Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 216 of 739
Previous
Next
Another.
Go! obedient to my call,Turn to profit thy young days,Wiser make betimes thy breastIn Fate's balance as it sways,Seldom is the cock at rest;Thou must either mount, or fall,Thou must either rule and win,Or submissively give in,Triumph, or else yield to clamour:Be the anvil or the hammer.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Sairey - Excerpts From An Incongruity
After A. C. S.In Spring there are lashings of new books,In Autumn fresh novels are sold,They are many, but my shelf has few books,My comrades, the favourites of old;Tho' the roll of the cata-logues vary,Thou alone art unchangeably dear,O bibulous, beautiful Sairey,Our Lady of Cheer.By the whites of thine eyes that were yellow,By the folds of thy duplicate chin,By thy voice that was husky but mellowWith gin, with the richness of gin,By thy scorn of the boy that was Bragian,By thy wealth of perambulate swoons,O matchless and mystical Magian,Beguile us with boons.For thou scatterest the evil before usWith grave humours and exquisite speech,Till we heed not the 'new men that bore us,'Nor...
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
Fragment: Sufficient Unto The Day.
Is not to-day enough? Why do I peerInto the darkness of the day to come?Is not to-morrow even as yesterday?And will the day that follows change thy doom?Few flowers grow upon thy wintry way;And who waits for thee in that cheerless homeWhence thou hast fled, whither thou must returnCharged with the load that makes thee faint and mourn?
Percy Bysshe Shelley
What is Life?
And what is Life?--An hour-glass on the run,A mist retreating from the morning sun,A busy, bustling, still repeated dream;Its length?--A minute's pause, a moment's thought;And happiness?-A bubble on the stream,That in the act of seizing shrinks to nought.What are vain Hopes?--The puffing gale of morn,That of its charms divests the dewy lawn,And robs each floweret of its gem,--and dies;A cobweb hiding disappointment's thorn,Which stings more keenly through the thin disguise.And thou, O Trouble?--Nothing can suppose,(And sure the power of wisdom only knows,)What need requireth thee:So free and liberal as thy bounty flows,Some necessary cause must surely be;But disappointments, pains, and every woeDevoted wretches feel,The ...
John Clare
Ein Yahav
A night drive to Ein Yahav in the Arava Desert,a drive in the rain. Yes, in the rain.There I met people who grow date palms,there I saw tamarisk trees and risk trees,there I saw hope barbed as barbed wire.And I said to myself: That's true, hope needs to belike barbed wire to keep out despair,hope must be a mine field.
Yehuda Amichai
Sanguine
"The clock indicates the hour but what does enternity indicate?" WhitmanImagine, being told cubism isn't painting. ThatBeardsley didn't die at 26, unheralded as a boy geniusor Corot didn't come to Paris after all.Imagine, The Louvre without a rooftop, theintelligentsia sitting down to a ragged tablesurrounded by sawdust intellects, Proust not beingable to write his name.Now that's splendour - that's in-depth "feeling".That's emotion to pull your socks or catch the bus ona brittle day.It's easy. Try to "feel" the event. It's 1896. People areperturbed (or so we are told) because the century'sgetting old. Time's rushing by. There's an alarm clockset to buzz at eternity's gate, Midnight 1900.In probing the mal...
Paul Cameron Brown
Echoes from Galilee.
What means this gathering multitude, Upon thy shores, O, Galilee,As various as the billows rude That sweep thy ever restless sea? Can but the mandate of a King So varied an assemblage bring?Behold the noble, rich, and great, From Levite, Pharisee and Priest,Down to the lowest dregs of fate, From mightiest even to the least; Yes, in this motley throng we find The palsied, sick, mute, halt, and blind.Is this some grand affair of state, A coronation, or display,By some vainglorious potentate,-- Or can this concourse mark the day Of some victorious hero's march Homeward, through triumphal arch?Or, have they come to celebrate Some sacred sacerdotal rit...
Alfred Castner King
Enough
It is enough for me by dayTo walk the same bright earth with him;Enough that over us by nightThe same great roof of stars is dim.I do not hope to bind the windOr set a fetter on the sea,It is enough to feel his love,Blow by like music over me.
Sara Teasdale
The Pressed Gentian
The time of gifts has come again,And, on my northern window-pane,Outlined against the days brief light,A Christmas token hangs in sight.The wayside travellers, as they pass,Mark the gray disk of clouded glass;And the dull blankness seems, perchance,Folly to their wise ignorance.They cannot from their outlook seeThe perfect grace it hath for me;For there the flower, whose fringes throughThe frosty breath of autumn blew,Turns from without its face of bloomTo the warm tropic of my room,As fair as when beside its brookThe hue of bending skies it took.So from the trodden ways of earth,Seem some sweet souls who veil their worth,And offer to the careless glanceThe clouding gray of circumstance.They blossom be...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Quarrel with Love
Oh that I could write a story Of love's dealing with affection!How he makes the spirit sorry That is touch'd with his infection.But he doth so closely wind him, In the plaits of will ill-pleased,That the heart can never find him Till it be too much diseased.'Tis a subtle kind or spirit Of a venom-kind of nature,That can, like a coney-ferret, Creep unawares upon a creature.Never eye that can behold it, Though it worketh first by seeing;Nor conceit that can unfold it, Though in thoughts be all its being.Oh! it maketh old men witty, Young men wanton, women idle,While that patience weeps, for pity Reason bite not nature's bridle.What it is, in conjecture; S...
