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Insensibility
I Happy are men who yet before they are killed Can let their veins run cold. Whom no compassion fleers Or makes their feet Sore on the alleys cobbled with their brothers. The front line withers, But they are troops who fade, not flowers For poets' tearful fooling: Men, gaps for filling Losses who might have fought Longer; but no one bothers. II And some cease feeling Even themselves or for themselves. Dullness best solves The tease and doubt of shelling, And Chance's strange arithmetic Comes simpler than the reckoning of their shilling. They keep no check on Armies' decimation. III Happy are thes...
Wilfred Edward Salter Owen
A New Year
Behold! a new white world! The falling snowHas cloaked the last old year And bid him go.To-morrow! cries the oak-tree To his heart,My sealèd buds shall fling Their leaves apart.To-morrow! pipes the robin, And againHow sweet the nest that long Was full of rain.To-morrow! bleats the sheep, And one by oneMy little lambs shall frolic Neath the sun.For us, too, let some fair To-morrow be,O Thou who weavest threads Of Destiny!Thou wast a babe on that Far Christmas Day,Let us as children follow In Thy way.So that our hearts grown cold Neath time and pain,With young ...
Dora Sigerson Shorter
Rhymes And Rhythms - XX
The shadow of Dawn;Stillness and stars and over-mastering dreamsOf Life and Death and Sleep;Heard over gleaming flats the old unchanging soundOf the old unchanging Sea.My soul and yours,O hand in hand let us fare forth, two ghosts,Into the ghostliness,The infinite and abounding solitudes,Beyond, O beyond! beyond . . .Here in the porchUpon the multitudinous silencesOf the kingdoms of the grave,We twain are you and I, two ghosts OmnipotenceCan touch no more, no more!
William Ernest Henley
A Song In Season
I.When in the wind the vane turns round,And round, and round;And in his kennel whines the hound;When all the gable eaves are boundWith icicles of ragged gray,A glinting gray;There is little to do, and much to say,And you hug your fire and pass the dayWith a thought of the springtime, dearie.II.When late at night the owlet hoots,And hoots, and hoots;And wild winds make of keyholes flutes;When to the door the goodman's bootsStamp through the snow the light stains red,The fire-light's red;There is nothing to do, and all is said,And you quaff your cider and go to bedWith a dream of the summer, dearie.III.When, nearing dawn, the black cock crows,And crows, and crows;...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Sparrow's Nest
Behold, within the leafy shade,Those bright blue eggs together laid!On me the chance-discovered sightGleamed like a vision of delight.I started, seeming to espyThe home and sheltered bed,The Sparrow's dwelling, which, hard byMy Father' house, in wet or dryMy sister Emmeline and ITogether visited.She looked at it and seemed to fear it;Dreading, tho' wishing, to be near it:Such heart was in her, being thenA little Prattler among men.The Blessing of my later yearWas with me when a boy:She gave me eyes, she gave me ears;And humble care, and delicate fears;A heart, the fountain of sweet tears;And love, and thought, and joy.
William Wordsworth
Ole Gabriel Ueland
(See Note 46)Of long toil 't is a matterThrough many a silent age,Before such power can shatterTime-hallowed custom's cage.The soul-fruit of the peasant,Though seldom seed was sown,It is our honor present, -Our future sure foreknown.The fjords that earnest waited'Mid mountain-snows aroundHis childhood's thoughts createdAnd depth of life profound.The highlands' sun that played thereOn fjord and mountain snowSo wide a vision made thereAs one could wish to know.When he to Ting repairingWould plead the peasant's right,Each word a beam was bearing.To make our young day bright.It came like ancient storyOr long-lost song's refrain;What crowned our past with gloryIt made our prese...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
Autumn Sorrow
Ah me! too soon the autumn comesAmong these purple-plaintive hills!Too soon among the forest gumsPremonitory flame she spills,Bleak, melancholy flame that kills.Her white fogs veil the morn, that rimsWith wet the moonflower's elfin moons;And, like exhausted starlight, dimsThe last slim lily-disk; and swoonsWith scents of hazy afternoons.Her gray mists haunt the sunset skies,And build the west's cadaverous fires,Where Sorrow sits with lonely eyes,And hands that wake an ancient lyre,Beside the ghost of dead Desire.
Seventeen
For Anne.All the loud winds were in the garden wood,All shadows joyfuller than lissom houndsDoubled in chasing, all exultant cloudsThat ever flung fierce mist and eddying fireAcross heavens deeper than blue polar seasFled over the sceptre-spikes of the chestnuts,Over the speckle of the wych-elms' green.She shouted; then stood still, hushed and abashedTo hear her voice so shrill in that gay roar,And suddenly her eyelashes were dimmed,Caught in tense tears of spiritual joy;For there were daffodils which sprightly shookTen thousand ruffling heads throughout the wood,And every flower of those delighting flowersLaughed, nodding to her, till she clapped her handsCrying 'O daffies, could you only speak!'But there was more. A jay with...
