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Foolish Children
Waking in the night to pray, Sleeping when the answer comes, Foolish are we even at play-- Tearfully we beat our drums! Cast the good dry bread away, Weep, and gather up the crumbs! "Evermore," while shines the day, "Lord," we cry, "thy will be done!" Soon as evening groweth gray, Thy fair will we fain would shun! "Take, oh, take thy hand away! See the horrid dark begun!" "Thou hast conquered Death," we say, "Christ, whom Hades could not keep!" Then, "Ah, see the pallid clay! Death it is," we cry, "not sleep! Grave, take all. Shut out the Day. Sit we on the ground and weep!" Gathering potsherds all the day, Truant children, Lord, we roam; F...
George MacDonald
Dying.
The sun kept setting, setting still;No hue of afternoonUpon the village I perceived, --From house to house 't was noon.The dusk kept dropping, dropping still;No dew upon the grass,But only on my forehead stopped,And wandered in my face.My feet kept drowsing, drowsing still,My fingers were awake;Yet why so little sound myselfUnto my seeming make?How well I knew the light before!I could not see it now.'T is dying, I am doing; butI'm not afraid to know.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
To Richard Wagner.
"I saw a sky of stars that rolled in grime.All glory twinkled through some sweat of fight,From each tall chimney of the roaring timeThat shot his fire far up the sooty nightMixt fuels - Labor's Right and Labor's Crime -Sent upward throb on throb of scarlet lightTill huge hot blushes in the heavens blentWith golden hues of Trade's high firmament."Fierce burned the furnaces; yet all seemed well,Hope dreamed rich music in the rattling mills.`Ye foundries, ye shall cast my church a bell,'Loud cried the Future from the farthest hills:`Ye groaning forces, crack me every shellOf customs, old constraints, and narrow ills;Thou, lithe Invention, wake and pry and guess,Till thy deft mind invents me Happiness.'"And I beheld high scaffoldings of...
Sidney Lanier
The Broken Dish.
What's life but full of care and doubtWith all its fine humanities,With parasols we walk about,Long pigtails, and such vanities.We plant pomegranate trees and things,And go in gardens sporting,With toys and fans of peacocks' wings,To painted ladies courting.We gather flowers of every hue,And fish in boats for fishes,Build summer-houses painted blue, -But life's as frail as dishes!Walking about their groves of trees,Blue bridges and blue rivers,How little thought them two Chinese,They'd both be smashed to shivers!
Thomas Hood
Sonnet CLVI.
Passa la nave mia colma d' oblio.UNDER THE FIGURE OF A TEMPEST-TOSSED VESSEL, HE DESCRIBES HIS OWN SAD STATE. My bark, deep laden with oblivion, ridesO'er boisterous waves, through winter's midnight gloom,'Twixt Scylla and Charybdis, while, in roomOf pilot, Love, mine enemy, presides;At every oar a guilty fancy bides,Holding at nought the tempest and the tomb;A moist eternal wind the sails consume,Of sighs, of hopes, and of desire besides.A shower of tears, a fog of chill disdainBathes and relaxes the o'er-wearied cords,With error and with ignorance entwined;My two loved lights their wonted aid restrain;Reason or Art, storm-quell'd, no help affords,Nor hope remains the wish'd-for port to find.CHARLEMONT.<...
Francesco Petrarca
The Two Rivers
ISlowly the hour-hand of the clock moves round; So slowly that no human eye hath power To see it move! Slowly in shine or shower The painted ship above it, homeward bound,Sails, but seems motionless, as if aground; Yet both arrive at last; and in his tower The slumberous watchman wakes and strikes the hour, A mellow, measured, melancholy sound.Midnight! the outpost of advancing day! The frontier town and citadel of night! The watershed of Time, from which the streamsOf Yesterday and To-morrow take their way, One to the land of promise and of light, One to the land of darkness and of dreams!IIO River of Yesterday, with current swift Through chasms descending, and soon lost to sight,
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Dora.
A waxing moon that, crescent yet,In all its silver beauty set,And rose no more in the lonesome nightTo shed full-orbed its longed-for light.Then was it dark; on wold and lea, In home, in heart, the hours were drear.Father and mother could no light see, And the hearts trembled and there was fear.- So on the mount, Christ's chosen three,Unware that glory it did shroud,Feared when they entered into the cloud.She was the best part of love's fairAdornment, life's God-given care,As if He bade them guard His own,Who should be soon anear His throne.Dutiful, happy, and who sayWhen childhood smiles itself away,'More fair than morn shall prove the day.'Sweet souls so nigh to God that rest,How shall be bettering of your best!<...
Jean Ingelow
Lighting The Fire
You were a gipsy as you bentYour dark hair over the black grate.Hardly the west light above the hillShowed your shadow, crooked and still.The bellows hissed, and one bright sparkDeepened the hasty dark.The bellows hissed, and the old smellCrept on the air of smoking peat,And round the spark a bubbling flameGrew bright and loud. Sweeping the gloomLunatic shadows fled and cameWhirling about the room.Then as you raised your head I sawIn the clear light of the bubbling fireYour dark hair all lined with the graySprinkled by years and sorrow and pain ...Till as the bellows idle layShadow swept back again.
John Frederick Freeman
The Robe Of Grass
Here lies the woven garb he woreOf grass he gathered by the shoreWhereon the phantom waves still fret and foamAnd sigh along the visionary sand.Where is he now? you cry. What desolate landGleams round him in dull mockery of home?You knew him by the robe he castAbout him, grey and worn at last.It fades, you murmur, changes, lives and dies.Why has he vanished? Whither is he fled?And is there any light among the dead?Can any dream come singing where he lies?Ah peace! lift up your clouded eyes,Nor where this curious relic liesGrope in the blown dust for the print of feet.Dim, twittering, ghastly sounds are these; but heLaughs now as ever, still aloof and free,Eager and wild and passionate and fleet.Because he h...
