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Days Too Short
When primroses are out in Spring,And small, blue violets come between;When merry birds sing on boughs green,And rills, as soon as born, must sing;When butterflies will make side-leaps,As though escaped from Nature's handEre perfect quite; and bees will standUpon their heads in fragrant deeps;When small clouds are so silvery whiteEach seems a broken rimmed moon,When such things are, this world too soon,For me, doth wear the veil of Night.
William Henry Davies
To A Child
Dear child! how radiant on thy mother's knee,With merry-making eyes and jocund smiles,Thou gazest at the painted tiles,Whose figures grace,With many a grotesque form and face.The ancient chimney of thy nursery!The lady with the gay macaw,The dancing girl, the grave bashawWith bearded lip and chin;And, leaning idly o'er his gate,Beneath the imperial fan of state,The Chinese mandarin.With what a look of proud commandThou shakest in thy little handThe coral rattle with its silver bells,Making a merry tune!Thousands of years in Indian seasThat coral grew, by slow degrees,Until some deadly and wild monsoonDashed it on Coromandel's sand!Those silver bellsReposed of yore,As shapeless ore,Far down in the ...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
To His Worthy Friend, M. John Hall, Student Of Gray's Inn.
Tell me, young man, or did the Muses bringThee less to taste than to drink up their spring,That none hereafter should be thought, or beA poet, or a poet-like but thee?What was thy birth, thy star that makes thee known,At twice ten years, a prime and public one?Tell us thy nation, kindred, or the whenceThou had'st and hast thy mighty influence,That makes thee lov'd, and of the men desir'd,And no less prais'd than of the maids admired.Put on thy laurel then; and in that trimBe thou Apollo or the type of him:Or let the unshorn god lend thee his lyre,And next to him be master of the choir.
Robert Herrick
Langley Bush.
O Langley Bush! the shepherd's sacred shade,Thy hollow trunk oft gain'd a look from me;Full many a journey o'er the heath I've made,For such-like curious things I love to see.What truth the story of the swain allows,That tells of honours which thy young days knew,Of "Langley Court" being kept beneath thy boughsI cannot tell--thus much I know is true,That thou art reverenc'd: even the rude clanOf lawless gipsies, driven from stage to stage,Pilfering the hedges of the husbandman,Spare thee, as sacred, in thy withering age.Both swains and gipsies seem to love thy name,Thy spot's a favourite with the sooty crew,And soon thou must depend on gipsy-fame,Thy mouldering trunk is nearly rotten through.My last doubts murmur on the zephyr's swell,My ...
John Clare
A Christmas Eve
Good fellows are laughing and drinking(To-night no heart should grieve),But I am of old days thinking,Alone, on Christmas Eve.Old memories fast are springingTo life again; old rhymesOnce more in my brain are ringing,Ah, God be with old times!There never was man so lonelyBut ghosts walked him beside,For Death our spirits can onlyBy veils of sense divide.Numberless as the blades ofGrass in the fields that grow,Around us hover the shades ofThe dead of long ago.Friends living a word estranges;We smile, and we say Adieu!But, whatsoever else changes,Dead friends are faithful and true.An old-time tune, or a flower,The simplest thing held dearIn bygone days has the powerOnce more to bring them nea...
Victor James Daley
Which
We are both of us sad at heart, But I wonder who can sayWhich has the harder part, Or the bitterer grief to-day.You grieve for a love that was lost Before it had reached its prime;I sit here and count the cost Of a love that has lived its time.Your blossom was plucked in its May, In its dawning beauty and pride;Mine lived till the August day, And reached fruition and died.You pressed its leaves in a book, And you weep sweet tears o'er them.Dry eyed I sit and look On a withered and broken stem.And now that all is told, Which is the sadder, pray,To give up your dream with its gold, Or to see it fade into grey?
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Orphan Maid of Glencoe.
