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The cataract, whirling down the precipice,Elbows down rocks and, shouldering, thunders through.Roars, howls, and stifled murmurs never cease;Hell and its agonies seem hid below.Thick rolls the mist, that smokes and falls in dew;The trees and greenwood wear the deepest green.Horrible mysteries in the gulph stare through,Roars of a million tongues, and none knows what they mean.
John Clare
Sonnet CCXVIII.
Far potess' io vendetta di colei.HIS SOUL VISITS HER IN SLEEP. Oh! that from her some vengeance I could wrestWith words and glances who my peace destroys,And then abash'd, for my worse sorrow, flies,Veiling her eyes so cruel, yet so blest;Thus mine afflicted spirits and oppress'dBy sure degrees she sorely drains and dries,And in my heart, as savage lion, criesEven at night, when most I should have rest.My soul, which sleep expels from his abode,The body leaves, and, from its trammels free,Seeks her whose mien so often menace show'd.I marvel much, if heard its advent be,That while to her it spake, and o'er her wept,And round her clung, asleep she alway kept.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Reverie
I know there shall dawn a dayIs it here on homely earth?Is it yonder, worlds away,Where the strange and new have birth,That Power comes full in play?Is it here, with grass about,Under befriending trees,When shy buds venture out,And the air by mild degreesPuts winters death past doubt?Is it up amid whirl and roarOf the elemental flameWhich star-flecks heavens dark floor,That, new yet still the same,Full in play comes Power once more?Somewhere, below, above,Shall a day dawn, this I know,When Power, which vainly stroveMy weakness to oerthrow,Shall triumph. I breathe, I move,I truly am, at last!For a veil is rent betweenMe and the truth which passedFitful, half-guessed, half-seen,...
Robert Browning
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 ...
Madison Julius Cawein
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
Satires Of Circumstances In Fifteen Glimpses - XI In The Restaurant
"But hear. If you stay, and the child be born,It will pass as your husband's with the rest,While, if we fly, the teeth of scornWill be gleaming at us from east to west;And the child will come as a life despised;I feel an elopement is ill-advised!""O you realize not what it is, my dear,To a woman! Daily and hourly alarmsLest the truth should out. How can I stay here,And nightly take him into my arms!Come to the child no name or fame,Let us go, and face it, and bear the shame."
Thomas Hardy
Grace Darling
Take, O star of all our seas, from not an alien hand,Homage paid of song bowed down before thy glory's face,Thou the living light of all our lovely stormy strand,Thou the brave north-country's very glory of glories, Grace.Loud and dark about the lighthouse rings and glares the night;Glares with foam-lit gloom and darkling fire of storm and spray,Rings with roar of winds in chase and rage of waves in flight,Howls and hisses as with mouths of snakes and wolves at bay.Scarce the cliffs of the islets, scarce the walls of Joyous Gard,Flash to sight between the deadlier lightnings of the sea:Storm is lord and master of a midnight evil-starred,Nor may sight or fear discern what evil stars may be.Dark as death and white as snow the sea-swell scowls and shines,Heaves and...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
He Abjures Love
At last I put off love,For twice ten yearsThe daysman of my thought,And hope, and doing;Being ashamed thereof,And faint of fearsAnd desolations, wroughtIn his pursuing,Since first in youthtime thoseDisquietingsThat heart-enslavement bringsTo hale and hoary,Became my housefellows,And, fool and blind,I turned from kith and kindTo give him glory.I was as children beWho have no care;I did not shrink or sigh,I did not sicken;But lo, Love beckoned me,And I was bare,And poor, and starved, and dry,And fever-stricken.Too many times ablazeWith fatuous fires,Enkindled by his wilesTo new embraces,Did I, by wilful waysAnd baseless ires,Return the anxious sm...
Eternities
I cannot count the pebbles in the brook.Well hath He spoken: 'Swear not by thy head,Thou knowest not the hairs,' though He, we read,Writes that wild number in his own strange book.I cannot count the sands or search the seas,Death cometh, and I leave so much untrod.Grant my immortal aureole, O my God,And I will name the leaves upon the trees.In heaven I shall stand on gold and glass,Still brooding earth's arithmetic to spell;Or see the fading of the fires of hellEre I have thanked my God for all the grass.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Griefs.
I measure every grief I meetWith analytic eyes;I wonder if it weighs like mine,Or has an easier size.I wonder if they bore it long,Or did it just begin?I could not tell the date of mine,It feels so old a pain.I wonder if it hurts to live,And if they have to try,And whether, could they choose between,They would not rather die.I wonder if when years have piled --Some thousands -- on the causeOf early hurt, if such a lapseCould give them any pause;Or would they go on aching stillThrough centuries above,Enlightened to a larger painBy contrast with the love.The grieved are many, I am told;The reason deeper lies, --Death is but one and comes but once,And only nails the eyes.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
A Marching Song
We mix from many lands,We march for very far;In hearts and lips and handsOur staffs and weapons are;The light we walk in darkens sun and moon and star.It doth not flame and waneWith years and spheres that roll,Storm cannot shake nor stainThe strength that makes it whole,The fire that moulds and moves it of the sovereign soul.We are they that have to copeWith time till time retire;We live on hopeless hope,We feed on tears and fire;Time, foot by foot, gives back before our sheer desire.From the edge of harsh derision,From discord and defeat,From doubt and lame division,We pluck the fruit and eat;And the mouth finds it bitter, and the spirit sweet.We strive with time at wrestlingTill time be on...
