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Congenial Horror
From this bizarre and livid skyTormented by your destiny,Into your vacant spirit flyWhat tho~ghts? respond, you libertine.Voracious in my appetiteFor the uncertain and unknown,I do not whine for paradiseAs Ovid did, expelled from Rome.Skies tom apart like wind-swept sands,You are the mirrors of my pride;Your mourning clouds, so black and wide,Are hearses that my dreams command,And you reflect in flashing lightThe Hell in which my heart delights.
Charles Baudelaire
Memorials Of A Tour In Scotland 1814 I. Suggested By A Beautiful Ruin Upon One Of The Islands Of Loch Lomond
ITo barren heath, bleak moor, and quaking fen,Or depth of labyrinthine glen;Or into trackless forest setWith trees, whose lofty umbrage met;World-wearied Men withdrew of yore;(Penance their trust, and prayer their storeAnd in the wilderness were boundTo such apartments as they found,Or with a new ambition raised;That God might suitably be praised.IIHigh lodged the 'Warrior', like a bird of prey;Or where broad waters round him lay:But this wild Ruin is no ghostOf his devices buried, lost!Within this little lonely isleThere stood a consecrated Pile;Where tapers burned, and mass was sung,For them whose timid Spirits clungTo mortal succour, though the tombHad fixed, for ever fixed, their doom!
William Wordsworth
The Coming Of The King.
"O thou afflicted, tossed with tempest, and not comforted, behold, I will lay thy atones with fair colours, and lay thy foundations with sapphires. And I will make thy windows of agates, and thy gates of carbuncles, and all thy borders of pleasant stones. And all thy children shall be taught of the Lord; and great shall be the peace of thy children." Isaiah, liv. 11-13.As the sand of the desert is smitten By hoof-beats that strike out a light,A flash by which dumb things are litten, The children of night;So Thou who of old did'st create us, Among the high gods the Most High,Strike us with Thy brightness, and let us Behold Thee, and die.Grown old in blind anguish and travail, Thy world thou mad'st sinless and freeGropes on, with no power to u...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Dorothy.
Dear little Dorothy, she is no more!I have wandered world-wide, from shore to shore,I have seen as great beauties as ever were wed;But none can console me for Dorothy dead.Dear little Dorothy! How strange it seemsThat her face is less real than the faces of dreams;That the love which kept true, and the lips which so spoke,Are more lost than my heart, which died not when it broke!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Bequest.
You left me, sweet, two legacies, --A legacy of loveA Heavenly Father would content,Had He the offer of;You left me boundaries of painCapacious as the sea,Between eternity and time,Your consciousness and me.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Weep With Those Who Weep.
(Mary Maud.)O friends, I cannot comfort, but will share with you your grieving, In the valley of the shadow where you sit in helpless tears;Greater is the parting anguish, than the joy of first receiving The sweet gift that was your treasure through five happy, golden yearsWhen I laid within your arms the dear babe that God had given, There was hidden in the future all the tears that you must weep,Ah! the little ones so tangled in our heart-strings, they are riven In the parting, are but treasures lent not given us to keepThere's silence in the places her voice filled with happy laughter, Stillness waiting for the echo of the patter of her feet,You are gazing on her picture, and your heart is longing after The tender touch of ...
Nora Pembroke
Life's Day.
"Life's day is too brief," he said at dawn, "I would it were ten times longer, For great tasks wait for me further on." At noonday the wish was stronger. His place was in the thick of the strife, And hopes were nearing completeness, While one was crowning the joys of life With love's own wonderful sweetness. "Life's day is too brief for all it contains, The triumphs, the fighting, the proving, The hopes and desires, the joys and the pains - Too brief for the hating and loving." * * * * * To-night he sits in the shadows gray, While heavily sorrow presses. O the long, long day! O the weary day, With its failures and successes!
Jean Blewett
Epitaph
Bethink, poor heart, what bitter kind of jestMad Destiny this tender stripling played;For a warm breast of maiden to his breast,She laid a slab of marble on his head.They say, through patience, chalkBecomes a ruby stone;Ah, yes! but by the true heart's bloodThe chalk is crimson grown.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Shadow.
Get you away! Is not the rose at flow'r? And list that song! The bird is in the sky!Ah, foolish one, I know your final hour, I know the very place where you shall lie.Silence! The music, and the bridal-train! Do you not see the maidens in their white?Along that whiteness, lo, I am the stain, And darken where the Lord of all shall smite!Yet leave me, Shadow, leave the day dear-bought When the swift runner reaches to the goal!That day is mine, and at the end, unsought, I ask the runner's body from his soul.Then hast thou all! The beautiful, the brave! Nothing untouched, dark Visitant, of thee!Oh blinded Reason! Sweeter for the grave. And fair a thousand-fold because of me!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Country At War.
And what of home, how goes it, boys,While we die here in stench and noise?"The hill stands up and hedges windOver the crest and drop behind;Here swallows dip and wild things goOn peaceful errands to and froAcross the sloping meadow floor,And make no guess at blasting war.In woods that fledge the round hill-shoulderLeaves shoot and open, fall and moulder,And shoot again. Meadows yet showAlternate white of drifted snowAnd daisies. Children play at shop,Warm days, on the flat boulder-top,With wildflower coinage, and the waresAre bits of glass and unripe pears.Crows perch upon the backs of sheep,The wheat goes yellow: women reap,Autumn winds ruffle brook and pond,Flutter the hedge and fly beyond.So the first things ...
