blent?These worlds of nature and the heart Await you like an instrument.Who knows what musical flocks of words Upon these pine-tree tops will light, And crown these towers in circling flightAnd cross these seas like summer birds, And give a voice to the day and night?Something of you already is ours; Some mystic part of you belongs To us whose dreams your future throngs,Who look on hills, and trees, and flo...
Alice Meynell
For Wilma (Aged Five Years)
Like winds that with the setting of the sun Draw to a quiet murmuring and cease,So is her little struggle fought and done; And the brief fever and the painIn a last sigh fade out and so releaseThe lately-breathing dust they may not hurt again.Now all that Wilma was is made as naught: Stilled is the laughter that was erst our pleasure;The pretty air, the childish grace untaught, The innocent wiles, And all the sunny smiles,The cheek that flushed to greet some tiny treasure; The mouth demure, the tilted chin held high, The gleeful flashes of her glancing eye; Her shy bold look of wildness unconfined, And the gay impulse of her baby mind That none could tame,That sent her spinning round, A spirit ...
R. C. Lehmann
Memorials Of A Tour On The Continent, 1820 - XXIV. - The Italian Itinerant And The Swiss Goatherd. - Part I
INow that the farewell tear is dried,Heaven prosper thee, be hope thy guideHope be thy guide, adventurous Boy;The wages of thy travel, joy!Whether for London bound, to trillThy mountain notes with simple skill;Or on thy head to poise a showOf Images in seemly row;The graceful form of milk-white Steed,Or Bird that soared with Ganymede;Or through our hamlets thou wilt bearThe sightless Milton, with his hairAround his placid temples curled;And Shakespeare at his side, a freight,If clay could think and mind were weight,For him who bore the world!Hope be thy guide, adventurous Boy;The wages of thy travel, joy!IIBut thou, perhaps, (alert as freeThough serving sage philosophy)Wilt ramble over hill ...
Hymn At Cock-Crow (Hymnus Ad Galli Cantum)
Hymn At Cock-Crow (Hymnus Ad Galli Cantum) Ales diei nuntius lucem propinquam praecinit; nos excitator mentium iam Christus ad vitam vocat. Auferte, clamat, lectulos aegros, soporos, desides: castique recti ac sobrii vigilate, iam sum proximus. Post solis ortum fulgidi serum est cubile spernere, ni parte noctis addita tempus labori adieceris. Vox ista, qua strepunt aves stantes sub ipso culmine paulo ante quam lux emicet, nostri figura est iudicis. Tectos tenebris horridis stratisque opertos segnibus suadet quietem linquere iam iamque venturo die. Ut, cum coruscis flatibus aurora...
Aurelius Clemens Prudentius
A Day Of Sunshine
O gift of God! O perfect day:Whereon shall no man work, but play;Whereon it is enough for me,Not to be doing, but to be!Through every fibre of my brain,Through every nerve, through every vein,I feel the electric thrill, the touchOf life, that seems almost too much.I hear the wind among the treesPlaying celestial symphonies;I see the branches downward bent,Like keys of some great instrument.And over me unrolls on highThe splendid scenery of the sky,Where though a sapphire sea the sunSails like a golden galleon,Towards yonder cloud-land in the West,Towards yonder Islands of the Blest,Whose steep sierra far upliftsIts craggy summits white with drifts.Blow, winds! and waft through all the rooms<...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Wayfarers
Is it the hour? We leave this resting-placeMade fair by one another for a while.Now, for a god-speed, one last mad embrace;The long road then, unlit by your faint smile.Ah! the long road! and you so far away!Oh, I'll remember! but . . . each crawling dayWill pale a little your scarlet lips, each mileDull the dear pain of your remembered face.. . . Do you think there's a far border town, somewhere,The desert's edge, last of the lands we know,Some gaunt eventual limit of our light,In which I'll find you waiting; and we'll goTogether, hand in hand again, out there,Into the waste we know not, into the night?
Rupert Brooke
In Church. 1916
Where are all the young men?There are only grey-heads here.What has become of the young men? * * * * *This is the young men's year!They are gone, one and all, at duty's call,To the camp, to the trench, to the sea.They have left their homes, they have left their all,And now, in ways heroical,-- They are making history.From bank and shop, from bench and mill,From the schools, from the tail of the plough,They hurried away at the call of the fray,They could not linger a day, and now,-- They are making history,And we miss them sorely, as we lookAt the seats where they used to be,And try to picture them as they are,--Then hastily drop the ...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
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)
None Truly Happy Here.
Happy's that man to whom God givesA stock of goods, whereby he livesNear to the wishes of his heart:No man is blest through every part.
Rome Unvisited
I.The corn has turned from grey to red,Since first my spirit wandered forthFrom the drear cities of the north,And to Italia's mountains fled.And here I set my face towards home,For all my pilgrimage is done,Although, methinks, yon blood-red sunMarshals the way to Holy Rome.O Blessed Lady, who dost holdUpon the seven hills thy reign!O Mother without blot or stain,Crowned with bright crowns of triple gold!O Roma, Roma, at thy feetI lay this barren gift of song!For, ah! the way is steep and longThat leads unto thy sacred street.II.And yet what joy it were for meTo turn my feet unto the south,And journeying towards the Tiber mouthTo kneel again at Fiesole!
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
Immutability.
The sun must rise, the sun must set, Nor ever change in plan may be,Though dawn to stricken wretch may bring The hempen rope and gallows tree,And eventide to happy bride Love's crown of love in Arcady.
Charles Hamilton Musgrove