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The Proud Poet
(For Shaemas O Sheel)One winter night a Devil came and sat upon my bed,His eyes were full of laughter for his heart was full of crime."Why don't you take up fancy work, or embroidery?" he said,"For a needle is as manly a tool as a pen that makes a rhyme!""You little ugly Devil," said I, "go back to HellFor the idea you express I will not listen to:I have trouble enough with poetry and poverty as well,Without having to pay attention to orators like you."When you say of the making of ballads and songs that it is woman's workYou forget all the fighting poets that have been in every land.There was Byron who left all his lady-loves to fight against the Turk,And David, the Singing King of the Jews, who was born with a sword in his hand.It was y...
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
Servants.
They are but servants, say the words of scorning, As though they meant to say, we're finer clay,Yet, all the universe holds solemn warning, Against this pride in creatures of a dayIn fashion's last new folly, flaunting slowly, With white plumes tossing on the Sabbath airThey pass with scornful words a sister lowly. Do scornful lips know anything of prayer?Alas! poor human nature's inconsistence, Up to God's house we go, that we be fed;And there, as beggars begging for assistance, Say "Give us, Lord, this day our daily bread."Without a price, the priceless blessings buying Which are laid up for us, with Christ in God;To Him we come as little children crying, That He may guide us by His staff and rod,
Nora Pembroke
Dedication Poem.
Dedication Poem on the reception of the annex to the home for aged colored people, from the bequest of Mr. Edward T. Parker.Outcast from her home in Syria In the lonely, dreary wild;Heavy hearted, sorrow stricken, Sat a mother and her child.There was not a voice to cheer her Not a soul to share her fate;She was weary, he was fainting, And life seemed so desolate.Far away in sunny Egypt Was lone Hagar's native land;Where the Nile in kingly bounty Scatters bread with gracious hand.In the tents of princely Abram She for years had found a home;Till the stern decree of Sarah Sent her forth the wild to roam.Hour by hour she journeyed onward From the shelter of their tent,
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
God's Blessing.
In vain our labours are whatsoe'er they be,Unless God gives the benedicite.
Robert Herrick
Fortune
One must have courage as strongAs Sisyphus', lifting this weight!Though the heart for the work may be great,Time is fleeting, and Art is so long!Far from the tombs of the braveToward a churchyard obscure and apart,Like a muffled drum, my heartBeats a funeral march to the grave.But sleeping lies many a gemIn dark, unfathomed caves,Far from the probes of men;And many a flower wavesAnd wastes its sweet perfumesIn desert solitudes.
Charles Baudelaire
Science
Alone I climb the steep ascending pathWhich leads to knowledge. In the babbling throngsThat hurry after, shouting to the worldSmall fragments of large truths, there is not oneWho comprehends my purpose, or who seesThe ultimate great goal. Why, even she,My heaven intended Spouse, my other self,Religion, turns her beauteous face on meWith hatred in the eyes, where love should dwell.While those who call me Master blindly run,Wounding the ear of Faith with blasphemies,And making useless slaughter in my name.Mine is the difficult slow task to blazeA road of Facts, through labyrinths of dreamsTo tear down Maybe and establish IS:And substitute I Know for I Believe.I follow closely where the Seers have led:But that intangible dim path...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
They Desire A Better Country
(Macmillan's Magazine, March 1869.)II would not if I could undo my past, Tho' for its sake my future is a blank; My past, for which I have myself to thank,For all its faults and follies first and last.I would not cast anew the lot once cast, Or launch a second ship for one that sank, Or drug with sweets the bitterness I drank,Or break by feasting my perpetual fast.I would not if I could: for much more dear Is one remembrance than a hundred joys, More than a thousand hopes in jubilee; Dearer the music of one tearful voice That unforgotten calls and calls to me,'Follow me here, rise up, and follow here.'IIWhat seekest thou far in the unknown land? In hope I follow joy gon...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Spirits For Good
We come with peace and reason,We come with love and light,To banish black self-treasonAnd everlasting night.We know no god nor devil,We neither drive nor lead,We come to banish evilIn thought as well as deed.And this our grandest mission,And this our purest worth;To banish superstition,The blackest curse on earth.We come to pass no sentence,For ours is not the power,The cowards vain repentanceBut wastes the waiting hour.Tis not for us to lengthenThe years of wasted lives;We come to help and strengthenThe goodness that survives.We promise nought hereafter,We cannot conquer pain,But work, and rest, and laughter,Will soothe the tortured brain.That which is lost, ...
Henry Lawson
On Seeing A Picture Of Sacred Contemplation.
Serene she looks, she wears an angel's form,Her arching eyes are fix'd upon the sky,Gloomy, yet glist'ning 'tween black curls wip'd by,Like a bright rainbow painted on the storm:Her blue-vein'd breasts religion's comforts warm,The bible open'd on her lap doth lie.What mixing beauties in her face appear!Charms more than mortal lighten up her smiles;Strong Faith and Hope unite her soul to cheer,And Resignation makes her smiles more dear.No earthly thoughts her purity defile;As vap'ring clouds by summer's suns are driven,Sin's temptings from the scriptures' charm recoil,And all her soul transported seems in heaven.
