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The Stars
These the bright symbols of man's hope and fame,In which he reads his blessing or his curseAre syllables with which God speaks his nameIn the vast utterance of the universe.
Madison Julius Cawein
Exeunt
HELEN RABY.Where the grave-deeps rot, where the grave-dews rust,They dug, crying, Earth to earth,Crying, Ashes to ashes and dust to dust,And what are my poor prayers worth?Upon whom shall I call, or in whom shall I trust,Though death were indeed new birth.And they bid me be glad for my babys sakeThat she suffered sinless and young,Would they have me be glad when my breasts still acheWhere that small, soft, sweet mouth clung?I am glad that the heart will so surely breakThat has been so bitterly wrung.He was false, they tell me, and what if he were?I can only shudder and pray,Pouring out my soul in a passionate prayerFor the soul that he cast away;Was there nothing that once was created fairIn the potter...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Colin.
Who'll dive for the dead men now,Since Colin is gone?Who'll feel for the anguished brow,Since Colin is gone?True Feeling is not confinedTo the learned or lordly mind;Nor can it be bought and soldIn exchange for an Alp of gold;For Nature, that never lies,Flings back with indignant scornThe counterfeit deed, still-born,In the face of the seeming wise,In the Janus face of the huckster raceWho barter her truths for lies.Who'll wrestle with dangers dire,Since Colin is gone?Who'll fearlessly brave the maniac wave,Thoughtless of self, human life to save,Unmoved by the storm-fiend's ire?Who, Shadrach-like, will walk through fire,Since Colin is gone?Or hang his life on so frail a breathThat there's but a step 't...
Charles Sangster
June Longings.
Lo, all about the lofty blue are blownLight vapors white, like thistle-down,That from their softened silver heaps opaqueScatter delicate flake by flake,Upon the wide loom of the heavens weavingForms of fancies past believing,And, with fantastic show of mute despair,As for some sweet hope hurt beyond repair,Melt in the silent voids of sunny air.All day the cooing brooklet runs in tune:Half sunk i' th' blue, the powdery moonShows whitely. Hark, the bobolink's note! I hear it,Far and faint as a fairy spirit!Yet all these pass, and as some blithe bird, winging,Leaves a heart-ache for his singing,A frustrate passion haunts me evermoreFor that which closest dwells to beauty's core.O Love, canst thou this heart of hope restore?
George Parsons Lathrop
Address To My Father, On His Receiving An Easy Chair From The Right Hon. Lady--------.
Calm resignation meets a happy end;And Providence, long-trusted, brings a friend.God's will be done, be patient and be good;Elisha was, and ravens brought him food:And so wast thou, my father,--fate's decreeDoom'd many evils should encompass thee;And, like Elisha, though it met thee late,Patience unwearied did not vainly wait.Thou hast, my father, long been us'd to pine,And patient borne thy pain; great pain was thine.Thou hast submitted, ah, and thou hast knownThe roughest storms that life has ever blown,Yet met them like a lamb: thou wert resign'd,And though thou pray'dst a better place to find,'Twas nought presumptuous--meekly wouldst thou crave,When pains rack'd sore, some easement in the grave;To lay thy aching body down in peace,Whe...
John Clare
Realisation
Hers was a lonely, shadowed lot;Or so the unperceiving thought,Who looked no deeper than her face,Devoid of chiselled lines of grace -No farther than her humble grate,And wondered how she bore her fate.Yet she was neither lone nor sad;So much of love her spirit had,She found an ever-flowing springOf happiness in everything.So near to her was Nature's heartIt seemed a very living partOf her own self; and bud and blade,And heat and cold, and sun and shade,And dawn and sunset, Spring and Fall,Held raptures for her, one and all.The year's four changing seasons broughtTo her own door what thousands soughtIn wandering ways and did not find -Diversion and content of mind.She loved the tasks that filled e...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Brave Alum Bey
Oh, big was the bosom of brave ALUM BEY,And also the region that under it lay,In safety and peril remarkably cool,And he dwelt on the banks of the river Stamboul.Each morning he went to his garden, to cullA bunch of zenana or sprig of bul-bul,And offered the bouquet, in exquisite bloom,To BACKSHEESH, the daughter of RAHAT LAKOUM.No maiden like BACKSHEESH could tastily cookA kettle of kismet or joint of tchibouk,As ALUM, brave fellow! sat pensively by,With a bright sympathetic ka-bob in his eye.Stern duty compelled him to leave her one day(A ship's supercargo was brave ALUM BEY)To pretty young BACKSHEESH he made a salaam,And sailed to the isle of Seringapatam."O ALUM," said she, "think again, ere you goHareems may a...
William Schwenck Gilbert
On Heaven.
Permit mine eyes to seePart, or the whole of Thee,O happy place!Where all have grace,And garlands shar'd,For their reward;Where each chaste soulIn long white stole,And palms in hand,Do ravish'd stand;So in a ring,The praises singOf Three in OneThat fill the Throne;While harps and viols thenTo voices say, Amen.
Robert Herrick
Passion Flower
Choose who will the wiser part,I have held her heart to heart;And have felt her heart-strings stirred,And her souls still singing heardFor one golden-haloed hourOf Loves life the passion-flower.So the world may roll or rest,I have tasted of its best;And shall laugh while I have breathAt thy dart and thee, O Death!
