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The Trickster.
'Twas the turn o' the nicht when a' was quateAn' niver a licht to see,That Death cam' stappin' the clachan throughAs the kirk knock chappit three.An' even forrit he keepit the road,Nor lookin' to either side,But heidin' straucht for the eastmost hooseWhaur an auld wife used to bide.Wi' ae lang stride he passed her door,Nor sign he niver gae nane,Save pu'in' a sprig o' the rowan treeTo flick on her window pane."An' is this to be a' my warnin', Death?I'm fourscore year an' four,Yet niver a drogue has crossed my lipsNor a doctor crossed my door.""I dinna seek to be forcy, wife,But I hinna a meenute to tyne,An' ye see ye're due for a transfer nooTo the Session books frae mine.""At ilka cryin' I'...
David Rorie
Written In An Album.
Judge we of coming, by the by-past, years,And still can Hope, the siren, soothe our fears?Cheated, deceived, our cherished day-dreams o'er,We cling the closer, and we trust the more.Oh, who can say there's bliss in the reviewOf hours, when Hope with fairy fingers drewA magic sketch of "rapture yet to be,"A rainbow horizon, a life of glee!The world all bright before us vivid sceneOf cloudless sunshine and of fadeless green;A treacherous picture of our coming years,Bright in prospective welcomed but with tears.How false the view, a backward glance will tell!A tale of visions wrecked, of broken spell,Of valued hearts estranged or careless grown,Affection's links dissevered or unknown;Of joys, deemed fadeless, gone to swift decay,And lo...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
The Dying Lover
I cannot change, as others do,Though you unjustly scorn;Since that poor swain that sighs for you,For you alone was born.No, Phyllis, no, your heart to moveA surer way I'll try:And to revenge my slighted love,Will still love on, will still love on, and die.When, killed with grief, Amintas liesAnd you to mind shall call,The sighs that now unpitied rise,The tears that vainly fall,That welcome hour that ends this smartWill then begin your pain;For such a faithful tender heartCan never break, can never break in vain.
John Wilmot
Love and Grief.
One day, when Love and Summer both were young, Love in a garden found my lady weeping; Whereat, when he to kiss her would have sprung, I stayed his childish leaping. "Forbear," said I, "she is not thine to-day; Subdue thyself in silence to await her; If thou dare call her from Death's side away Thou art no Love, but traitor. Yet did he run, and she his kiss received, "She is twice mine," he cried, "since she is troubled; I knew but half, and now I see her grieved My part in her is doubled."
Henry John Newbolt
Song For The Night Of Christ's Resurrection.
(A Humble Imitation.)"And birds of calm sit brooding on the charméd wave." It is the noon of night, And the world's Great LightGone out, she widow-like doth carry her: The moon hath veiled her face, Nor looks on that dread placeWhere He lieth dead in sealéd sepulchre; And heaven and hades, emptied, lendTheir flocking multitudes to watch and wait the end. Tier above tier they rise, Their wings new line the skies,And shed out comforting light among the stars; But they of the other place The heavenly signs deface,The gloomy brand of hell their brightness mars; Yet high they sit in thronéd state, -It is the hour of darkness to them dedicate. And first and highest set,...
Jean Ingelow
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XXVI
Florence exult! for thou so mightilyHast thriven, that o'er land and sea thy wingsThou beatest, and thy name spreads over hell!Among the plund'rers such the three I foundThy citizens, whence shame to me thy son,And no proud honour to thyself redounds.But if our minds, when dreaming near the dawn,Are of the truth presageful, thou ere longShalt feel what Prato, (not to say the rest)Would fain might come upon thee; and that chanceWere in good time, if it befell thee now.Would so it were, since it must needs befall!For as time wears me, I shall grieve the more.We from the depth departed; and my guideRemounting scal'd the flinty steps, which lateWe downward trac'd, and drew me up the steep.Pursuing thus our solitary wayAmong the cr...
Dante Alighieri
Churchill's Grave,[59]
A Fact Literally Rendered.[60]I stood beside the grave of him who blazedThe Comet of a season, and I sawThe humblest of all sepulchres, and gazedWith not the less of sorrow and of aweOn that neglected turf and quiet stone,With name no clearer than the names unknown,Which lay unread around it; and I askedThe Gardener of that ground, why it might beThat for this plant strangers his memory tasked,Through the thick deaths of half a century;And thus he answered - "Well, I do not knowWhy frequent travellers turn to pilgrims so;He died before my day of Sextonship,And I had not the digging of this grave."And is this all? I thought, - and do we ripThe veil of Immortality, and craveI know not what of honour and of lightThroug...
George Gordon Byron
The Levelled Churchyard
"O passenger, pray list and catchOur sighs and piteous groans,Half stifled in this jumbled patchOf wrenched memorial stones!"We late-lamented, resting here,Are mixed to human jam,And each to each exclaims in fear,'I know not which I am!'"The wicked people have annexedThe verses on the good;A roaring drunkard sports the textTeetotal Tommy should!"Where we are huddled none can trace,And if our names remain,They pave some path or p-ing placeWhere we have never lain!"There's not a modest maiden elfBut dreads the final Trumpet,Lest half of her should rise herself,And half some local strumpet!"From restorations of Thy fane,From smoothings of Thy sward,From zealous Churchmen's pick and ...
Thomas Hardy
The Countess - To E. W.
