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The Human Music
At evening when the aspens rustled softAnd the last blackbird by the hedge-nest laughed,And through the leaves the moon's unmeaning faceLooked, and then rose in dark-blue leafless space;Watching the trees and moon she could not bearThe silence and the presence everywhere.The blackbird called the silence and it cameClosing and closing round like smoke round flame.Into her heart it crept and the heart was numb,Even wishes died, and all but fear was dumb--Fear and its phantoms. Then the trees were enlarged,And from their roundness unguessed shapes emerged,Or no shape but the image of her fearCreeping forth from her mind and hovering near.If a bat flitted it was an evil thing;Sadder the trees grew with every shadowy wing--Their shape enlarged, thei...
John Frederick Freeman
Evening
Tis evening; the black snail has got on his track,And gone to its nest is the wren,And the packman snail, too, with his home on his back,Clings to the bowed bents like a wen.The shepherd has made a rude mark with his footWhere his shadow reached when he first came,And it just touched the tree where his secret love cutTwo letters that stand for loves name.The evening comes in with the wishes of love,And the shepherd he looks on the flowers,And thinks who would praise the soft song of the dove,And meet joy in these dew-falling hours.For Nature is love, and finds haunts for true love,Where nothing can hear or intrude;It hides from the eagle and joins with the dove,In beautiful green solitude.
John Clare
A Sketch
The little hedgerow birds,That peck along the road, regard him not.He travels on, and in his face, his step,His gait, is one expression; every limb,His look and bending figure, all bespeakA man who does not move with pain, but movesWith thought. He is insensibly subduedTo settled quiet: he is one by whomAll effort seems forgotten; one to whomLong patience hath such mild composure givenThat patience now doth seem a thing of whichHe hath no need. He is by nature ledTo peace so perfect, that the young beholdWith envy what the Old Man hardly feels.
William Wordsworth
Sketches In The Exhibition, 1805.
What various objects strike with various force,Achilles, Hebe, and Sir Watkin's horse!Here summer scenes, there Pentland's stormy ridge,Lords, ladies, Noah's ark, and Cranford bridge!Some that display the elegant design,The lucid colours, and the flowing line;Some that might make, alas! Walsh Porter[1] stare,And wonder how the devil they got there!Lady M----ve.How clear a strife of light and shade is spread!The face how touched with nature's loveliest red!The eye, how eloquent, and yet how meek!The glow subdued, yet mantling on thy cheek!M----ve! I mark alone thy beauteous face,But all is nature, dignity, and grace!Hon. Miss Mercer.--Hopner.Oh! hide those tempting eyes, that faultless form,Those looks wi...
William Lisle Bowles
'T is evening: the black snail has got on his track,And gone to its nest is the wren,And the packman snail, too, with his home on his back,Clings to the bowed bents like a wen.The shepherd has made a rude mark with his footWhere his shadow reached when he first came,And it just touched the tree where his secret love cutTwo letters that stand for love's name.The evening comes in with the wishes of love,And the shepherd he looks on the flowers,And thinks who would praise the soft song of the dove,And meet joy in these dew-falling hours.For Nature is love, and finds haunts for true love,Where nothing can hear or intrude;It hides from the eagle and joins with the dove,In beautiful green solitude.
A Touch Of Nature
When first the crocus thrusts its point of goldUp through the still snow-drifted garden mould,And folded green things in dim woods uncloseTheir crinkled spears, a sudden tremor goesInto my veins and makes me kith and kinTo every wild-born thing that thrills and blows.Sitting beside this crumbling sea-coal fire,Here in the city's ceaseless roar and din,Far from the brambly paths I used to know,Far from the rustling brooks that slip and shineWhere the Neponset alders take their glow,I share the tremulous sense of bud and briarAnd inarticulate ardors of the vine.
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
The Mountain Hearts-Ease
By scattered rocks and turbid waters shifting,By furrowed glade and dell,To feverish men thy calm, sweet face uplifting,Thou stayest them to tellThe delicate thought that cannot find expression,For ruder speech too fair,That, like thy petals, trembles in possession,And scatters on the air.The miner pauses in his rugged labor,And, leaning on his spade,Laughingly calls unto his comrade-neighborTo see thy charms displayed.But in his eyes a mist unwonted rises,And for a moment clearSome sweet home face his foolish thought surprises,And passes in a tear,Some boyish vision of his Eastern village,Of uneventful toil,Where golden harvests followed quiet tillageAbove a peaceful soil.One moment only; f...
Bret Harte
The Wanderer.
WANDERER.Young woman, may God bless thee,Thee, and the sucking infantUpon thy breast!Let me, 'gainst this rocky wall,Neath the elm-tree's shadow,Lay aside my burden,Near thee take my rest.WOMAN.What vocation leads thee,While the day is burning,Up this dusty path?Bring'st thou goods from out the townRound the country?Smil'st thou, stranger,At my question?WANDERER.From the town no goods I bring.Cool is now the evening;Show to me the fountain'Whence thou drinkest,Woman young and kind!WOMAN.Up the rocky pathway mount;Go thou first! Across the thicketLeads the pathway tow'rd the cottageThat I live in,To the fountainWhence I drink.<...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Buttercups And Daisies
Buttercups and daisies growing everywhere,In the field of clover, on the hillside fair,And in lovely valley, tilled with greatest care.Naught but weeds and rubbish, in the farmer's eyes,Drawing off the nurture from the grain they prize,And their great luxuriance sore their patience tries.But the dews of heaven give them richest bloom,And their smiling beauty drives away our gloom;For such little beauties surely there is room.In this world of sorrow flowers ne'er bloom in vain,Though they in their blooming sap the golden grain,And drink in the moisture of the latter rain;For our Heavenly Father deemed it wise and goodTo diffuse this beauty with the grain for food.And this wise arrangement He has never rued.Teaching us thi...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Reciprocity
I do not think that skies and meadows areMoral, or that the fixture of a starComes of a quiet spirit, or that treesHave wisdom in their windless silences.Yet these are things invested in my moodWith constancy, and peace, and fortitude,That in my troubled season I can cryUpon the wide composure of the sky,And envy fields, and wish that I might beAs little daunted as a star or tree.
