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Natural Theology
PrimitiveI ate my fill of a whale that diedAnd stranded after a month at sea. . . .There is a pain in my inside.Why have the Gods afflicted me?Ow! I am purged till I am a wraith!Wow! I am sick till I cannot see!What is the sense of Religion and Faith:Look how the Gods have afflicted me!PaganHow can the skin of rat or mouse holdAnything more than a harmless flea?. . .The burning plague has taken my household.Why have my Gods afflicted me?All my kith and kin are deceased,Though they were as good as good could be,I will out and batter the family priest,Because my Gods have afflicted me!MedievalMy privy and well drain into each otherAfter the custom of Christendie. . . .F...
Rudyard
At School-Close
Bowdoin Street, Boston, 1877.The end has come, as come it mustTo all things; in these sweet June daysThe teacher and the scholar trustTheir parting feet to separate ways.They part: but in the years to beShall pleasant memories cling to each,As shells bear inland from the seaThe murmur of the rhythmic beach.One knew the joy the sculptor knowsWhen, plastic to his lightest touch,His clay-wrought model slowly growsTo that fine grace desired so much.So daily grew before her eyesThe living shapes whereon she wrought,Strong, tender, innocently wise,The child's heart with the woman's thought.And one shall never quite forgetThe voice that called from dream and play,The firm but kindly hand that set<...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Invocation To The Earth, February 1816
I"Rest, rest, perturbed Earth!O rest, thou doleful Mother of Mankind!"A Spirit sang in tones more plaintive than the wind:"From regions where no evil thing has birthI come thy stains to wash away,Thy cherished fetters to unbind,And open thy sad eyes upon a milder day.The Heavens are thronged with martyrs that have risenFrom out thy noisome prison;The penal caverns groanWith tens of thousands rent from off the treeOf hopeful life, by battle's whirlwind blownInto the deserts of Eternity.Unpitied havoc! Victims unlamented!But not on high, where madness is resented,And murder causes some sad tears to flow,Though, from the widely-sweeping blow,The choirs of Angels spread, triumphantly augmented.II"False Pare...
William Wordsworth
Freedom
I.O thou so fair in summers gone,While yet thy fresh and virgin soulInformd the pillard Parthenon,The glittering Capitol;II.So fair in southern sunshine bathed,But scarce of such majestic mienAs here with forehead vapor-swathedIn meadows ever green;III.For thouwhen Athens reignd and Rome,Thy glorious eyes were dimmd with painTo mark in many a freemans homeThe slave, the scourge, the chain;IV.O follower of the Vision, stillIn motion to the distant gleamHoweer blind force and brainless willMay jar thy golden dreamV.Of Knowledge fusing class with class,Of civic Hate no more to be,Of Love to leaven a...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Blind and the Dead
She lay like a saint on her copper couch; Like an angel asleep she lay, In the stare of the ghoulish folks that slouch Past the Dead and sneak away. Then came old Jules of the sightless gaze, Who begged in the streets for bread. Each day he had come for a year of days, And groped his way to the Dead. "What's the Devil's Harvest to-day?" he cried; "A wanton with eyes of blue! I've known too many a such," he sighed; "Maybe I know this . . . mon Dieu!" He raised the head of the heedless Dead; He fingered the frozen face. . . . Then a deathly spell on the watchers fell - God! it was still, that place! He raised the head of the careless Dead; He fumbled a vagrant cu...
Robert William Service
To One Shortly To Die
From all the rest I single out you, having a message for you:You are to die Let others tell you what they please, I cannot prevaricate,I am exact and merciless, but I love you There is no escape for you.Softly I lay my right hand upon you you just feel it,I do not argue I bend my head close, and half envelope it,I sit quietly by I remain faithful,I am more than nurse, more than parent or neighbor,I absolve you from all except yourself, spiritual, bodily that is eternal you yourself will surely escape,The corpse you will leave will be but excrementitious.The sun bursts through in unlooked-for directions!Strong thoughts fill you, and confidence you smile!You forget you are sick, as I forget you are sick,You do not see the medicines you do not mind the weepin...
Walt Whitman
Earth To Earth
What is the soul? Is it the windAmong the branches of the mind?Is it the sea against Time's shoreBreaking and broken evermore?Is it the shore that breaks Time's sea,The verge of vast Eternity?And in the night is it the soulSleep needs must hush, must needs kiss whole?Or does the soul, secure from sleep,Safe its bright sanctities yet keep?And oh, before the body's deathShall the confined soul ne'er gain breath,But ever to this serpent fleshSubdue its alien self afresh?Is it a bird that shuns earth's night,Or makes with song earth's darkness bright?Is it indeed a thought of God,Or merest clod-fellow to clod?A thought of God, and yet subduedTo any passion's apish mood?Itself a God--and yet, O God,As like to earth as c...
John Frederick Freeman
The Question
Beside us in our seeking after pleasures, Through all our restless striving after fame,Through all our search for worldly gains and treasures, There walketh one whom no man likes to name.Silent he follows, veiled of form and feature, Indifferent if we sorrow or rejoice,Yet that day comes when every living creature Must look upon his face and hear his voice.When that day comes to you, and Death, unmasking, Shall bar your path, and say, "Behold the end,"What are the questions that he will be asking About your past? Have you considered, friend?I think he will not chide you for your sinning, Nor for your creeds or dogmas will he care;He will but ask, "From your life's first beginning How many burdens have you helped to be...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Song. Hope.
