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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
In Early Spring
O Spring, I know thee! Seek for sweet surprise In the young children's eyes.But I have learnt the years, and know the yet Leaf-folded violet.Mine ear, awake to silence, can foretell The cuckoo's fitful bell.I wander in a grey time that encloses June and the wild hedge-roses.A year's procession of the flowers doth pass My feet, along the grass.And all you sweet birds silent yet, I know The notes that stir you so,Your songs yet half devised in the dim dear Beginnings of the year.In these young days you meditate your part; I have it all by heart.I know the secrets of the seeds of flowers Hidden and warm with showers,And how, in kindling Spring, the cuckoo shall Alter his interval.But not ...
Alice Meynell
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.
Vachel Lindsay
Mountain Song (From A Happy Boy)
When you will the mountains roamAnd your pack are making,Put therein not much from home,Light shall be your taking!Drag no valley-fetters strongTo those upland spaces,Toss them with a joyous songTo the mountains' bases!Birds sing Hail! from many a bough,Gone the fools' vain talking,Purer breezes fan your brow,You the heights are walking.Fill your breast and sing with joy!Childhood's mem'ries starting,Nod with blushing cheeks and coy,Bush and heather parting.If you stop and listen long,You will hear upwellingSolitude's unmeasured songTo your ear full swelling;And when now there purls a brook,Now stones roll and tumble,Hear the duty you forsookIn a world-wide rumble.Fear, but pray, you a...
Bjørnstjerne Martinius Bjørnson
The Night Is Darkening Around Me
The night is darkening round me,The wild winds coldly blow ;But a tyrant spell has bound me,And I cannot, cannot go.The giant trees are bendingTheir bare boughs weighed with snow;The storm is fast descending,And yet I cannot go.Clouds beyond clouds above me,Wastes beyond wastes below;But nothing drear can move me:I will not, cannot go.
Emily Bronte
Adieu!
"Adieu, my love, adieu!Be constant and be trueAs the daisies gemmed with dew,Bonny maid."The cows their thirst were slaking,Trees the playful winds were shaking;Sweet songs the birds were makingIn the shade.The moss upon the treeWas as green as green could be,The clover on the leaRuddy glowed;Leaves were silver with the dew,Where the tall sowthistles grew,And I bade the maid adieuOn the road.Then I took myself to sea,While the little chiming beeSung his ballad on the lea,Humming sweet;And the red-winged butterflyWas sailing through the sky,Skimming up and bouncing byNear my feet.I left the little birds,And sweet lowing of the herds,And couldn't find out words,Do...
John Clare
An Exile's Song
My soul is like a prisoned lark, That sings and dreams of liberty,The nights are long, the days are dark, Away from home, away from thee!My only joy is in my dreams, When I thy loving face can see.How dreary the awakening seems, Away from home, away from thee!At dawn I hasten to the shore, To gaze across the sparkling sea--The sea is bright to me no more, Which parts me from my home and thee.At twilight, when the air grows chill, And cold and leaden is the sea,My tears like bitter dews distil, Away from home, away from thee.I could not live, did I not know That thou art ever true to me,I could not bear a doubtful woe, Away from home, away from thee.I could not l...
Robert Fuller Murray
Dreams.
Let me not mar that perfect dreamBy an auroral stain,But so adjust my daily nightThat it will come again.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Impromptu,
Written among the ruins of the Sonnenberg.Thou who within thyself dost not beholdRuins as great as these, though not as old,Can'st scarce through life have travelled many a year,Or lack'st the spirit of a pilgrim here.Youth hath its walls of strength, its towers of pride;Love, its warm hearth-stones; Hope, its prospects wide;Life's fortress in thee, held these one, and all,And they have fallen to ruin, or shall fall.
Frances Anne Kemble
Hymn To Death.
Oh! could I hope the wise and pure in heartMight hear my song without a frown, nor deemMy voice unworthy of the theme it tries,I would take up the hymn to Death, and sayTo the grim power: The world hath slandered theeAnd mocked thee. On thy dim and shadowy browThey place an iron crown, and call thee kingOf terrors, and the spoiler of the world,Deadly assassin, that strik'st down the fair,The loved, the good, that breathest on the lightsOf virtue set along the vale of life,And they go out in darkness. I am come,Not with reproaches, not with cries and prayers,Such as have stormed thy stern, insensible earfrom the beginning. I am come to speakThy praises. True it is, that I have weptThy conquests, and may weep them yet again:And thou from so...
