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The Wretched Monk
Old monasteries under steadfast wallsDisplayed tableaux of holy Verity,Warming the inner men in those cold hallsAgainst the chill of their austerity.Those times, when seeds of Christ would thrive and grow,More than one monk, now in obscurity,Taking the graveyard as his studio,Ennobled Death, in all simplicity.My soul's a tomb that, wretched cenobite,I travel in throughout eternity;Nothing adorns the walls of this sad shrineO slothful monk! Oh, when may I assignThis living spectacle of miseryTo labour of my hands, my eyes' delight?
Charles Baudelaire
Life's Tragedy
It may be misery not to sing at allAnd to go silent through the brimming day.It may be sorrow never to be loved,But deeper griefs than these beset the way.To have come near to sing the perfect songAnd only by a half-tone lost the key,There is the potent sorrow, there the grief,The pale, sad staring of life's tragedy.To have just missed the perfect love,Not the hot passion of untempered youth,But that which lays aside its vanityAnd gives thee, for thy trusting worship, truth--This, this it is to be accursed indeed;For if we mortals love, or if we sing,We count our joys not by the things we have,But by what kept us from the perfect thing.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
A Ghost And A Dream
Rain will fall on the fading flowers,Winds will blow through the dripping tree,When Fall leads in her tattered HoursWith Death to keep them company.All night long in the weeping weather,All night long in the garden grey,A ghost and a dream will talk togetherAnd sad are the things they will have to say:Old sad things of the bough that's broken;Heartbreak things of the leaf that's dead;Old sad things no tongue hath spoken;Sorrowful things no man hath said.
Madison Julius Cawein
An Upbraiding
Now I am dead you sing to meThe songs we used to know,But while I lived you had no wishOr care for doing so.Now I am dead you come to meIn the moonlight, comfortless;Ah, what would I have given aliveTo win such tenderness!When you are dead, and stand to meNot differenced, as now,But like again, will you be coldAs when we lived, or how?
Thomas Hardy
Nemesis.
When through the nations stalks contagion wild,We from them cautiously should steal away.E'en I have oft with ling'ring and delayShunn'd many an influence, not to be defil'd.And e'en though Amor oft my hours beguil'd,At length with him preferr'd I not to play,And so, too, with the wretched sons of clay,When four and three-lined verses they compil'd.But punishment pursues the scoffer straight,As if by serpent-torch of furies ledFrom bill to vale, from land to sea to fly.I hear the genie's laughter at my fate;Yet do I find all power of thinking fledIn sonnet-rage and love's fierce ecstasy.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Last Words. Napoleon and Wellington
NAPOLEON.Is it this, then, O world-warrior,That, exulting, through the foldsOf the dark and cloudy barrierThine enfranchised eye beholds?Is, when blessed hands relieve theeFrom the gross and mortal clay,This the heaven that should receive thee? Tête darmée.Now the final link is breaking,Of the fierce, corroding chain,And the ships, their watch forsaking,Bid the seas no more detain,Whither is it, freed and risen,The pure spirit seeks away,Quits for what the weary prison? Tête darmée.Doubtless angels, hovering oer theeIn thine exiles sad abode,Marshalled even now before thee,Move upon that chosen road!Thither they, ere friends have laid theeWhere sad willo...
Arthur Hugh Clough
The Human Abstract
Pity would be no moreIf we did not make somebody poor,And Mercy no more could beIf all were as happy as we.And mutual fear brings Peace,Till the selfish loves increase;Then Cruelty knits a snare,And spreads his baits with care.He sits down with his holy fears,And waters the ground with tears;Then Humility takes its rootUnderneath his foot.Soon spreads the dismal shadeOf Mystery over his head,And the caterpillar and flyFeed on the Mystery.And it bears the fruit of Deceit,Ruddy and sweet to eat,And the raven his nest has madeIn its thickest shade.The gods of the earth and seaSought through nature to find this tree,But their search was all in vain:There grows one in the human ...
William Blake
In Memoriam. - Mrs. Charles N. Cadwallader,
Died at Philadelphia, July 2nd, 1859, five weeks after her marriage.The year rolls round, and brings again The bright, auspicious day,The marriage scene, the festive cheer, The group serenely gay,The hopes that nurs'd by sun and shower O'er youth's fair trellis wound,And in that consecrated rite Their full fruition found.But One unseen amid the throng Drew near with purpose fell,And lo! the orange-flowers were changed To mournful asphodel.Five sabbaths walk'd the beautiful Her chosen lord beside,But ere the sixth illumed the sky She was that dread One's bride.Yet call her not the bride of Death Though in his bed she sleeps,And broidering Myrtle richly green ...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
April On Waggon Hill
Lad, and can you rest now, There beneath your hill!Your hands are on your breast now, But is your heart so still?'Twas the right death to die, lad, A gift without regret,But unless truth's a lie, lad, You dream of Devon yet.Ay, ay, the year's awaking, The fire's among the ling,The beechen hedge is breaking, The curlew's on the wing;Primroses are out, lad, On the high banks of Lee,And the sun stirs the trout, lad; From Brendon to the sea.I know what's in your heart, lad,--- The mare he used to hunt---And her blue market-cart, lad, With posies tied in front---We miss them from the moor road, They're getting old to roam,The road they're on's a sure road And n...
Henry John Newbolt
Lines In Memory Of William Leggett.