And said I that all hope was fled,That sorrow and despair were mine,That each enthusiast wish was dead,Had sank beneath pale Misery's shrine. -Seest thou the sunbeam's yellow glow,That robes with liquid streams of light;Yon distant Mountain's craggy brow.And shows the rocks so fair, - so bright -Tis thus sweet expectation's ray,In softer view shows distant hours,And portrays each succeeding day,As dressed in fairer, brighter flowers, -The vermeil tinted flowers that blossom;Are frozen but to bud anew,Then sweet deceiver calm my bosom,Although thy visions be not true, -Yet true they are, - and I'll believe,Thy whisperings soft of love and peace,God never made thee to deceive,'Tis sin that bade thy empire...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Sonnet XXIX.
My weary life, that lives unsatisfiedOn the foiled off-brink of being e'er but this,To whom the power to will hath been deniedAnd the will to renounce doth also miss;My sated life, with having nothing sated,In the motion of moving poisèd aye,Within its dreams from its own dreams abated--This life let the Gods change or take away.For this endless succession of empty hours,Like deserts after deserts, voidly one,Doth undermine the very dreaming powersAnd dull even thought's active inaction, Tainting with fore-unwilled will the dreamed act Twice thus removed from the unobtained fact.
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
Apostasy
Et Judas m'a dit: Traître!- Victor HugoITruths change with time, and terms with truth. To-dayA statesman worships union, and to-nightDisunion. Shame to have sinned against the lightConfounds not but impels his tongue to unsayWhat yestereve he swore. Should fear make wayFor treason? honour change her livery? frightClasp hands with interest? wrong pledge faith with right?Religion, mercy, conscience, answer, Yea.To veer is not to veer: when votes are weighed,The numerous tongue approves him renegadeWho cannot change his banner: he that canSits crowned with wreaths of praise too pure to fade.Truth smiles applause on treason's poisonous plan:And Cleon is an honourable man.IIPure faith, fond hope, sweet love, with God f...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Lover Mourns For The Loss Of Love
Pale brows, still hands and dim hair,I had a beautiful friendAnd dreamed that the old despairWould end in love in the end:She looked in my heart one dayAnd saw your image was there;She has gone weeping away.
William Butler Yeats
Perle Des Jardins.
What am I, and what is heWho can cull and tear a heart,As one might a rose for sportIn its royalty?What am I, that he has madeAll this love a bitter foam,Blown about a life of loamThat must break and fade?He who of my heart could makeHollow crystal where his faceLike a passion had its placeHoly and then break!Shatter with insensate jeers! -But these weary eyes are dry,Tearless clear, and if I dieThey shall know no tears.Yet my heart weeps; - let it weep!Let it weep in sullen pain,And this anguish in my brainCry itself to sleep.Ah! the afternoon is warm,And yon fields are glad and fair;Many happy creatures thereThro' the woodland swarm.All the summer land is stil...
Madison Julius Cawein
Unity In Space.
Take me away into a storm of snowSo white and soft, I feel no deathly chill,But listen to the murmuring overflowOf clouds that fall in many a frosty rill!Take me away into the sunset's glow,That holds a summer in a glorious bloom;Or take me to the shadowed woods that growOn the sky's mountains, in the evening gloom!Give me an entrance to the limpid lakeWhen moonbeams shine across its purity!A life there is, within the life we takeSo commonly, for which 't were well to die.
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Lot's Wife
And the just man trailed God's shining agent,over a black mountain, in his giant track,while a restless voice kept harrying his woman:"It's not too late, you can still look backat the red towers of your native Sodom,the square where once you sang, the spinning-shed,at the empty windows set in the tall housewhere sons and daughters blessed your marriage-bed."A single glance: a sudden dart of painstitching her eyes before she made a sound . . .Her body flaked into transparent salt,and her swift legs rooted to the ground.Who will grieve for this woman? Does she not seemtoo insignificant for our concern?Yet in my heart I never will deny her,who suffered death because she chose to turn.
Anna Akhmatova
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XIX
Woe to thee, Simon Magus! woe to you,His wretched followers! who the things of God,Which should be wedded unto goodness, them,Rapacious as ye are, do prostituteFor gold and silver in adultery!Now must the trumpet sound for you, since yoursIs the third chasm. Upon the following vaultWe now had mounted, where the rock impendsDirectly o'er the centre of the foss.Wisdom Supreme! how wonderful the art,Which thou dost manifest in heaven, in earth,And in the evil world, how just a meedAllotting by thy virtue unto all!I saw the livid stone, throughout the sidesAnd in its bottom full of apertures,All equal in their width, and circular each,Nor ample less nor larger they appear'dThan in Saint John's fair dome of me belov'dThose fr...
Dante Alighieri
He Wishes His Beloved Were Dead
Were you but lying cold and dead,And lights were paling out of the West,You would come hither, and bend your head,And I would lay my head on your breast;And you would murmur tender words,Forgiving me, because you were dead:Nor would you rise and hasten away,Though you have the will of the wild birds,But know your hair was bound and woundAbout the stars and moon and sun:O would, beloved, that you layUnder the dock-leaves in the ground,While lights were paling one by one.
Fallen Majesty
Although crowds gathered once if she but showed her face,And even old mens eyes grew dim, this hand alone,Like some last courtier at a gypsy camping place,Babbling of fallen majesty, records whats gone.The lineaments, a heart that laughter has made sweet,These, these remain, but I record whats gone. A crowdWill gather, and not know it walks the very streetWhereon a thing once walked that seemed a burning cloud.