William Cullen Bryant
The Humble-Bee
Burly, dozing humble-bee,Where thou art is clime for me.Let them sail for Porto Rique,Far-off heats through seas to seek;I will follow thee alone,Thou animated torrid-zone!Zigzag steerer, desert cheerer,Let me chase thy waving lines;Keep me nearer, me thy hearer,Singing over shrubs and vines.Insect lover of the sun,Joy of thy dominion!Sailor of the atmosphere;Swimmer through the waves of air;Voyager of light and noon;Epicurean of June;Wait, I prithee, till I comeWithin earshot of thy hum,--All without is martyrdom.When the south wind, in May days,With a net of shining hazeSilvers the horizon wall,And with softness touching all,Tints the human countenanceWith a color of romance,An...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Heat.
The fickle sun that had the earth caress'd And quickened all her amorous desire, And brought fresh roses to adorn her breast, Now spurned her in the madness of his ire; A haze of heat half hid the mountain's crest; The very river seemed of liquid fire; The air was flame, the town a stifling pale, And all the land was like a Hinnom's Vale. I thought of Hagar and what she endured, Faint in the desert, driv'n from Sara's sight; Of angry Jonah underneath his gourd, Grown in a night and withered in a night; Of the sun-stricken lad Elisha cured For the good, hospitable Shunammite; And of the fiery furnace made to glow For Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego. I called t...
W. M. MacKeracher
To Madame Jumel
Of all the wind-blown dust of faces fair,Had I a god's re-animating breath,Thee, like a perfumed torch in the dim airLethean and the eyeless halls of death,Would I relume; the cresset of thine hair,Furiously bright, should stream across the gloom,And thy deep violet eyes again should bloom.Methinks that but a pinch of thy wild dust,Blown back to flame, would set our world on fire;Thy face amid our timid counsels thrustWould light us back to glory and desire,And swords flash forth that now ignobly rust;Maenad and Muse, upon thy lips of flame.Madness too wise might kiss a clod to fame.Like musk the charm of thee in the gray mouldThat lies on by-gone traffickings of state,Transformed a moment by that head of gold,Touching the pal...
Richard Le Gallienne
My Star
All that I knowOf a certain star,Is, it can throw(Like the angled spar)Now a dart of red,Now a dart of blue,Till my friends have saidThey would fain see, too,My star that dartles the red and the blue!Then it stops like a bird; like a flower, hangs furled:They must solace themselves with the Saturn above it.What matter to me if their star is a world?Mine has opened its soul to me; therefore I love it.
Robert Browning
The Choirmaster's Burial
He often would ask usThat, when he died,After playing so manyTo their last rest,If out of us anyShould here abide,And it would not task us,We would with our lutesPlay over himBy his grave-brimThe psalm he liked best -The one whose sense suits"Mount Ephraim" -And perhaps we should seemTo him, in Death's dream,Like the seraphim.As soon as I knewThat his spirit was goneI thought this his due,And spoke thereupon."I think," said the vicar,"A read service quickerThan viols out-of-doorsIn these frosts and hoars.That old-fashioned wayRequires a fine day,And it seems to meIt had better not be."Hence, that afternoon,Though never knew heThat his wish could not ...
Thomas Hardy
The Legend Of The Stone.
The year was dying, and the dayWas almost dead;The West, beneath a sombre gray,Was sombre red.The gravestones in the ghostly light,'Mid trees half bare,Seemed phantoms, clothed in glimmering white,That haunted there.I stood beside the grave of one,Who, here in life,Had wronged my home; who had undoneMy child and wife.I stood beside his grave untilThe moon came up -As if the dark, unhallowed hillLifted a cup.No stone was there to mark his grave,No flower to grace -'T was meet that weeds alone should waveIn such a place.I stood beside his grave untilThe stars swam high,And all the night was iron stillFrom sky to sky.What cared I if strange eyes seemed brightWithin the gloom!<...
Madison Julius Cawein
To All Young Men That Love.
I could wish you all who love,That ye could your thoughts removeFrom your mistresses, and beWisely wanton, like to me,I could wish you dispossessedOf that fiend that mars your rest,And with tapers comes to frightYour weak senses in the night.I could wish ye all who fryCold as ice, or cool as I;But if flames best like ye, then,Much good do 't ye, gentlemen.I a merry heart will keep,While you wring your hands and weep.
Robert Herrick
Sonnet.
My heart is sick with longing, tho' I feedOn hope; Time goes with such a heavy paceThat neither brings nor takes from thy embrace,As if he slept - forgetting his old speed:For, as in sunshine only we can readThe march of minutes on the dial's face,So in the shadows of this lonely placeThere is no love, and Time is dead indeed.But when, dear lady, I am near thy heart,Thy smile is time, and then so swift it flies,It seems we only meet to tear apart,With aching hands and lingering of eyes.Alas, alas! that we must learn hours' flightBy the same light of love that makes them bright!
Thomas Hood