I know not, Time and Space so intervene,Whether, still waiting with a trust serene,Thou bearest up thy fourscore years and ten,Or, called at last, art now Heavens citizen;But, here or there, a pleasant thought of thee,Like an old friend, all day has been with me.The shy, still boy, for whom thy kindly handSmoothed his hard pathway to the wonder-landOf thought and fancy, in gray manhood yetKeeps green the memory of his early debt.To-day, when truth and falsehood speak their wordsThrough hot-lipped cannon and the teeth of swords,Listening with quickened heart and ear intentTo each sharp clause of that stern argument,I still can hear at times a softer noteOf the old pastoral music round me float,While through the hot gleam of our civil strife
John Greenleaf Whittier
Ghazal Of Sayyid Ahmad
My heart is torn by the tyranny of women very quietly;Day and night my tears are wearing away my cheeks very quietly.Life is a red thing like the sun setting very quietly;Setting quickly and heavily and very quietly.If you are to buy heaven by a good deed, to-day the market is open;To-morrow is a day when no man buys,And the caravan is broken up very quietly.The kings are laughing and the slaves are laughing; but for your sakeSayyid Ahmad is walking and mourning very quietly.From the Pus'hto (Afghans, nineteenth century).
Edward Powys Mathers
Blood Road
The Old Year groaned as he trudged away,His guilty shadow black on the snow,And the heart of the glad New Year turned greyAt the road Time bade him go."O Gaffer Time, is it blood-road still?Is the noontide dark as the stormy morn?Is man's will yet as a wild beast's will?When shall the Christ be born?"He laughed as he answered, grim Gaffer Time,Whose laugh is sadder than all men's moan."That name rides high on our wrath and crime,For the Light in darkness shone."And thou, fair youngling, wilt mend the tale?"The New Year stared on the misty word,Where at foot of a cross all lustrous paleMen raged for their gods of gold."Come back, Old Year, with thy burden bent.Come back and settle thine own dark debt.""Nay, le...
Katharine Lee Bates
Faith
Since all that is was ever bound to be;Since grim, eternal laws our Being bind;And both the riddle and the answer find,And both the carnage and the calm decree;Since plain within the Book of DestinyIs written all the journey of mankindInexorably to the end; since blindAnd mortal puppets playing parts are we:Then let's have faith; good cometh out of ill;The power that shaped the strife shall end the strife;Then let's bow down before the Unknown Will;Fight on, believing all is well with life;Seeing within the worst of War's red rageThe gleam, the glory of the Golden Age.
Robert William Service
On An Icicle That Clung To The Grass Of A Grave.
1.Oh! take the pure gem to where southerly breezes,Waft repose to some bosom as faithful as fair,In which the warm current of love never freezes,As it rises unmingled with selfishness there,Which, untainted by pride, unpolluted by care,Might dissolve the dim icedrop, might bid it arise,Too pure for these regions, to gleam in the skies.2.Or where the stern warrior, his country defending,Dares fearless the dark-rolling battle to pour,Or o'er the fell corpse of a dread tyrant bending,Where patriotism red with his guilt-reeking gorePlants Liberty's flag on the slave-peopled shore,With victory's cry, with the shout of the free,Let it fly, taintless Spirit, to mingle with thee.3.For I found the pure gem, when the daybeam returning,<...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
From The Far West
Tis a song of the Never Never landSet to the tune of a scorching galeOn the sandhills red,When the grasses deadLoudly rustle, and bow the headTo the breath of its dusty hail:Where the cattle trample a dusty padAcross the never-ending plain,And come and goWith muttering lowIn the time when the rivers cease to flow,And the Drought King holds his reign;When the fiercest piker who ever turnedWith lowered head in defiance proud,Grown gaunt and weak,Release doth seekIn vain from the depths of the slimy creekHis sepulchre and his shroud;His requiem sung by an insect host,Born of the pestilential air,That seethe and swarmIn hideous formWhere the stagnant waters lie thick and warm,And Fever lur...
Barcroft Boake
Night
Into the darkness and the hush of night Slowly the landscape sinks, and fades away, And with it fade the phantoms of the day, The ghosts of men and things, that haunt the light,The crowd, the clamor, the pursuit, the flight, The unprofitable splendor and display, The agitations, and the cares that prey Upon our hearts, all vanish out of sight.The better life begins; the world no more Molests us; all its records we erase From the dull common-place book of our lives,That like a palimpsest is written o'er With trivial incidents of time and place, And lo! the ideal, hidden beneath, revives.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Stone Guide
She was fading - into the stone into rifled shadows heavy with fallen light, rippled boughs of splitting fruit & droopy leaves to a sallow body under clumsy years that ripped the tunic of her coat while bleating the dismal age with each petal fall of a stockinged foot.
Paul Cameron Brown
Cassinus And Peter; A Tragical Elegy
Two college sophs of Cambridge growth,Both special wits and lovers both,Conferring, as they used to meet,On love, and books, in rapture sweet;(Muse, find me names to fit my metre,Cassinus this, and t'other Peter.)Friend Peter to Cassinus goes,To chat a while, and warm his nose:But such a sight was never seen,The lad lay swallow'd up in spleen.He seem'd as just crept out of bed;One greasy stocking round his head,The other he sat down to darn,With threads of different colour'd yarn;His breeches torn, exposing wideA ragged shirt and tawny hide.Scorch'd were his shins, his legs were bare,But well embrown'd with dirt and hairA rug was o'er his shoulders thrown,(A rug, for nightgown he had none,)His jordan stood in manner fitt...
Jonathan Swift
A Nameless Grave
"A soldier of the Union mustered out," Is the inscription on an unknown grave At Newport News, beside the salt-sea wave, Nameless and dateless; sentinel or scoutShot down in skirmish, or disastrous rout Of battle, when the loud artillery drave Its iron wedges through the ranks of brave And doomed battalions, storming the redoubt.Thou unknown hero sleeping by the sea In thy forgotten grave! with secret shame I feel my pulses beat, my forehead burn,When I remember thou hast given for me All that thou hadst, thy life, thy very name, And I can give thee nothing in return.