NOTE: - The tale is told a few years after the massacre of Glencoe, by a wandering bard, who had formerly been piper to MacDonald of Glencoe, but had escaped the fate of his kinsmen.I tell a tale of woful tragedy,Resulting from that fearful infamy;That unsurpassed, unrivalled treachery,That merciless, that beastlike butchery.Upon the evening calm and bright,That followed on the fatal night,Just as the sun was setting redBehind Benmore's sequestered head,And weeping tears of yellow light,That, streaming down, bedimmed his sight,As he prepared to make his graveBeneath the deep Atlantic wave;I stood and viewed with starting tearsThe silent scene of glorious years,And thought me on my former pride,As when I marched my chief beside,
W. M. MacKeracher
Listening
I listen to the stillness of you,My dear, among it all;I feel your silence touch my words as I talk,And take them in thrall.My words fly off a forgeThe length of a spark;I see the night-sky easily sip themUp in the dark.The lark sings loud and glad,Yet I am not lothThat silence should take the song and the birdAnd lose them both.A train goes roaring south,The steam-flag flying;I see the stealthy shadow of silenceAlongside going.And off the forge of the world,Whirling in the draught of life,Go sparks of myriad people, fillingThe night with strife.Yet they never change the darknessOr blench it with noise;Alone on the perfect silenceThe stars are buoys.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
To My Country
O dear my Country, beautiful and dear,Love cloth not darken sight.God looketh through Love's eyes, whose vision clearBeholds more flaws than keenest Hate hath known.Nor is Love's judgment gentle, but austere;The heart of Love must break ere it condoneOne stain upon the white.There comes an hour when on the parent turnsThe challenge of the child;The bridal passion for perfection burns;Life gives her last allegiance to the best;Each sweet idolatry the spirit spurns,Once more enfranchised for its starry questOf beauty undefiled.Love must be one with honor; yet to-dayLove liveth by a sign;Allows no lasting compromise with clay,But tends the mounting miracle of gold,Content with service till the bud make wayTo the rejoi...
Katharine Lee Bates
André Le Chapelain.
(Clerk of Love, 1170.)His Plaint To Venus Of The Coming Years."Plus ne suis ce que j'ay estéEt ne le sçaurois jamais estre;Mon beau printemps et mon estéOnt fait le saut par la fenestre."Queen Venus, round whose feet,To tend thy sacred fire,With service bitter-sweetNor youths nor maidens tire;--Goddess, whose bounties beLarge as the un-oared sea;--Mother, whose eldest bornFirst stirred his stammering tongue,In the world's youngest morn,When the first daisies sprung:--Whose last, when Time shall die,In the same grave shall lie:--Hear thou one suppliant more!Must I, thy Bard, grow old,Bent, with the temples frore,Not jocund be nor bold,To tune for folk in MayBallad and ...
Henry Austin Dobson
Eliza.
Tune - "Gilderoy."I. From thee, Eliza, I must go, And from my native shore; The cruel Fates between us throw A boundless ocean's roar: But boundless oceans roaring wide Between my love and me, They never, never can divide My heart and soul from thee!II. Farewell, farewell, Eliza dear, The maid that I adore! A boding voice is in mine ear, We part to meet no more! The latest throb that leaves my heart, While death stands victor by, That throb, Eliza, is thy part, And thine that latest sigh!
Robert Burns
In The Park
This dense hard ground I tread. These iron bars that ripple past, Will they unshaken stand when I am dead And my deep thoughts outlast? Is it my spirit slips, Falls, like this leaf I kick aside; This firmness that I feel about my lips, Is it but empty pride? Mute knowledge conquers me; I contemplate them as they are, Faint earth and shadowy bars that shake and flee, Less hard, more transient far Than those unbodied hues The sunset flings on the calm river; And, as I look, a swiftness thrills my shoes And my hands with empire quiver. Now light the ground I tread, I walk not now but rather float; Clear but unreal is the scene outspread, Pitiful,...