Nicholas Breton
Ode On The Installation Of His Royal Highness Prince Albert As Chancellor Of The University Of Cambridge, July 1847
INTRODUCTION AND CHORUSFor thirst of power that Heaven disowns,For temples, towers, and thrones,Too long insulted by the Spoiler's shock,Indignant Europe castHer stormy foe at lastTo reap the whirlwind on a Libyan rock.SOLO (TENOR)War is passion's basest gameMadly played to win a name;Up starts some tyrant, Earth and Heaven to dare,The servile million bow;But will the lightning glance aside to spareThe Despot's laureled brow?CHORUSWar is mercy, glory, fame,Waged in Freedom's holy cause;Freedom, such as Man may claimUnder God's restraining laws.Such is Albion's fame and glory:Let rescued Europe tell the story.RECIT. (accompanied) (CONTRALTO)But lo, what sudden cloud ha...
William Wordsworth
A Lucky Dog.
Tha'rt a rough en; - aye tha art, - an aw'll betJust as ready. Tha ne'er lived as a pet,Aw can tell.Ther's noa mistress weshed thi skin, cooam'd thi heead;Net mich pettin; kicks an cuffins oft asteead,Like mysel.Tha'rt noa beauty; - nivver wor; - nivver will;Ther's lots like thee amang men, - but then still,Sich is fate;An its fooilish for to be discontentAt a thing we've noa paar to prevent.That's true mate.Why tha's foller'd one like me aw cant tell;If tha'rt seekin better luck, - its a sell,As tha'll find;Nay, tha needn't twitch thi tail aght o' seet,Aw'll nooan hurt thi, tho' aw own tha'rt a freet.Nivver mind.Here's mi supper, an aw'll spare thee a part, -Gently, pincher! Tak thi time. Here tha art;...
John Hartley
The River Scamander
I'M now disposed to give a pretty tale;Love laughs at what I've sworn and will prevail;Men, gods, and all, his mighty influence know,And full obedience to the urchin show.In future when I celebrate his flame,Expressions not so warm will be my aim;I would not willingly abuses plant,But rather let my writings spirit want.If in these verses I around should twirl,Some wily knave and easy simple girl,'Tis with intention in the breast to place;On such occasions, dread of dire disgrace;The mind to open, and the sex to setUpon their guard 'gainst snares so often met.Gross ignorance a thousand has misled,For one that has been hurt by what I've said.I'VE read that once, an orator renownedIn Greece, where arts superior then were found,By...
Jean de La Fontaine
On A Similar Occasion. For The Year 1793.
De sacris autem hæc sit una sententia, ut conserventur.- Cic. de Leg.But let us all concur in this one sentiment, that things sacred be inviolate.He lives who lives to God alone,And all are dead beside;For other source than God is noneWhence life can be supplied.To live to God is to requiteHis love as best we may:To make his precepts our delight,His promises our stay.But life, within a narrow ringOf giddy joys comprised,Is falsely named, and no such thing,But rather death disguised.Can life in them deserve the name,Who only live to proveFor what poor toys they can disclaimAn endless life above?Who, much diseased, yet nothing feel;Much menaced, nothin...
William Cowper
To An Infant Daughter.
Sweet gem of infant fairy-flowers!Thy smiles on life' unclosing hours,Like sunbeams lost in summer showers,They wake my fears;When reason knows its sweets and sours,They'll change to tears.God help thee, little senseless thing!Thou, daisy-like of early spring,Of ambush'd winter's hornet stingHast yet to tell;Thou know'st not what to-morrows bring:I wish thee well.But thou art come, and soon or late'Tis thine to meet the frowns of fate,The harpy grin of envy's hate,And mermaid-smilesOf worldly folly's luring bait,That youth beguiles.And much I wish, whate'er may beThe lot, my child, that falls to thee,Nature may never let thee seeHer glass betimes,But keep thee from my failings free,--N...
Never Had a Chance
Fresh from piano, school, and books,A happy girl with rosy looks Young Plowman wooed and won; despiteHer pretty, pouting prejudice,Her deep distaste for rural bliss Or countryfied delight.Romance through all her nature ran -Indeed, to wed a husband-man Suffused her ardent maiden thought;But lofty fancy dwelt uponA new "Queen Anne," a terraced lawn, A city's corner lot.Her lily fingers that so wellCould paint a scene - in aquarelle - Or broider plush with leaves and vines,No more of real labor knewThan waxen petals of the dew On native eglantines.Anon, with lapse of tender waysThat emphasized the courting days, The housewife in her apron blue,As mistress of her new abode,...
Hattie Howard
Disenchantment
Time and I have fallen out;We, who were such steadfast friends.So slowly has it come aboutThat none may tell when it began;Yet sure am I a cunning planRuns through it all;And now, beyond recall,Our friendship ends,And ending, there remains to meThe memory of disloyalty.Long years ago Time tripping cameWith promise grand,And sweet assurances of fame;And hand in handThrough fairy-landWent he and I togetherIn bright and golden weather.Then, then I had not learned to doubt,For friends were gods, and faith was sure,And words were truth, and deeds were pure,Before we had our falling out;And life, all hope, was fair to see,When Time made promise sweet to me.When first my faithless friend grew cold<...
Arthur Macy
Zophiel. (Invocation)
Thou with the dark blue eye upturned to heaven,And cheek now pale, now warm with radiant glow, Daughter of God,--most dear,-- Come with thy quivering tear,And tresses wild, and robes of loosened flow,--To thy lone votaress let one look be given!Come Poesy! nor like some just-formed maid,With heart as yet unswoln by bliss or woe;-- But of such age be seen As Egypt's glowing queen,When her brave Roman learned to love her soThat death and loss of fame, were, by a smile, repaid.Or as thy Sappho, when too fierce assailedBy stern ingratitude her tender breast:-- Her love by scorn repaid Her friendship true betrayed,Sick of the...
Maria Gowen Brooks