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Though Fickle Fortune Has Deceived Me,
Though fickle Fortune has deceived me, She promis'd fair and perform'd but ill; Of mistress, friends, and wealth bereav'd me, Yet I bear a heart shall support me still. I'll act with prudence as far's I'm able, But if success I must never find, Then come misfortune, I bid thee welcome, I'll meet thee with an undaunted mind.
Robert Burns
The Reply. (The Reproof.)
Like Esop's lion, Burns says, sore I feel All others' scorn, but damn that ass's heel.
Poems From "A Shropshire Lad" - XI
On your midnight pallet lyingListen, and undo the door:Lads that waste the light in sighingIn the dark should sigh no more;Night should ease a lover's sorrow;Therefore, since I go to-morrow;Pity me before.In the land to which I travel,The far dwelling, let me say-Once, if here the couch is gravel,In a kinder bed I lay,And the breast the darnel smothersRested once upon another'sWhen it was not clay.
Alfred Edward Housman
Loved And Lost.
I.Sweetly to sleep beneath the fresh green turf They laid the loved and lost away;A chair is vacant by the household hearth, And shadow-vested Sorrow's there to-day.II.The tender hands that guided us in youth Are folded now upon the gentle breast,And those dear eyes whose depths were love and truth Are closed to open in eternal rest.III.Through simple faith and duty well performed, A crown of light forever shall be hers;And though with bitter grief and anguish mourned, A consolation gleams through blinding tears!
George W. Doneghy
Off Rough Point.
We sat at twilight nigh the sea, The fog hung gray and weird.Through the thick film uncannily The broken moon appeared.We heard the billows crack and plunge, We saw nor waves nor ships.Earth sucked the vapors like a sponge, The salt spray wet our lips.Closer the woof of white mist drew, Before, behind, beside.How could that phantom moon break through, Above that shrouded tide?The roaring waters filled the ear, A white blank foiled the sight.Close-gathering shadows near, more near, Brought the blind, awful night.O friends who passed unseen, unknown! O dashing, troubled sea!Still stand we on a rock alone,Walled round by mystery.
Emma Lazarus
Night Burial In The Forest
Lay him down where the fern is thick and fair.Fain was he for life, here lies he low:With the blood washed clean from his brow and his beautiful hair,Lay him here in the dell where the orchids grow.Let the birch-bark torches roar in the gloom,And the trees crowd up in a quiet startled ringSo lone is the land that in this lonely roomNever before has breathed a human thing.Cover him well in his canvas shroud, and the mossPart and heap again on his quiet breast,What recks he now of gain, or love, or lossWho for love gained rest?While she who caused it all hides her insolent eyesOr braids her hair with the ribbons of lust and of lies,And he who did the deed fares out like a hunted beastTo lurk where the musk-ox tramples the barren groun...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Iota Subscript
Seek not in me the big I capital,Not yet the little dotted in me seek.If I have in me any I at all,'Tis the iota subscript of the Greek.So small am I as an attention beggar.The letter you will find me subscript toIs neither alpha, eta, nor omega,But upsilon which is the Greek for you.
Robert Lee Frost
In Memoriam E.B.E.
I mourn upon this battle-field,But not for those who perished here.Behold the river-bankWhither the angry farmers came,In sloven dress and broken rank,Nor thought of fame.Their deed of bloodAll mankind praise;Even the serene Reason says,It was well done.The wise and simple have one glanceTo greet yon stern head-stone,Which more of pride than pity gaveTo mark the Briton's friendless grave.Yet it is a stately tomb;The grand returnOf eve and morn,The year's fresh bloom,The silver cloud,Might grace the dust that is most proud.Yet not of these I museIn this ancestral place,But of a kindred faceThat never joy or hope shall here diffuse.Ah, brother of the brief but blazing star!What has...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Progress Of Poetry
The farmer's goose, who in the stubbleHas fed without restraint or trouble,Grown fat with corn and sitting still,Can scarce get o'er the barn-door sill;And hardly waddles forth to coolHer belly in the neighbouring pool!Nor loudly cackles at the door;For cackling shows the goose is poor. But, when she must be turn'd to graze,And round the barren common strays,Hard exercise, and harder fare,Soon make my dame grow lank and spare;Her body light, she tries her wings,And scorns the ground, and upward springs;While all the parish, as she flies,Hear sounds harmonious from the skies. Such is the poet fresh in pay,The third night's profits of his play;His morning draughts till noon can swill,Among his brethren of the quill:W...
Jonathan Swift
Night
The night is old, and all the worldIs wearied out with strife;A long gray mist lies heavy and wanAbove the house of life.Four stars burn up and are unquelledBy the low, shrunken moon;Her spirit draws her down and down -She shall be buried soon.There is a sound that is no sound,Yet fine it falls and clear,The whisper of the spinning earthTo the tranced atmosphere.An odour lives where once was air,A strange, unearthly scent,From the burning of the four great starsWithin the firmament.The universe, deathless and old,Breathes, yet is void of breath:As still as death that seems to moveAnd yet is still as death.