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols
A Song
Thou art the soul of a summer's day,Thou art the breath of the rose.But the summer is fledAnd the rose is deadWhere are they gone, who knows, who knows?Thou art the blood of my heart o' hearts,Thou art my soul's repose,But my heart grows numbAnd my soul is dumbWhere art thou, love, who knows, who knows?Thou art the hope of my after years--Sun for my winter snowsBut the years go by'Neath a clouded sky.Where shall we meet, who knows, Who knows?
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Even-Song.
It may be, yes, it must be, Time that bringsAn end to mortal things,That sends the beggar Winter in the trainOf Autumn's burdened wain, -Time, that is heir of all our earthly state,And knoweth well to waitTill sea hath turned to shore and shore to sea,If so it need must be,Ere he make good his claim and call his ownOld empires overthrown, -Time, who can find no heavenly orb too largeTo hold its fee in charge,Nor any motes that fill its beam so small,But he shall care for all, -It may be, must be, - yes, he soon shall tireThis hand that holds the lyre.Then ye who listened in that earlier dayWhen to my careless layI matched its chords and stole their first-born thrill,With untaught rudest skillVexing a treble from th...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The Voices
"Why urge the long, unequal fight,Since Truth has fallen in the street,Or lift anew the trampled light,Quenched by the heedless million's feet?"Give o'er the thankless task; forsakeThe fools who know not ill from good:Eat, drink, enjoy thy own, and takeThine ease among the multitude."Live out thyself; with others shareThy proper life no more; assumeThe unconcern of sun and air,For life or death, or blight or bloom."The mountain pine looks calmly onThe fires that scourge the plains below,Nor heeds the eagle in the sunThe small birds piping in the snow!"The world is God's, not thine; let HimWork out a change, if change must be:The hand that planted best can trimAnd nurse the old unfruitful tree."So spake the Tempter, when ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Dream Within A Dream
Take this kiss upon the brow!And, in parting from you now,Thus much let me avow,You are not wrong, who deemThat my days have been a dream;Yet if hope has flown awayIn a night, or in a day,In a vision, or in none,Is it therefore the less gone?All that we see or seemIs but a dream within a dream.I stand amid the roarOf a surf-tormented shore,And I hold within my handGrains of the golden sand,How few! yet how they creepThrough my fingers to the deep,While I weep, while I weep!O God! can I not graspThem with a tighter clasp?O God! can I not saveOne from the pitiless wave?Is all that we see or seemBut a dream within a dream?
Edgar Allan Poe
Reuben Pantier
Well, Emily Sparks, your prayers were not wasted, Your love was not all in vain. I owe whatever I was in life To your hope that would not give me up, To your love that saw me still as good. Dear Emily Sparks, let me tell you the story. I pass the effect of my father and mother; The milliner's daughter made me trouble And out I went in the world, Where I passed through every peril known Of wine and women and joy of life. One night, in a room in the Rue de Rivoli, I was drinking wine with a black-eyed cocotte, And the tears swam into my eyes. She though they were amorous tears and smiled For thought of her conquest over me. But my soul was three thousand miles away, In the days when you...
Edgar Lee Masters
How Fear Came
The stream is shrunk, the pool is dry,And we be comrades, thou and I;With fevered jowl and dusty flankEach jostling each along the bank;And, by one drouthy fear made still,Forgoing thought of quest or kill.Now 'neath his dam the fawn may see,The lean Pack-Wolf as cowed as he,And the tall buck, unflinching, noteThe fangs that tore his father's throat.The pools are shrunk, the streams are dry,And we be playmates, thou and I,Till yonder cloud, Good Hunting! LooseThe rain that breaks our Water Truce.
Rudyard
Odes Of A Boy.
Fades the great pyramid, the blank walls fade!And thou, immortal boy, dost walk with meAlong that grove from out whose deeper shadeThe nightingale sings living ecstasy.And where thy burial-stone so long is setWith plaintive lines that tell a day's despair,Lo, now that urn with happy figures fretWhich cannot fail, but go eternal fair!Yet, suddenly, the wind of death is blownOn all earth 's beauty, even at its prime;The red rose drops, the hand of Joy is flown,And thou, oh, thou art dust this long, long time!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Fragment - October 22, 1838.
Neglected record of a mind neglected,Unto what "lets and stops" art thou subjected!The day with all its toils and occupations,The night with its reflections and sensations,The future, and the present, and the past,--All I remember, feel, and hope at last,All shapes of joy and sorrow, as they pass,--Find but a dusty image in this glass.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Here They Lie.
Here they lie who once learned here All that is taught of hurt or fear;Dead, but by free will they died: They were true men, they had pride.
Robert von Ranke Graves