John Drinkwater
By An Evolutionist
The Lord let the house of a brute to the soul of a man,And the man said, Am I your debtor?And the LordNot yet; but make it as clean as you can,And then I will let you a better.I.If my body come from brutes, my soul uncertain or a fable,Why not bask amid the senses while the sun of morning shines,I, the finer brute rejoicing in my hounds, and in my stable,Youth and health, and birth and wealth, and choice of women and of wines?II.What hast thou done for me, grim Old Age, save breaking my bones on the rack?Would I had past in the morning that looks so bright from afar!OLD AGEDone for thee? starved the wild beast that was linkt with thee eighty years back.Less weight now for the ladder-of-heaven that hangs on a s...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Wood Nymph
A glint of her hair or a flash of her shoulder,That is the most I can boast to have seen,Then all is lost as the shadows enfold her,Forest glades making a screen of their green,Could I cast off all the cares of tomorrow,Could I forget all the fret of todayThen, my heart free from the burdens I borrow,Natures chaste spirit her face would display.
Ellis Parker Butler
Solitude.
Now as even's warning bellRings the day's departing knell,Leaving me from labour free,Solitude, I'll walk with thee:Whether 'side the woods we rove,Or sweep beneath the willow grove;Whether sauntering we proceedCross the green, or down the mead;Whether, sitting down, we lookOn the bubbles of the brook;Whether, curious, waste an hour,Pausing o'er each tasty flower;Or, expounding nature's spells,From the sand pick out the shells;Or, while lingering by the streams,Where more sweet the music seems,Listen to the soft'ning swellsOf some distant chiming bellsMellowing sweetly on the breeze,Rising, falling by degrees,Dying now, then wak'd againIn full many a 'witching strain,Sounding, as the gale flits by,Flats...
The Pursuit of Daphne.
Daphne is running, running through the grass, The long stalks whip her ankles as she goes. I saw the nymph, the god, I saw them pass And how a mounting flush of tender rose Invaded the white bosom of the lass And reached her shoulders, conquering their snows. He wasted all his breath, imploring still: They passed behind the shadow of the hill. The mad course goes across the silent plain, Their flying footsteps make a path of sound Through all the sleeping country. Now with pain She runs across a stretch of stony ground That wounds her soft-palmed feet and now again She hastens through a wood where flowers abound, Which staunch her cuts with balsam where she treads And f...
Edward Shanks
Pied Beauty
Glory be to God for dappled things -For skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow;For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim:Fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls; finches' wings;Landscape plotted and pieced - fold, fallow, and plough;And àll tràdes, their gear and tackle and trim.All things counter, original, spare, strange;Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change: Praise him.
Gerard Manley Hopkins
The Menagerie
Thank God my brain is not inclined to cut Such capers every day! I 'm just about Mellow, but then--There goes the tent-flap shut. Rain 's in the wind. I thought so: every snout Was twitching when the keeper turned me out. That screaming parrot makes my blood run cold. Gabriel's trump! the big bull elephant Squeals "Rain!" to the parched herd. The monkeys scold, And jabber that it 's rain water they want. (It makes me sick to see a monkey pant.) I 'll foot it home, to try and make believe I 'm sober. After this I stick to beer, And drop the circus when the sane folks leave. A man 's a fool to look at things too near: They look back, and begi...
William Vaughn Moody
Lines On Revisiting The Country.
I stand upon my native hills again,Broad, round, and green, that in the summer skyWith garniture of waving grass and grain,Orchards, and beechen forests, basking lie,While deep the sunless glens are scooped between,Where brawl o'er shallow beds the streams unseen.A lisping voice and glancing eyes are near,And ever restless feet of one, who, now,Gathers the blossoms of her fourth bright year;There plays a gladness o'er her fair young brow,As breaks the varied scene upon her sight,Upheaved and spread in verdure and in light.For I have taught her, with delighted eye,To gaze upon the mountains, to behold,With deep affection, the pure ample sky,And clouds along its blue abysses rolled,To love the song of waters, and to hearThe melo...
William Cullen Bryant
Threnody
The South-wind bringsLife, sunshine and desire,And on every mount and meadowBreathes aromatic fire;But over the dead he has no power,The lost, the lost, he cannot restore;And, looking over the hills, I mournThe darling who shall not return.I see my empty house,I see my trees repair their boughs;And he, the wondrous child,Whose silver warble wildOutvalued every pulsing soundWithin the air's cerulean round,--The hyacinthine boy, for whomMorn well might break and April bloom,The gracious boy, who did adornThe world whereinto he was born,And by his countenance repayThe favor of the loving Day,--Has disappeared from the Day's eye;Far and wide she cannot find him;My hopes pursue, they cannot bind him.Re...
Ralph Waldo Emerson