His Content In The Country
Here, Here I live with what my boardCan with the smallest cost afford;Though ne'er so mean the viands be,They well content my Prue and me:Or pea or bean, or wort or beet,Whatever comes, Content makes sweet.Here we rejoice, because no rentWe pay for our poor tenement;Wherein we rest, and never fearThe landlord or the usurer.The quarter-day does ne'er affrightOur peaceful slumbers in the night:We eat our own, and batten more,Because we feed on no man's score;But pity those whose flanks grow great,Swell'd with the lard of other's meat.We bless our fortunes, when we seeOur own beloved privacy;And like our living, where we're knownTo very few, or else to none.
Robert Herrick
Once Poor, Still Penurious.
Goes the world now, it will with thee go hard:The fattest hogs we grease the more with lard.To him that has, there shall be added more;Who is penurious, he shall still be poor.
Life In The Woods.
(Life of the early settlers.) Canada hath wealthy yeomen Whose fathers overcome the foemen, The enemy they boldly slew Was mighty forests they did hew, And where they burned heaps of slain Their sons now reap the golden grain, But in the region of Northwest With prairie farms they are blest. Though this to them it may seem good Yet many blessings come from wood, It shelters you from the fierce storm And in the winter keeps you warm, For one who hath his forest trees He builds his house and barn with ease, And how quick he gets from thence Timber for bridge and for his fence.
James McIntyre
The Norsemen
Gift from the cold and silent Past!A relic to the present cast,Left on the ever-changing strandOf shifting and unstable sand,Which wastes beneath the steady chimeAnd beating of the waves of Time!Who from its bed of primal rockFirst wrenched thy dark, unshapely block?Whose hand, of curious skill untaught,Thy rude and savage outline wrought?The waters of my native streamAre glancing in the sun's warm beam;From sail-urged keel and flashing oarThe circles widen to its shore;And cultured field and peopled townSlope to its willowed margin down.Yet, while this morning breeze is bringingThe home-life sound of school-bells ringing,And rolling wheel, and rapid jarOf the fire-winged and steedless car,And voices from the wayside nea...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Rain
I.Around, the stillness deepened; then the grainWent wild with wind; and every briery laneWas swept with dust; and then, tempestuous black,Hillward the tempest heaved a monster back,That on the thunder leaned as on a cane;And on huge shoulders bore a cloudy pack,That gullied gold from many a lightning-crack:One great drop splashed and wrinkled down the pane,And then field, hill, and wood were lost in rain.II.At last, through clouds, as from a cavern hewnInto night's heart, the sun burst, angry roon;And every cedar, with its weight of wet,Against the sunset's fiery splendour set,Frightened to beauty, seemed with rubies strewn:Then in drenched gardens, like sweet phantoms met,Dim odours rose of pink and mignonette;An...
Madison Julius Cawein
L'Envoi (Songs of a Sourdough)
You who have lived in the Land,You who have trusted the trail;You who are strong to withstand,You who are swift to assail;Songs have I sung to beguile,Vintage of desperate yearsHard as a harlot's smile,Bitter as unshed tears. Little of joy or mirth, Little of ease I sing; Sagas of men of earth, Humanly suffering, Such as you all have done; Savagely faring forth, Sons of the midnight sun, Argonauts of the North.Far in the land God forgotGlimmers the lure of your trail;Still in your lust are you taughtEven to win is to fail.Still must you follow and fightUnder the vampire wing;There in the long, long nightHoping and vanquishing. Hu...
Robert William Service
The Lost Soul
Look! look there!Send your eyes across the grayBy my finger-point awayThrough the vaporous, fumy air.Beyond the air, you see the dark?Beyond the dark, the dawning day?On its horizon, pray you, markSomething like a ruined heapOf worlds half-uncreated, that go back:Down all the grades through which they roseUp to harmonious life and law's repose,Back, slow, to the awful deepOf nothingness, mere being's lack:On its surface, lone and bare,Shapeless as a dumb despair,Formless, nameless, something lies:Can the vision in your eyesIts idea recognize? 'Tis a poor lost soul, alack!--Half he lived some ages back;But, with hardly opened eyes,Thinking him already wise,Down he sat and wrote a book;Drew h...
George MacDonald
Heath from the Highlands
Here, where the great hills fall awayTo bays of silver sea,I hold within my hand to-dayA wild thing, strange to me.Behind me is the deep green dellWhere lives familiar light;The leaves and flowers I know so wellAre gleaming in my sight.And yonder is the mountain glen,Where sings in trees unstirredBy breath of breeze or axe of menThe shining satin-bird.The old weird cry of plover comesAcross the marshy ways,And here the hermit hornet hums,And here the wild bee strays.No novel life or light I see,On hill, in dale beneath:All things around are known to meExcept this bit of heath.This touching growth hath made me dreamIt sends my soul afarTo where the Scottish mountains gleamAg...
Henry Kendall