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To Electra.
Shall I go to Love and tell,Thou art all turned icicle?Shall I say her altars beDisadorn'd and scorn'd by thee?O beware! in time submit;Love has yet no wrathful fit:If her patience turns to ire,Love is then consuming fire.
Robert Herrick
On A Magazine Sonnet
"Scorn not the sonnet," though its strength be sapped, Nor say malignant its inventor blundered;The corpse that here in fourteen lines is wrapped Had otherwise been covered with a hundred.
Russell Hilliard Loines
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
Parvenu
Where does Cinderella sleep?By far-off day-dream river.A secret place her burning PrinceDecks, while his heart-strings quiver.Homesick for our cinder world,Her low-born shoulders shiver;She longs for sleep in cinders curled -We, for the day-dream river.
Vachel Lindsay
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.
Thomas Hardy
Puck's Song
See you the ferny ride that stealsInto the oak-woods far?O that was whence they hewed the keelsThat rolled to Trafalgar.And mark you where the ivy clingsTo Bayham's mouldering walls?O there we cast the stout railingsThat stand around St. Paul's.See you the dimpled track that runsAll hollow through the wheat?O that was where they hauled the gunsThat smote King Philip's fleet.(Out of the Weald, the secret Weald,Men sent in ancient years,The horse-shoes red at Flodden Field,The arrows at Poitiers!)See you our little mill that clacks,So busy by the brook?She has ground her corn and paid herEver since Domesday Book.See you our stilly woods of oak,And the dread ditch beside?O that was ...
Rudyard
And What Have You To Say
I mind the days when ladies fairHelped on my overcoat,And tucked the silken handkerchiefAbout my precious throat;They used to see the poets soulIn every song I wrote.They pleaded hard, but I had workTo do, and could not stayI used to work the whole night through,And what have you to say?Twas clever, handsome woman then,And I their rising star;I could not see they worshipped me,Because I saw too far.(Tis well for one or two, I think,That things are as they are.)(I used to write for writings sake,I used to write till day,I loved my prose and poetry,And what have you to say?)I guess if one should meet me nowThat she would gasp to think,She ever knew a thing like me,As down the s...
Henry Lawson
The White Moon Wasteth.
The white moon wasteth,And cold morn hasteth Athwart the snow,The red east burnethAnd the tide turneth, And thou must go.Think not, sad rover,Their story all over Who come from far -Once, in the agesWon goodly wages Led by a star.Once, for all dulyGuidance doth truly Shine as of old,Opens for me and theeOnce, opportunity Her gates of gold.Enter, thy star is out,Traverse nor faint nor doubt Earth's antres wild,Thou shalt find good and restAs found the Magi blest That divine Child.
Jean Ingelow
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 ...
A Dream
Was it a dream? We saild, I thought we saild,Martin and I, down a green Alpine stream,Under oerhanging pines; the morning sun,On the wet umbrage of their glossy tops,On the red pinings of their forest floor,Drew a warm scent abroad; behind the pinesThe mountain skirts, with all their sylvan changeOf bright-leafd chestnuts, and mossd walnut-trees,And the frail scarlet-berried ash, began.Swiss chalets glitterd on the dewy slopes,And from some swarded shelf high up, there cameNotes of wild pastoral music: over allRangd, diamond-bright, the eternal wall of snow.Upon the mossy rocks at the streams edge.Backd by the pines, a plank-built cottage stood,Bright in the sun; the climbing gourd-plants leavesMuffled its walls, and on the stone-stre...
Matthew Arnold
The Death Of Autumn.
Discrowned and desolate,And wandering with dim eyes and faded hair,Singing sad songs to comfort her despair, Grey Autumn meets her fate. Forsaken and aloneShe haunts the ruins of her queenly state,Like banished Eve at Eden's flaming gate, Making perpetual moan. Crazed with her grief she movesAlong the banks of the frost-charmed rills,And all the hollows of the wooded hills, Searching for her lost loves. From verdurous base to cope,The sunny hill-sides, and sweet pasture lands,Where bubbling brooks reach ever-dimpled hands Along the amber slope,-- And valleys drowsed between,In the ...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Verses In An Album.
