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I Shall Forget
Although my life, which thou hast scarred and shaken,Retains awhile some influence of thee,As shells, by faithless waves long since forsaken,Still murmur with the music of the Sea,I shall forget. Not thine the haunting beauty,Which, once beheld, for ever holds the heart,Or, if resigned from stress of Fate or Duty,Takes part of life away: - the dearer part.I gave thee love; thou gavest but Desire.Ah, the delusion of that summer night!Thy soul vibrated at the rate of Fire;Mine, with the rhythm of the waves of Light.It is my love for thee that I regret,Not thee, thyself, and hence, - I shall forget!
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Immortal Sails
Now, in a breath, we'll burst those gates of gold, And ransack heaven before our moment fails.Now, in a breath, before we, too, grow old, We'll mount and sing and spread immortal sails.It is not time that makes eternity. Love and an hour may quite out-run the years,And give us more to hear and more to see Than life can wash away with all its tears.Dear, when we part, at last, that sunset sky Shall not be touched with deeper hues than this;But we shall ride the lightning ere we die And seize our brief infinitude of bliss,With time to spare for all that heaven can tell,While eyes meet eyes, and look their last farewell.
Alfred Noyes
Victory
Though dead the flower,That, from her tower,Love flung you in some perfect hour:Though quenched the light,That, on the height,Faith built, a beacon in the fight:Though gone the star,That, seen afar,Hope lit to guide you through the war:Yet draw your sword,And shout your word,And plunge into the battling horde!Give Fate the lie!And, live or die,Yours, yours shall be the victory!
Madison Julius Cawein
The Sprig Of Lime
He lay, and those who watched him were amazedTo see unheralded beneath the lidsTwin tears, new-gathered at the price of pain,Start and at once run crookedly athwartCheeks channelled long by pain, never by tears.So desolate too the sigh next utteredThey had wept also, but his great lips moved,And bending down one heard, 'A sprig of lime;Bring me a sprig of lime.' Whereat she stoleWith dumb signs forth to pluck the thing he craved.So lay he till a lime-twig had been snappedFrom some still branch that swept the outer grassFar from the silver pillar of the boleWhich mounting past the house's crusted roofSplit into massy limbs, crossed boughs, a mazeOf close-compacted intercontorted staffsBowered in foliage wherethrough the sunShot sudde...
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols
Demon and Beast
For certain minutes at the leastThat crafty demon and that loud beastThat plague me day and nightRan out of my sight;Though I had long perned in the gyre,Between my hatred and desire.I saw my freedom wonAnd all laugh in the sun.The glittering eyes in a death's headOf old Luke Wadding's portrait saidWelcome, and the Ormondes allNodded upon the wall,And even Strafford smiled as thoughIt made him happier to knowI understood his plan.Now that the loud beast ranThere was no portrait in the GalleryBut beckoned to sweet company,For all men's thoughts grew clearBeing dear as mine are dear.But soon a tear-drop started up,For aimless joy had made me stopBeside the little lakeTo watch a white gull takeA bit ...
William Butler Yeats
Dirge
CONCORD, 1838I reached the middle of the mountUp which the incarnate soul must climb,And paused for them, and looked around,With me who walked through space and time.Five rosy boys with morning lightHad leaped from one fair mother's arms,Fronted the sun with hope as bright,And greeted God with childhood's psalms.Knows he who tills this lonely fieldTo reap its scanty corn,What mystic fruit his acres yieldAt midnight and at morn?In the long sunny afternoonThe plain was full of ghosts;I wandered up, I wandered down,Beset by pensive hosts.The winding Concord gleamed below,Pouring as wide a floodAs when my brothers, long ago,Came with me to the wood.But they are gone,--the holy ...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Man's Dying-place Uncertain
Man knows where first he ships himself; but heNever can tell where shall his landing be.
Robert Herrick
The Souls' Rising.
See how the storm of life ascendsUp through the shadow of the world!Beyond our gaze the line extends,Like wreaths of vapour tempest-hurled!Grasp tighter, brother, lest the stormShould sweep us down from where we stand,And we may catch some human formWe know, amongst the straining band. See! see in yonder misty cloudOne whirlwind sweep, and we shall hearThe voice that waxes yet more loudAnd louder still approaching near! Tremble not, brother, fear not thou,For yonder wild and mystic strainWill bring before us strangely nowThe visions of our youth again! Listen! oh listen!See how its eyeballs roll and glistenWith a wild and fearful stareUpwards through the shining air,Or backwards with averte...
George MacDonald
Stanza From A Translation Of The Marseillaise Hymn.
Tremble, Kings despised of man!Ye traitors to your Country,Tremble! Your parricidal planAt length shall meet its destiny...We all are soldiers fit to fight,But if we sink in glory's nightOur mother Earth will give ye newThe brilliant pathway to pursueWhich leads to Death or Victory...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Heaven Is But The Hour
Eyes wide for wisdom, calm for joy or pain,Bright hair alloyed with silver, scarcely gold.And gracious lips flower pressed like buds to holdThe guarded heart against excess of rain.Hands spirit tipped through which a genius playsWith paints and clays,And strings in many keys -Clothed in an aura of thought as soundless as a floodOf sun-shine where there is no breeze.So is it light in spite of rhythm of blood,Or turn of head, or hands that move, unite -Wind cannot dim or agitate the light.From Plato's idea stepping, wholly wroughtFrom Plato's dream, made manifest in hair,Eyes, lips and hands and voice,As if the stored up thoughtFrom the earth sphereHad given down the being of your choiceConjured by the dream long sought. ...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Open Door
O Mystery of life,That, after all our strife, Defeats, mistakes,Just as, at last, we seeThe road to victory, The tired heart breaks.Just as the long years giveKnowledge of how to live, Life's end draws near;As if, that gift being ours,God needed our new powers In worlds elsewhere.There, if the soul whose wingsWere won in suffering, springs To life anew,Justice would have some roomFor hope beyond the tomb, And mercy, too.And since, without this dreamNo light, no faintest gleam Answers our "why";But earth and all its raceMust pass and leave no trace On that blind sky;Shall reason close that doorOn all we struggled for, Seal the soul's do...