Victor James Daley
The Poet Priest
Not as of one whom multitudes admire,I believe they call him great;They throng to hear him with a strange desire;They, silent, come and wait,And wonder when he opens wide the gateOf some strange, inner temple, where the fireIs lit on many altars of many dreams --They wait to catch the gleams --And then they say,In praiseful words: "'Tis beautiful and grand."And so his wayIs strewn with many flowers, sweet and fair; And people say:"How happy he must be to win and wear Praise ev'ry day!"And all the while he stands far out the crowd, Strangely ~alone~.Is it a Stole he wears? -- or mayhap a shroud --No matter which, his spirit maketh moan;And all the while a lo...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Sunset Dreams
The moth and beetle wing aboutThe garden ways of other days;Above the hills, a fiery shoutOf gold, the day dies slowly out,Like some wild blast a huntsman blows:And o'er the hills my Fancy goes,Following the sunset's golden callUnto a vine-hung garden wall,Where she awaits me in the gloom,Between the lily and the rose,With arms and lips of warm perfume,The Dream of Love my Fancy knows.The glow-worm and the firefly glowAmong the ways of bygone days;A golden shaft shot from a bowOf silver, star and moon swing lowAbove the hills where twilight lies:And o'er the hills my Longing flies,Following the star's far, arrowed gold,Unto a gate where, as of old,She waits amid the rose and rue,With star-bright hair and nigh...
Statio Quarta
We have not seen the sun for many days,But now through East-wind hazeHe makes a shiftTo send a luminous drift,To which, as to his full unclouded splendour,The meek, contented earth makes glad surrender.God bless the simple earthThat gave me birth!God bless her that she looks so pleased,The soul thai is diseasedWith this world's sorrow,Well, sir? ought to look?Beyond, and yet beyond: not in this narrow nook of His creationWill God make up His book.The whole is one great scheme of compensationThe net resultIs all . . . I too have had my dream,As from my nonage dedicate a meustgxOf that great cult.I saw Lord Love upon his galley passWestward from Cyprus; smooth as glassThe sea was all before him. He, as keleustgx
Thomas Edward Brown
Trying
The dream of the white man ever goes out To the fight that can never be won,And ever he plans to do the things That they say can never be done.It's seldom he values the things that are What he craves he may never gain,Yet ever he tries, till the day he dies And then feels he has lived in vain.He climbs to the top of the highest hills To search out the vales afar;He bedrocks a hole on the deepest creeks He hitches his cart to a star.He's ever the first in the far stampede As he chases the rainbow's blend,But it's not the need, and it's not the greed, It's the wanting to win in the end.And whether he strives in the lofty range Or tries in the crowded mart,The longing to do what has never been don...
Pat O'Cotter
The Superwoman
What will the superwoman be, of whom we sing - She who is coming over the dim border Of Far To-morrow, after earth's disorderIs tidied up by Time? What will she bring To make life better on tempestuous earth? How will her worthBe greater than her forbears? What new powerWithin her being will burst into flower?She will bring beauty, not the transient dower Of adolescence which departs with youth - But beauty based on knowledge of the truthOf its eternal message and the sourceOf all its potent force. Her outer being by the inner thought Shall into lasting loveliness be wrought.She will bring virtue; but it will not beThe pale, white blossom of cold chastity Which hides a barren heart. She will...
Distant Hills
What is there in those distant hillsMy fancy longs to see,That many a mood of joy instils?Say what can fancy be?Do old oaks thicken all the woods,With weeds and brakes as here?Does common water make the floods,That's common everywhere?Is grass the green that clothes the ground?Are springs the common springs?Daisies and cowslips dropping round,Are such the flowers she brings?* * * * *Are cottages of mud and stone,By valley wood and glen,And their calm dwellers little knownMen, and but common men,That drive afield with carts and ploughs?Such men are common here,And pastoral maidens milking cowsAre dwelling everywhere.If so my fancy idly clingsTo notions far away,<...
Cruisers
As our mother the Frigate, bepainted and fine,Made play for her bully the Ship of the Line;So we, her bold daughters by iron and fire,Accost and decoy to our masters' desire.Now, pray you, consider what toils we endure,Night-walking wet sea-lanes, a guard and a lure;Since half of our trade is that same pretty sortAs mettlesome wenches do practise in port.For this is our office to spy and make room,As hiding yet guiding the foe to their doom;Surrounding, confounding, we bait and betrayAnd tempt them to battle the seas' width away.The pot-bellied merchant foreboding no wrongWith headlight and sidelight he lieth along,Till, lightless and lightfoot and lurking, leap weTo force him discover his business by sea.And when we hav...
Rudyard
The Way
Between the finite and the infiniteThe missing link of Love has left a void.Supply the link, and earth with Heaven will joinIn one continued chain of endless life.Hell is wherever Love is not, and HeavenIs Love's location. No dogmatic creed,No austere faith based on ignoble fearCan lead thee into realms of joy and peace.Unless the humblest creatures on the earthAre bettered by thy loving sympathyThink not to find a Paradise beyond.There is no sudden entrance into Heaven.Slow is the ascent by the path of Love.
Heart Brokken.
He wor a poor hard workin lad,An shoo a workin lass,An hard they tew'd throo day to day,For varry little brass.An oft they tawk'd o'th' weddin day,An lang'd for th' happy time,When poverty noa moor should part,Two lovers i' ther prime.But wark wor scarce, an wages low,An mait an drink wor dear,They did ther best to struggle on,As year crept after year.But they wor little better off,Nor what they'd been befoor;It tuk 'em all ther time to keepGrim Want aghtside o'th' door.Soa things went on, wol Hope at last,Gave place to dark despair;They felt they'd nowt but lovin hearts,An want an toil to share.At length he screw'd his courage upTo leeav his native shore;An goa where wealth wor worshipped less,
John Hartley