John Clare
Spirit Of A Great Control
Spirit of a Great Control, Gird me with thy strength and might,Essence of the Over-Soul - Fill me, thrill me with thy light;Though the waves of sorrow beat Madly at my very feet,Though the night and storm are near, Teach me that I need not fear.Though the clouds obscure the sky, When the tempest sweeps the lands,Still about, below, on high, God's great solar system stands.Never yet a star went out. What have I to fear or doubt? -I, a part of this great whole, Governed by the Over-Soul.Like the great eternal hills, Like the rock that fronts the wave,Let me meet all earthly ills With a fearless heart and brave;Like the earth that drinks the rain, Let me welcome floods of p...
Despair.
We catch a glimpse of it, gaunt and gray, When the golden sunbeams are all abroad; We sober a moment, then softly say: The world still lies in the hand of God. We watch it stealthily creeping o'er The threshold leading to somebody's soul; A shadow, we cry, it cannot be more When faith is one's portion and Heaven one's goal. A ghost that comes stealing its way along, Affrighting the weak with its gruesome air, But who that is young and glad and strong Fears for a moment to meet Despair? To this heart of ours we have thought so bold All uninvited it comes one day - Lo! faith grows wan, and love grows cold, And the heaven of our dreams lies far away.
Jean Blewett
Vision
(For Aline)Homer, they tell us, was blind and could not see the beautiful faces Looking up into his own and reflecting the joy of his dream, Yet did he seemGifted with eyes that could follow the gods to their holiest places.I have no vision of gods, not of Eros with love-arrows laden, Jupiter thundering death or of Juno his white-breasted queen, Yet have I seenAll of the joy of the world in the innocent heart of a maiden.
Most Sweet It Is
Most sweet it is with unuplifted eyesTo pace the ground, if path be there or none,While a fair region round the traveler liesWhich he forbears again to look upon;Pleased rather with some soft ideal scene,The work of Fancy, or some happy toneOf meditation, slipping in betweenThe beauty coming and the beauty gone.If Thought and Love desert us, from that dayLet us break off all commerce with the Muse:With Thought and Love companions of our way,Whateer the senses take or may refuse,The Minds internal heaven shall shed her dewsOf inspiration on the humblest lay.
William Wordsworth
Jackson. A Sonnet.
Thank God for such a Hero! - Fearless hold His diamond character beneath the sun, And brighter scintillations, one by one,Come flashing from it. Never knight of oldWore on serener brow, so calm, yet bold, Diviner courage: never martyr knew Trust more sublime, - nor patriot, zeal more true, -Nor saint, self-abnegation of a mould Touched with profounder beauty. All the rare,Clear, starry points of light, that gave his soul Such lambent lustre, owned but one sole aim, - Not for himself, nor yet his country's fame,These glories shone: he kept the clustered whole A jewel for the crown that Christ shall wear!
Margaret J. Preston
The Martyr
Not only on cross and gibbet,By sword, and fire, and flood,Have perished the worlds sad martyrsWhose names are writ in blood.A woman lay in a hovel,Mean, dismal, gasping for breath;One friend alone was beside her,The name of him was, Death.For the sake of her orphan children,For money to buy them food,She had slaved in the dismal hovelAnd wasted her womanhood.Winter and Spring and SummerCame each with a load of cares;And Autumn to her brought onlyA harvest of gray hairs.Far out in the blessèd country,Beyond the smoky town,The winds of God were blowingEvermore up and down;The trees were waving signalsOf joy from the bush beyond;The gum its blue-green banner,The fern its dar...
Victor James Daley
The Voice of the Soul
In Youth, when through our veins runs fastThe bright red stream of life,The Souls Voice is a trumpet-blastThat calls us to the strife.The Spirit spurns its prison-bars,And feels with force enduedTo scale the ramparts of the starsAnd storm Infinitude.Youth passes; like a dungeon growsThe Spirits house of clay:The voice that once in music roseIn murmurs dies away.But in the day when sickness soreSmites on the bodys walls,The Souls Voice through the breach once moreLike to a trumpet calls.Well shall it be with him who heedsThe mystic summons then!His after-life with loving deedsShall blossom amongst men.He shall have gifts, the gift that feelsThe germ within the clod,And hears t...
The Sentence Of John L. Brown
Ho! thou who seekest late and longA License from the Holy BookFor brutal lust and fiendish wrong,Man of the Pulpit, look!Lift up those cold and atheist eyes,This ripe fruit of thy teaching see;And tell us how to heaven will riseThe incense of this sacrificeThis blossom of the gallows tree!Search out for slavery's hour of needSome fitting text of sacred writ;Give heaven the credit of deedWhich shames the nether pit.Kneel, smooth blasphemer, unto HimWhose truth is on thy lips a lie;Ask that His bright winged cherubimMay bend around that scaffold grimTo guard and bless and sanctify.O champion of the people's cause!Suspend thy loud and vain rebukeOf foreign wrong and Old World's laws,Man of the Senate, look!Was t...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Our Hero.
Onward to her destination, O'er the stream the Hannah sped,When a cry of consternation Smote and chilled our hearts with dread.Wildly leaping, madly sweeping, All relentless in their sway,Like a band of cruel demons Flames were closing 'round our wayOh! the horror of those moments; Flames above and waves below -Oh! the agony of ages Crowded in one hour of woe.Fainter grew our hearts with anguish In that hour with peril rife,When we saw the pilot flying, Terror-stricken, for his life.Then a man uprose before us - We had once despised his race -But we saw a lofty purpose Lighting up his darkened face.While the flames were madly roaring, With a coura...