Above The Battle
Honor and pity for the smitten field,The valorous ranks mown down like precious corn,Whose want must famish love morn after morn,Till Death, the good physician, shall have healedThe craving and the tearspent eyelids sealed.Proud be the homes that for each cannon-torn,Encrimsoned rampart have been left forlorn;Holy the knells o'er fallen patriots pealed.But they, above the battle, throng a spaceOf starry silences and silver rest.Commingled ghosts, they press like brothers throughWhite, dove-winged portals, where one Father's faceAtones their passion, as the ethereal blueSerenes the fiery glows of east and west.
Katharine Lee Bates
The Bankrupt Peace Maker
I opened the ink-well and smoke filled the room.The smoke formed the giant frog-cat of my doom.His web feet left dreadful slime tracks on the floor.He had hammer and nails that he laid by the door.He sprawled on the table, claw-hands in my hair.He looked through my heart to the mud that was there.Like a black-mailer hating his victim he spoke:"When I see all your squirming I laugh till I chokeSinging of peace. Railing at battle.Soothing a handful with saccharine prattle.All the millions of earth have voted for fight.You are voting for talk, with hands lily white."He leaped to the floor, then grew seven feet high,Beautiful, terrible, scorn in his eye:The Devil Eternal, Apollo grown old,With beard of bright silver and garments of gold."What will ...
Vachel Lindsay
Song, Of One Eleven Years In Prison
IWhene'er with haggard eyes I view This dungeon that I'm rotting in,I think of those companions trueWho studied with me at the U niversity of Gottingen, niversity of Gottingen.[Weeps, and pulls out a blue kerchief, with which he wipes his eyes; gazing tenderly at it, he proceeds] IISweet kerchief, check'd with heavenly blue, Which once my love sat knotting in!Alas! Matilda then was true! At least I thought so at the U niversity of Gottingen, niversity of Gottingen.[At the repetition of this line he clanks his chains in cadence.] IIIBarbs! Barbs! alas! how swift you flew, Her neat post-wagon trotting in!<...
George Canning
Quare Fatigasti
Two years ago I was thinkingOn the changes that years bring forth;Now I stand where I then stood drinkingThe gust and the salt sea froth;And the shuddering wave strikes, linkingWith the waves subsiding and sinking,And clots the coast herbage, shrinking,With the hue of the white cere-cloth.Is there aught worth losing or keeping?The bitters or sweets men quaff?The sowing or the doubtful reaping?The harvest of grain or chaff?Or squandering days or heaping,Or waking seasons or sleeping,The laughter that dries the weeping,Or the weeping that drowns the laugh?For joys wax dim and woes deaden,We forget the sorrowful biers,And the garlands glad that have fled inThe merciful march of years;And the sunny skies, and the...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Ambergris City
Felt no pain against the water,the tea-cup sky was a turquoise colour in its wrathilluminating ambergris city in spot checks below.The sperm whale population was in decline.Little or nothing remained of former commitments.A bitter legacy consumed itself in half-truthsagainst the sound of upturned lies.Winding alleys come as the conscience of well plaid cities.are open zippers revealing the indecent poor.The fire hydrant lives of cellar inhabitants strain these urinalsfor wretches sniffing out the edge of completed walls.Gray nuisances, the men in asbestos overalls finding their waythrough the apricot fire of dark, eclipse Park Plazas with thestately elegance of empty dinner dishes or red trash cansagainst indentured snow.
Paul Cameron Brown
Something Left Undone
Labor with what zeal we will, Something still remains undone,Something uncompleted still Waits the rising of the sun.By the bedside, on the stair, At the threshold, near the gates,With its menace or its prayer, Like a mendicant it waits;Waits, and will not go away; Waits, and will not be gainsaid;By the cares of yesterday Each to-day is heavier made;Till at length the burden seems Greater than our strength can bear,Heavy as the weight of dreams, Pressing on us everywhere.And we stand from day to day, Like the dwarfs of times gone by,Who, as Northern legends say, On their shoulders held the sky.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Re-Enactment
Between the folding sea-downs, In the gloom Of a wailful wintry nightfall, When the boomOf the ocean, like a hammering in a hollow tomb, Throbbed up the copse-clothed valley From the shore To the chamber where I darkled, Sunk and soreWith gray ponderings why my Loved one had not come before To salute me in the dwelling That of late I had hired to waste a while in - Vague of date,Quaint, and remote wherein I now expectant sate; On the solitude, unsignalled, Broke a man Who, in air as if at home there, Seemed to scanEvery fire-flecked nook of the apartment span by span. A stranger's and no lover's Eyes were these, Eyes of a man wh...
Thomas Hardy