The earth may ring, from shore to shore,With echoes of a glorious name,But he, whose loss our tears deplore,Has left behind him more than fame.For when the death-frost came to lieOn Leggett's warm and mighty heart,And quenched his bold and friendly eye,His spirit did not all depart.The words of fire that from his penWere flung upon the fervent page,Still move, still shake the hearts of men,Amid a cold and coward age.His love of truth, too warm, too strongFor Hope or Fear to chain or chill,His hate of tyranny and wrong,Burn in the breasts he kindled still.
William Cullen Bryant
A Song Of Liberty
The Eternal Female groand! it was heard over all the Earth:Albions coast is sick silent; the American meadows faint!Shadows of Prophecy shiver along by the lakes and the rivers and mutter across the ocean! France rend down thy dungeon;Golden Spain burst the barriers of old Rome;Cast thy keys O Rome into the deep down falling, even to eternity down falling,And weep!In her trembling hands she took the new, born terror howling;On those infinite mountains of light now barr'd out by the atlantic sea, the new born fire stood before the starry king!Flag'd with grey brow'd snows and thunderous visages the jealous wings wav'd over the deep.The speary hand burned aloft, unbuckled was the shield, forth went the hand of jealousy among the flaming hair, and[PL 26]hurl'd the new born wonder th...
The Virgin Mother
My little love, my darling,You were a doorway to me;You let me out of the confinesInto this strange countrie,Where people are crowded like thistles,Yet are shapely and comely to see.My little love, my dearestTwice have you issued me,Once from your womb, sweet mother,Once from myself, to beFree of all hearts, my darling,Of each heart's home-life free.And so, my love, my mother,I shall always be true to you;Twice I am born, my dearest,To life, and to death, in you;And this is the life hereafterWherein I am true.I kiss you good-bye, my darling,Our ways are different now;You are a seed in the night-time,I am a man, to ploughThe difficult glebe of the futureFor God to endow.I ki...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Face In The Tomb That Lies So Still
Face in the tomb, that lies so still, May I draw near,And watch your sleep and love you, Without word or tear.You smile, your eyelids flicker; Shall I tellHow the world goes that lost you? Shall I tell?Ah! love, lift not your eyelids; 'Tis the sameOld story that we laughed at, - Still the same.We knew it, you and I, We knew it all:Still is the small the great, The great the small;Still the cold lie quenches The flaming truth,And still embattled age Wars against youth.Yet I believe still in the ever-living God That fills your grave with perfume,Writing your name in violets across the sod, Shielding your holy face from hail and snow; ...
Richard Le Gallienne
Chapter Headings - The Light That Failed
So we settled it all when the storm was doneAs comfy as comfy could be;And I was to wait in the barn, my dears,Because I was only three;And Teddy would run to the rainbows footBecause he was five and a man;And thats how it all began, my dears,And thats how it all began!Then we brought the lances down, then the trumpets blewWhen we went to Kandahar, ridin two an two.Ridin, ridin, ridin, two an two!Ta-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra-a!All the way to Kandahar,Ridin two an two.The, wolf-cub at even lay hid in the corn,When the smoke of the cooking hung grey.He knew where the doe made a couch for her fawn,And he looked to his strength for his prey.But the moon swept the smoke-wreaths away,And he turned...
Rudyard
Richard And Kate: Or, Fair-Day. - A Suffolk Ballad.
'Come, Goody, stop your humdrum wheel,Sweep up your orts, and get your Hat;Old joys reviv'd once more I feel,'Tis Fair-day; - ay, and more than that.The Deliberation.'Have you forgot, Kate, prithee say,'How many Seasons here we've tarry'd?'Tis Forty years, this very day,'Since you and I, old Girl, were married'Look out; - the Sun shines warm and bright,'The Stiles are low, the paths all dry;'I know you cut your corns last night:'Come; be as free from care as I.'For I'm resolv'd once more to see'That place where we so often met;'Though few have had more cares than we,'We've none just now to make us fret.'Kate scorn'd to damp the generous flameThat warm'd her aged Partner's bre...
Robert Bloomfield
The Last Caesar
1851-1870INow there was one who came in later daysTo play at Emperor: in the dead of nightStole crown and sceptre, and stood forth to lightIn sudden purple. The dawn's straggling raysShowed Paris fettered, murmuring in amaze,With red hands at her throat--a piteous sight.Then the new Caesar, stricken with affrightAt his own daring, shrunk from public gazeIn the Elysee, and had lost the dayBut that around him flocked his birds of prey,Sharp-beaked, voracious, hungry for the deed.'Twixt hope and fear behold great Caesar hang!Meanwhile, methinks, a ghostly laughter rangThrough the rotunda of the Invalides.IIWhat if the boulevards, at set of sun,Reddened, but not with sunset's kindly glow?What if fr...
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
I Shall Not Care
When I am dead and over me bright AprilShakes out her rain-drenched hair,Though you should lean above me broken-hearted,I shall not care.I shall have peace, as leafy trees are peacefulWhen rain bends down the bough,And I shall be more silent and cold-heartedThan you are now.
Sara Teasdale
Broken Music
(In Memoriam)There it lies broken, as a shard,What breathed sweet music yesterday;The source, all mute, has passed awayWith its masked meanings still unmarred.But melody will never cease!Above the vast cerulean seaOf heaven, created harmonyRings and re-echoes its release!So, this dumb instrument that liesAll powerless, [with spirit flown,Beyond the veil of the UnknownTo chant its love-hymned litanies, ]Though it may thrill us here no moreWith cadenced strain, in other spheresWill rise above the vanquished yearsAnd breathe its music as before!