John Le Gay Brereton
Oer The Wide Earth, On Mountain And On Plain
O'er the wide earth, on mountain and on plain,Dwells in the affections and the soul of manA Godhead, like the universal PAN;But more exalted, with a brighter train:And shall his bounty be dispensed in vain,Showered equally on city and on field,And neither hope nor steadfast promise yieldIn these usurping times of fear and pain?Such doom awaits us. Nay, forbid it Heaven!We know the arduous strife, the eternal lawsTo which the triumph of all good is given,High sacrifice, and labour without pause,Even to the death: else wherefore should the eyeOf man converse with immortality?
William Wordsworth
Should E'er The Loveless Day.
Should e'er the loveless day remainObscured by storms of hail and rain,Thy charms thou showest never;I tap at window, tap at door:Come, lov'd one, come! appear once more!Thou art as fair as ever!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Memories They Bring
I would never waste the hoursOf the time that is mine own,Writing verses about flowersFor their own sweet sakes alone;Gushing as a schoolgirl gushesOver babies at their best,Or as poets trill of thrushes,Larks, and starlings and the rest.I am not a man who praisesBeauty that he cannot see,But the buttercups and daisiesBring my childhood back to me;And before lifes bitter battle,That breaks lion hearts and kills,Oh the waratah and wattleSaw my boyhood on the hills.It was Cissy or Cecilia,And I loved her very much,When I wore the white cameliaThat will wither at a touch.Ah, the fairest chapter closesWith lilies white and blue,When the wild days with the rosesCast their glamour over you!
Henry Lawson
To Sleep
A flock of sheep that leisurely pass by,One after one; the sound of rain, and beesMurmuring; the fall of rivers, winds and seas,Smooth fields, white sheets of water, and pure sky;I have thought of all by turns, and yet do lieSleepless! and soon the small birds' melodiesMust hear, first uttered from my orchard trees;And the first cuckoo's melancholy cry.Even thus last night, and two nights more, I lay,And could not win thee, Sleep! by any stealth:So do not let me wear to-night away:Without Thee what is all the morning's wealth?Come, blessed barrier between day and day,Dear mother of fresh thoughts and joyous health!
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet XCVI
Thought, with good cause thou lik'st so well the night,Since kind or chance giues both one liuerie,Both sadly blacke, both blackly darkned be;Night bard from Sunne, thou from thy owne sunlight;Silence in both displaies his sullen might;Slow heauinesse in both holds one degreeThat full of doubts, thou of perplexity;Thy teares expresse Nights natiue moisture right;In both amazeful solitarinesse:In night, of sprites, the gastly powers do stur;In thee or sprites or sprited gastlinesse.But, but (alas) Nights side the ods hath fur:For that, at length, yet doth inuite some rest;Thou, though still tired, yet still doost it detest.
Philip Sidney
Dawn Song
I hear a twittering of birds, And now they burst in song.How sweet, although it wants the words! It shall not want them long,For I will set some to the noteWhich bubbles from the thrush's throat.O jewelled night, that reign'st on high, Where is thy crescent moon?Thy stars have faded from the sky, The sun is coming soon.The summer night is passed away,Sing welcome to the summer day.
Robert Fuller Murray
Methought I Saw The Footsteps Of A Throne
Methought I saw the footsteps of a throneWhich mists and vapours from mine eyes did shroudNor view of who might sit thereon allowed;But all the steps and ground about were strownWith sights the ruefullest that flesh and boneEver put on; a miserable crowd,Sick, hale, old, young, who cried before that cloud,"Thou art our king, O Death! to thee we groan."Those steps I clomb; the mists before me gaveSmooth way; and I beheld the face of oneSleeping alone within a mossy cave,With her face up to heaven; that seemed to havePleasing remembrance of a thought foregone;A lovely Beauty in a summer grave!
The Convalescent
. . . So I walked among the willows very quietly all night;There was no moon at all, at all; no timid star alight;There was no light at all, at all; I wint from tree to tree,And I called him as his mother called, but he nivver answered me.Oh I called him all the night-time, as I walked the wood alone;And I listened and I listened, but I nivver heard a moan;Then I found him at the dawnin', when the sorry sky was red:I was lookin' for the livin', but I only found the dead.Sure I know that it was Shamus by the silver cross he wore;But the bugles they were callin', and I heard the cannon roar.Oh I had no time to tarry, so I said a little prayer,And I clasped his hands together, and I left him lyin' there.Now the birds are singin', singin', and I'm home i...
Robert William Service
Blank Misgivings Of A Creature Moving About In Worlds Not Realised.
IHere am I yet, another twelvemonth spent,One-third departed of the mortal span,Carrying on the child into the man,Nothing into reality. Sails rent,And rudder broken, reason impotentAffections all unfixed; so forth I fareOn the mid seas unheedingly, so dareTo do and to be done by, well content.So was it from the first, so is it yet;Yea, the first kiss that by these lips was setOn any human lips, methinks was sinSin, cowardice, and falsehood; for the willInto a deed een then advanced, whereinGod, unidentified, was thought-of still.IIThough to the vilest things beneath the moonFor poor Ease sake I give away my heart,And for the moments sympathy let partMy sight and sense of truth, Thy precious boon,My ...
Arthur Hugh Clough