Far above the hollowTempest, and its moan,Singeth bright ApolloIn his golden zone, -Cloud doth never shade him,Nor a storm invade him,On his joyous throne.So when I behold meIn an orb as bright,How thy soul doth fold meIn its throne of light!Sorrow never paineth,Nor a care attainethTo that blessed height.
Thomas Hood
Dead Men's Love
There was a damned successful Poet;There was a Woman like the Sun.And they were dead. They did not know it.They did not know their time was done.They did not know his hymnsWere silence; and her limbs,That had served Love so well,Dust, and a filthy smell.And so one day, as ever of old,Hands out, they hurried, knee to knee;On fire to cling and kiss and holdAnd, in the other's eyes, to seeEach his own tiny face,And in that long embraceFeel lip and breast grow warmTo breast and lip and arm.So knee to knee they sped again,And laugh to laugh they ran, I'm told,Across the streets of Hell . . .And thenThey suddenly felt the wind blow cold,And knew, so closely pressed,Chill air on lip and breast,And,...
Rupert Brooke
In The Winter
In the winter, flowers are springing;In the winter, woods are green,Where our banished birds are singing,Where our summer sun is seen!Our cold midnights are coevalWith an evening and a mornWhere the forest-gods hold revel,And the spring is newly born!While the earth is full of fighting,While men rise and curse their day,While the foolish strong are smiting,And the foolish weak betray--The true hearts beyond are growing,The brave spirits work alone,Where Love's summer-wind is blowingIn a truth-irradiate zone!While we cannot shape our livingTo the beauty of our skies,While man wants and earth is giving--Nature calls and man denies--How the old worlds round Him gatherWhere their Maker is their sun!Ho...
George MacDonald
Those Evening Bells.
Those evening bells, those evening bells,How many a tale their music tells, -Of Yorkshire cakes and crumpets prime,And letters only just in time!The Muffin-boy has passed away,The Postman gone - and I must pay,For down below Deaf Mary dwells,And does not hear those Evening Bells.[1]And so 'twill be when she is gone,That tuneful peal will still ring on,And other maids with timely yellsForget to stay those Evening Bells.
Others Save With Fear
Some men there are who stand so straight,So equipoised, that others' fateSeems to depend on their behest;And useless all our every questTo gain perfection or renown,Unless we touch the flowing gownOf these high-priests, whose shadows fallWithin themselves, if fall at all.Others are not as straight as these,But more like rough and gnarled trees;But little beauty they display;Shadows they cast across the way;And from them men with scorning turn,Or, if they speak, their accents burnLike capsicum on chafed skin,And leave a smarting wound within.Once noble men, when turned asideBy fleshly lust or sinful pride,Each one becomes a broken bellOn which the angry fiends of hellRing out their discord, harsh and loud,
Joseph Horatio Chant
The Wandering Bard.
What life like that of the bard can be--The wandering bard, who roams as freeAs the mountain lark that o'er him sings,And, like that lark, a music bringsWithin him, where'er he comes or goes,--A fount that for ever flows!The world's to him like some playground,Where fairies dance their moonlight round;--If dimmed the turf where late they trod,The elves but seek some greener sod;So, when less bright his scene of glee,To another away flies he!Oh, what would have been young Beauty's doom,Without a bard to fix her bloom?They tell us, in the moon's bright round,Things lost in this dark world are found;So charms, on earth long past and gone,In the poet's lay live on.--Would ye have smiles that ne'er grow dim?You've only to giv...
Thomas Moore
Drying their Wings
(Moon Poems for the Children/Fairy-tales for the Children) (What the Carpenter Said) The moon's a cottage with a door. Some folks can see it plain. Look, you may catch a glint of light, A sparkle through the pane, Showing the place is brighter still Within, though bright without. There, at a cosy open fire Strange babes are grouped about. The children of the wind and tide - The urchins of the sky, Drying their wings from storms and things So they again can fly.