Weep On, Weep On.
Weep on, weep on, your hour is past; Your dreams of pride are o'er;The fatal chain is round you cast, And you are men no more.In vain the hero's heart hath bled; The sage's tongue hath warned in vain;--Oh, Freedom! once thy flame hath fled, It never lights again.Weep on--perhaps in after days, They'll learn to love your name;When many a deed may wake in praise That long hath slept in blame.And when they tread the ruined isle, Where rest, at length, the lord and slave,They'll wondering ask, how hands so vile Could conquer hearts so brave?"'Twas fate," they'll say, "a wayward fate "Your web of discord wove;"And while your tyrants joined in hate, "You never joined in love."But heart...
Thomas Moore
Sappho. A Monodrama.
Argument.To leap from the promontory of LEUCADIA was believed by the Greeks to be a remedy for hopeless love, if the self-devoted victim escaped with life. Artemisia lost her life in the dangerous experiment: and Sappho is said thus to have perished, in attempting to cure her passion for Phaon.SAPPHO(Scene the promontory of Leucadia.)This is the spot:--'tis here Tradition saysThat hopeless Love from this high towering rockLeaps headlong to Oblivion or to Death.Oh 'tis a giddy height! my dizzy headSwims at the precipice--'tis death to fall!Lie still, thou coward heart! this is no timeTo shake with thy strong throbs the frame convuls'd.To die,--to be at rest--oh pleasant thought!Perchance to leap and live; the soul all still,And...
Robert Southey
Upon Watts' Picture Sic Transit
"What I spent I had; what I saved, I lost; what I gave, I have."But yesterday the tourney, all the eager joy of life,The waving of the banners, and the rattle of the spears,The clash of sword and harness, and the madness of the strife;To-night begin the silence and the peace of endless years.( One sings within.)But yesterday the glory and the prize,And best of all, to lay it at her feet,To find my guerdon in her speaking eyes:I grudge them not, they pass, albeit sweet.The ring of spears, the winning of the fight,The careless song, the cup, the love of friends,The earth in spring to live, to feel the light'Twas good the while it lasted: here it ends.Remain the well-wrought deed in honour done,The dole for Christ's dear sa...
John McCrae
Old Chums
"If I die first," my old chum paused to say, "Mind! not a whimper of regret: - instead, Laugh and be glad, as I shall. - Being dead,I shall not lodge so very far awayBut that our mirth shall mingle. - So, the day The word comes, joy with me." "I'll try," I said, Though, even speaking, sighed and shook my headAnd turned, with misted eyes. His roundelayRang gaily on the stair; and then the door Opened and - closed. . . . Yet something of the clear, Hale hope, and force of wholesome faith he hadAbided with me - strengthened more and more. - Then - then they brought his broken body here: And I laughed - whisperingly - and we were glad.
James Whitcomb Riley
Sonnet CLXXVII.
Beato in sogno, e di languir contento.THOUGH SO LONG LOVE'S FAITHFUL SERVANT, HIS ONLY REWARD HAS BEEN TEARS. Happy in visions, and content to pine,Shadows to clasp, to chase the summer gale,On shoreless and unfathom'd sea to sail,To build on sand, and in the air design,The sun to gaze on till these eyes of mineAbash'd before his noonday splendour fail,To chase adown some soft and sloping vale,The wingèd stag with maim'd and heavy kine;Weary and blind, save my own harm to all,Which day and night I seek with throbbing heart,On Love, on Laura, and on Death I call.Thus twenty years of long and cruel smart,In tears and sighs I've pass'd, because I tookUnder ill stars, alas! both bait and hook.MACGREGOR.
Peru. Canto The Second.
THE ARGUMENT.Pizarro, a Spanish Captain, lands with his forces - his meeting with Ataliba - its unhappy consequences - Zorai dies - Ataliba imprisoned, and strangled - Alzira's despair, and madness.PERU.CANTO THE SECOND.Flush'd with impatient hope, the martial bandBy stern Pizarro led, approach the land:No terrors arm the hostile brow, for guileCharms to betray, in Candour's open smile.Too artless for distrust, the monarch springs To meet his latent foe on friendship's wings:On as he moves, with glitt'ring splendours crown'd,His feather'd chiefs the golden throne surround;The waving canopy its plume displays,Whose varied hues reflect the morning rays; ...
Helen Maria Williams
Conscience
Within the soul are throned two powers,One, Love; one, Hate. Begot of these,And veiled between, a presence towers,The shadowy keeper of the keys.With wild command or calm persuasionThis one may argue, that compel;Vain are concealment and evasion--For each he opens heaven and hell.