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The Murdered Traveller.
When spring, to woods and wastes around,Brought bloom and joy again,The murdered traveller's bones were found,Far down a narrow glen.The fragrant birch, above him, hungHer tassels in the sky;And many a vernal blossom sprung,And nodded careless by.The red-bird warbled, as he wroughtHis hanging nest o'erhead,And fearless, near the fatal spot,Her young the partridge led.But there was weeping far away,And gentle eyes, for him,With watching many an anxious day,Were sorrowful and dim.They little knew, who loved him so,The fearful death he met,When shouting o'er the desert snow,Unarmed, and hard beset;Nor how, when round the frosty poleThe northern dawn was red,The mountain wolf and wil...
William Cullen Bryant
The Lost Battle
It is not over yet-the fight Where those immortal dreamers failed.They stormed the citadels of night And the night praised them--and prevailed.So long ago the cause was lost We scarce distinguish friend from foe;But--if the dead can help it most-- The armies of the dead will grow.The world has all our banners now, And filched our watchwords for its own.The world has crowned the "rebel's" brow And millions crowd his lordly throne.The masks have altered. Names are names; They praise the "truth" that is not true.The "rebel" that the world acclaims Is not the rebel Shelley knew.We may not build that Commonweal. We may not reach the goal we set.But there's a flag they dare not steal. Forwar...
Alfred Noyes
On Fanny Godwin.
Her voice did quiver as we parted,Yet knew I not that heart was brokenFrom which it came, and I departedHeeding not the words then spoken.Misery - O Misery,This world is all too wide for thee.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Amour 6
In one whole world is but one Phoenix found,A Phoenix thou, this Phoenix then alone:By thy rare plume thy kind is easly knowne,With heauenly colours dide, with natures wonder cround.Heape thine own vertues, seasoned by their sunne,On heauenly top of thy diuine desire;Then with thy beautie set the same on fire,So by thy death thy life shall be begunne.Thy selfe, thus burned in this sacred flame,With thine owne sweetnes al the heauens perfuming,And stil increasing as thou art consuming,Shalt spring againe from th' ashes of thy fame; And mounting vp shall to the heauens ascend: So maist thou liue, past world, past fame, past end.
Michael Drayton
Fogarty's Gin
A sweat-dripping horse and a half-naked myall,And a message: Come out to the back of the runBe out at the stake-yards by rising of sun!Ride hard and fail not! there's the devil to pay:For the men from Monkyra have mustered the runCows and calves, calves of ours, without ever a brand,Fifty head, if there's one, on the camp there they stand.Come out to the stake-yards, nor fail me, or by allThe saints they'll be drafted and driven away!'Boot and saddle it was to the rolling of curses:Snatching whip, snatching spurs, where they hung on the nail.In his wrath old McIvor, head stockman, turned pale,Spitting oaths with his head 'neath the flap of his saddle;Taking up the last hole in the girth with his teeth;Then a hand on the pommel, a quick catch of breath,
Barcroft Boake
Father And Child
She hears me strike the board and sayThat she is under banOf all good men and women,Being mentioned with a manThat has the worst of all bad names;And thereupon repliesThat his hair is beautiful,Cold as the March wind his eyes.
William Butler Yeats
Fragment Of The Elegy On The Death Of Bion.
From The Greek Of Moschus.[Published from the Hunt manuscripts by Forman, "Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1876.]Ye Dorian woods and waves, lament aloud,Augment your tide, O streams, with fruitless tears,For the beloved Bion is no more.Let every tender herb and plant and flower,From each dejected bud and drooping bloom,Shed dews of liquid sorrow, and with breathOf melancholy sweetness on the windDiffuse its languid love; let roses blush,Anemones grow paler for the lossTheir dells have known; and thou, O hyacinth,Utter thy legend now, yet more, dumb flower,Than 'Ah! alas!' thine is no common griefBion the [sweetest singer] is no more.
Epitaph On The Lady Mary Villiers
The Lady Mary Villiers liesUnder this stone; with weeping eyesThe parents that first gave her birth,And their sad friends, laid her in earth.If any of them, Reader, wereKnown unto thee, shed a tear;Or if thyself possess a gemAs dear to thee, as this to them,Though a stranger to this place,Bewail in theirs thine own hard case:For thou perhaps at thy returnMayst find thy Darling in an urn.
Thomas Carew
After The Death Of Vittoria Colonna. Love's Triumph Over Death.
Quand' el ministro de' sospir.When she who was the source of all my sighs, Fled from the world, herself, my straining sight, Nature who gave us that unique delight, Was sunk in shame, and we had weeping eyes.Yet shall not vauntful Death enjoy this prize, This sun of suns which then he veiled in night; For Love hath triumphed, lifting up her light On earth and mid the saints in Paradise.What though remorseless and impiteous doom Deemed that the music of her deeds would die, And that her splendour would be sunk in gloom,The poet's page exalts her to the sky With life more living in the lifeless tomb, And death translates her soul to reign on high.
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni
Rainless
The locust builds its are of soundAnd tops it with a spire;The roadside leaves pant to the groundWith dust from hoof and tire.The insects, day and night, make din,And with the heat grow shriller;And everywhere great spiders spin,And crawls the caterpillar.The wells are dry; the creeks are pools;Weeds cram their beds with bristles;And when a wind breathes, naught it cools,The air grows white with thistles.For months the drouth has burned and bakedThe wood and field and garden;The flower-plots are dead; and, raked,Or mown, the meadows harden.The Summer, sunk in godlessness,From quarter unto quarter,Now drags, now lifts a dusty dress,That shows a sloven garter.The child of Spring, it now appear...