Robert von Ranke Graves
The Wishing Gate Destroyed
'Tis gone, with old belief and dreamThat round it clung, and tempting schemeReleased from fear and doubt;And the bright landscape too must lie,By this blank wall, from every eye,Relentlessly shut out.Bear witness ye who seldom passedThat opening, but a look ye castUpon the lake below,What spirit-stirring power it gainedFrom faith which here was entertained,Though reason might say no.Blest is that ground, where, o'er the springsOf history, Glory claps her wings,Fame sheds the exulting tear;Yet earth is wide, and many a nookUnheard of is, like this, a bookFor modest meanings dear.It was in sooth a happy thoughtThat grafted, on so fair a spot,So confident a tokenOf coming good; the charm is fled,
The Wind Of Winter
The Winter Wind, the wind of death,Who knocked upon my door,Now through the key-hole entereth,Invisible and hoar;He breathes around his icy breathAnd treads the flickering floor.I heard him, wandering in the night,Tap at my window pane,With ghostly fingers, snowy white,I heard him tug in vain,Until the shuddering candle-lightWith fear did cringe and strain.The fire, awakened by his voice,Leapt up with frantic arms,Like some wild babe that greets with noiseIts father home who storms,With rosy gestures that rejoiceAnd crimson kiss that warms.Now in the hearth he sits and, drownedAmong the ashes, blows;Or through the room goes stealing 'roundOn cautious-stepping toes,Deep mantled in the drowsy ...
Madison Julius Cawein
Nebuchadnezzar's Fall.
Frowning over the riddle that Daniel told,Down through the mist hung garden, below a feeble sun,The King of Persia walked: oh, the chilling cold!His mind was webbed with a grey shroud vapour-spun.Here for the pride of his soaring eagle heart,Here for his great hand searching the skies for food,Here for his courtship of Heaven's high stars he shall smart,Nebuchadnezzar shall fall, crawl, be subdued.Hot sun struck through the vapour, leaf strewn mouldBreathed sweet decay: old Earth called for her child.Mist drew off from his mind, Sun scattered gold,Warmth came and earthy motives fresh and wild.Down on his knees he sinks, the stiff-necked King,Stoops and kneels and grovels, chin to the mud.Out from his changed heart flutter on startle...
Sonnet.
I hear a voice low in the sunset woods; Listen, it says: "Decay, decay, decay!"I hear it in the murmuring of the floods, And the wind sighs it as it flies away.Autumn is come; seest thou not in the skies,The stormy light of his fierce lurid eyes?Autumn is come; his brazen feet have trod,Withering and scorching, o'er the mossy sod.The fainting year sees her fresh flowery wreathShrivel in his hot grasp; his burning breathDries the sweet water-springs that in the shadeWandering along, delicious music made.A flood of glory hangs upon the world,Summer's bright wings shining ere they are furled.
Frances Anne Kemble
Things Seen In A Battle
Clear diamond heart,I have been hunting deathAmong the swords.But death abhors my shadow,And I come backWounded with memories.Your eyes,For steel is amorous of steelAnd there are bright blue sparks.Your lips,I see great bloody rosesCut in white dead breasts.Your bed,For I see wrestling bodiesUnder the evening star.From the Turkic.
Edward Powys Mathers
In Memoriam.
Lines on the death of my only son, who died on the 5th of July, 1876, on the anniversary of his mother's death. His mother from celestial bower, In the self-same day and hour Of her death or heavenly birth, Gazed again upon the earth, And saw her gentle, loving boy, Once source of fond maternal joy, In anguish on a couch of pain. She knew that earthly hopes were vain, And beckoned him to realms above To share with her the heavenly love.
James McIntyre
Self And Soul.
It came to me in my sleep,And I rose from my sleep and wentOut in the night to weep,Over the bristling bent.With my soul, it seemed, I stoodAlone in a moaning wood.And my soul said, gazing at me,"Shall I show you another landThan other this flesh can see?"And took into hers my hand.We passed from the wood to a heathAs starved as the ribs of Death.Three skeleton trees we pass,Bare bones on an iron moor,Where every leaf and the grassWas a thorn and a thistle hoar.And my soul said, looking on me,"The past of your life you see."And a swine-herd passed with his swine,Deformed; and I heard him growl;Two eyes of a sottish shineLeered under two brows as foul.And my soul said, "This is the ...
Little Kate.
Beside me, in the golden lightThat slants upon the floor,She twines the many-colored silksHer dimpled fingers o'er;Uplifting now and then her eye,Or praise or blame in mine to spy.For her sweet sake I've cast asideThe books I've loved so well,And given up my being toAffection's mighty spell;Ambition's visions vanish all,Before the music of her call.The fancy of the past, that lentTo jewels bright and rareAscendency at every birthIn this our planet's air,Hath to October's children givenThe opal with its hues of Heaven.The golden sunlight in the sky,The red leaf on the plain;Beneath the opal's changeful lightHope and Misfortune reign;And mid gay leaves of wondrous dyes,My darling first u...
Mary Gardiner Horsford