John Collings Squire, Sir
Golden Days
Another day of toil and strife,Another page so white,Within that fateful Log of LifeThat I and all must write;Another page without a stainTo make of as I may,That done, I shall not see againUntil the Judgment Day.Ah, could I, could I backward turnThe pages of that Book,How often would I blench and burn!How often loathe to look!What pages would be meanly scrolled;What smeared as if with mud;A few, maybe, might gleam like gold,Some scarlet seem as blood.O Record grave, God guide my handAnd make me worthy be,Since what I write to-day shall standTo all eternity;Aye, teach me, Lord of Life, I pray,As I salute the sun,To bear myself that every dayMay be a Golden One.
Robert William Service
Melancholia
Silently without my window,Tapping gently at the pane,Falls the rain.Through the trees sighs the breezeLike a soul in pain.Here alone I sit and weep;Thought hath banished sleep.Wearily I sit and listenTo the water's ceaseless drip.To my lipFate turns up the bitter cup,Forcing me to sip;'T is a bitter, bitter drink,Thus I sit and think,--Thinking things unknown and awful,Thoughts on wild, uncanny themes,Waking dreams.Spectres dark, corpses stark,Show the gaping seamsWhence the cold and cruel knifeStole away their life.Bloodshot eyes all strained and staring,Gazing ghastly into mine;Blood like wineOn the brow--clotted now--Shows death's dreadful sign.Lonely vigil still ...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Cremation Of Sam Mcgee
There are strange things done in the midnight sunBy the men who moil for gold;The Arctic trails have their secret talesThat would make your blood run cold;The Northern Lights have seen queer sights,But the queerest they ever did seeWas that night on the marge of Lake LebargeI cremated Sam McGee.Now Sam McGee was from Tennessee, where the cotton blooms and blows.Why he left his home in the South to roam round the Pole God only knows.He was always cold, but the land of gold seemed to hold him like a spell;Though he'd often say in his homely way that he'd "sooner live in hell."On a Christmas Day we were mushing our way over the Dawson trail.Talk of your cold! through the parka's fold it stabbed like a driven nail.If our eyes we'd close, the...
Sonnet CLXXX.
Tutto 'l di piango; e poi la notte, quando.HER CRUELTY RENDERS LIFE WORSE THAN DEATH TO HIM. Through the long lingering day, estranged from rest,My sorrows flow unceasing; doubly flow,Painful prerogative of lover's woe!In that still hour, when slumber soothes th' unblest.With such deep anguish is my heart opprest,So stream mine eyes with tears! Of things belowMost miserable I; for Cupid's bowHas banish'd quiet from this heaving breast.Ah me! while thus in suffering, morn to mornAnd eve to eve succeeds, of death I view(So should this life be named) one-half gone by--Yet this I weep not, but another's scorn;That she, my friend, so tender and so true,Should see me hopeless burn, and yet her aid deny.WRANGHAM.
Francesco Petrarca
Men Who March Away - Song Of The Soldiers
What of the faith and fire within usMen who march awayEre the barn-cocks sayNight is growing gray,Leaving all that here can win us;What of the faith and fire within usMen who march away?Is it a purblind prank, O think you,Friend with the musing eye,Who watch us stepping byWith doubt and dolorous sigh?Can much pondering so hoodwink you!Is it a purblind prank, O think you,Friend with the musing eye?Nay. We well see what we are doing,Though some may not see -Dalliers as they be -England's need are we;Her distress would leave us rueing:Nay. We well see what we are doing,Though some may not see!In our heart of hearts believingVictory crowns the just,And that braggarts mustSurely bite ...
Thomas Hardy
To Sincerity
O sweet sincerity! -Where modern methods beWhat scope for thine and thee?Life may be sad past saying,Its greens for ever graying,Its faiths to dust decaying;And youth may have foreknown it,And riper seasons shown it,But custom cries: "Disown it:"Say ye rejoice, though grieving,Believe, while unbelieving,Behold, without perceiving!"- Yet, would men look at true things,And unilluded view things,And count to bear undue things,The real might mend the seeming,Facts better their foredeeming,And Life its disesteeming.February 1899.