Madison Julius Cawein
In Egypt
It was the Angel Azrael the Lord God sent belowAt midnight, into every house in Egypt, long ago -0 long, and long ago.All day the wife of Pharaoh had paced the palace hallOr the long white pillared court that was open to the sky;A passion of wild restlessness ensnared her in its thrallWhile she fought a fear within her - a thing that would not die.She had sent away her maidens - their weeping vexed her ears -Their pallid faces filled her with impatient pitying scorn; -But she kept one time-worn woman, who long had outgrown fears,The old brown nurse who held her son the day that he was born.The mighty gods had failed her - the river-gods and the sun,And the little gods of brass and stone - who stared but made no sign,So she pled with them ...
Virna Sheard
Act V
[Midnight.]First, two white arms that held him very close,And ever closer as he drew him backReluctantly, the loose gold-colored hairA thousand delicate fibres reaching outStill to detain him; then some twenty stepsOf iron staircase winding round and down,And ending in a narrow gallery hungWith Gobelin tapestries--AndromedaRescued by Perseus, and the sleek DianaWith her nymphs bathing; at the farther endA door that gave upon a starlit groveOf citron and clipt palm-trees; then a pathAs bleached as moonlight, with the shadow of leavesStamped black upon it; next a vine-clad lengthOf solid masonry; and last of allA Gothic archway packed with night, and then--A sudden gleaming dagger through his heart.
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
Tithonus
So when the verdure of his life was shed,With all the grace of ripened manlihead,And on his locks, but now so lovable,Old age like desolating winter fell,Leaving them white and flowerless and forlorn:Then from his bed the Goddess of the MornSoftly withheld, yet cherished him no lessWith pious works of pitying tenderness;Till when at length with vacant, heedless eyes,And hoary height bent down none otherwiseThan burdened willows bend beneath their weightOf snow when winter winds turn temperate, -So bowed with years - when still he lingered on:Then to the daughter of HyperionThis counsel seemed the best: for she, afarBy dove-gray seas under the morning star,Where, on the wide world's uttermost extremes,Her amber-walled, auroral palace gleam...
Alan Seeger
Rest - Sonnet
O Earth, lie heavily upon her eyes; Seal her sweet eyes weary of watching, Earth; Lie close around her; leave no room for mirthWith its harsh laughter, nor for sound of sighs.She hath no questions, she hath no replies, Hushed in and curtained with a blessèd dearth Of all that irked her from the hour of birth;With stillness that is almost Paradise.Darkness more clear than noon-day holdeth her, Silence more musical than any song;Even her very heart has ceased to stir:Until the morning of EternityHer rest shall not begin nor end, but be; And when she wakes she will not think it long.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Light: an Epicede
To Philip Bourke MarstonLove will not weep because the seal is brokenThat sealed upon a life beloved and briefDarkness, and let but song break through for tokenHow deep, too far for even thy song's relief,Slept in thy soul the secret springs of grief.Thy song may soothe full many a soul hereafter,As tears, if tears will come, dissolve despair;As here but late, with smile more bright than laughter,Thy sweet strange yearning eyes would seem to bearWitness that joy might cleave the clouds of care.Two days agone, and love was one with pityWhen love gave thought wings toward the glimmering goalWhere, as a shrine lit in some darkling city,Shone soft the shrouded image of thy soul:And now thou art healed of life; thou art healed, and whol...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Common Men
The great men framed the fierce decreesEmbroiling State with State;They bit their thumbs across the seasIn diplomatic hate;They lit the pyre whose glare and heatMake Hell itself seem cold;The flames bloomed red above the wheat,Their wild profusion wreathed the street,Then in the smoke and fiery sleetThe common men took hold.Where Babel was with Bedlam freed,And wide the gates were flung;To chaos, while the anarch breedIn all the world gave tongue,The common men in close array,By mountain, plain and sea,Went outward girded for the fray,On one dear quest, whate'er they payIn blood and pain, the open wayTo keep for Liberty.The common men who never tire,Unsightly in the mirkOf caking blood and smoke a...
Edward
His Immortality
II saw a dead man's finer partShining within each faithful heartOf those bereft. Then said I: "This must beHis immortality."III looked there as the seasons wore,And still his soul continuously upboreIts life in theirs. But less its shine excelledThan when I first beheld.IIIHis fellow-yearsmen passed, and thenIn later hearts I looked for him again;And found him - shrunk, alas! into a thinAnd spectral mannikin.IVLastly I ask - now old and chill -If aught of him remain unperished still;And find, in me alone, a feeble spark,Dying amid the dark.February 1899.
Thomas Hardy
Deep Sea Cables
The wrecks dissolve above us; their dust drops down from afar,Down to the dark, to the utter dark, where the blind white sea-snakes are.There is no sound, no echo of sound, in the deserts of the deep,Or the great grey level plains of ooze where the shell-burred cables creep.Here in the womb of the world, here on the tie-ribs of earthWords, and the words of men, flicker and flutter and beat,Warning, sorrow and gain, salutation and mirth,For a Power troubles the Still that has neither voice nor feet.They have wakened the timeless Things; they have killed their father TimeJoining hands in the gloom, a league from the last of the sun.Hush! Men talk to-day o'er the waste of the ultimate slime,And a new Word runs between: whispering, 'Let us be one!'
Rudyard