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Day's End
In evening as the sun goes downShe twists and dances mindlesslyLife, in her brash effrontery.But also, when above the townThe night has risen, charming, vast,Blessing the hungry with its peace,Obliterating all disgrace,The Poet tells himself: 'At last!My spirit, like my backbone, seemsIntent on finding its repose;The heart so full of mournful dreams,I'll stretch out on my weary backAnd roll up in your curtains, thoseConsoling comforters of black!'
Charles Baudelaire
Sonnet III.
When I do think my meanest line shall beMore in Time's use than my creating whole,That future eyes more clearly shall feel meIn this inked page than in my direct soul;When I conjecture put to make me seeingGood readers of me in some aftertime,Thankful to some idea of my beingThat doth not even my with gone true soul rime;An anger at the essence of the world,That makes this thus, or thinkable this wise,Takes my soul by the throat and makes it hurledIn nightly horrors of despaired surmise, And I become the mere sense of a rage That lacks the very words whose waste might 'suage.
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
Stage Love
When the game began between them for a jest,He played king and she played queen to match the best;Laughter soft as tears, and tears that turned to laughter,These were things she sought for years and sorrowed after.Pleasure with dry lips, and pain that walks by night;All the sting and all the stain of long delight;These were things she knew not of, that knew not of her,When she played at half a love with half a lover.Time was chorus, gave them cues to laugh or cry;They would kill, befool, amuse him, let him die;Set him webs to weave to-day and break to-morrow,Till he died for good in play, and rose in sorrow.What the years mean; how time dies and is not slain;How love grows and laughs and cries and wanes again;These were things she came to...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Dead Master
Amid earth's vagrant noises, he caught the note sublime:To-day around him surges from the silences of TimeA flood of nobler music, like a river deep and broad,Fit song for heroes gathered in the banquet-hall of God.
John McCrae
The Legion Of Iron
They pass through the great iron gates -Men with eyes gravely discerning,Skilled to appraise the tunnage of cranesOr split an inch into thousandths -Men tempered by fire as the ore isAnd planned to resistanceLike steel that has cooled in the trough;Silent of purpose, inflexible, set to fulfilment -To conquer, withstand, overthrow...Men mannered to large undertakings,Knowing force as a brotherAnd power as something to play with,Seeing blood as a slip of the iron,To be wiped from the toolsLest they rust.But what if they stood aside,Who hold the earth so careless in the crook of their arms?What of the flamboyant citiesAnd the lights guttering out like candles in a wind...And the armies halted...And the train mid...
Lola Ridge
The Old Man
Days of darkness, of dreariness, have come.... Thy own infirmities, the sufferings of those dear to thee, the chill and gloom of old age. All that thou hast loved, to which thou hast given thyself irrevocably, is falling, going to pieces. The way is all down-hill.What canst thou do? Grieve? Complain? Thou wilt aid not thyself nor others that way....On the bowed and withering tree the leaves are smaller and fewer, but its green is yet the same.Do thou too shrink within, withdraw into thyself, into thy memories, and there, deep down, in the very depths of the soul turned inwards on itself, thy old life, to which thou alone hast the key, will be bright again for thee, in all the fragrance, all the fresh green, and the grace and power of its spring!But beware ... look not forward, poor old man!<...
Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev
To-Day
I rake no coffined clay, nor publish wideThe resurrection of departed pride.Safe in their ancient crannies, dark and deep,Let kings and conquerors, saints and soldiers sleep--Late in the world,--too late perchance for fame,Just late enough to reap abundant blame,--I choose a novel theme, a bold abuseOf critic charters, an unlaurelled Muse.Old mouldy men and books and names and landsDisgust my reason and defile my hands.I had as lief respect an ancient shoe,As love old things for age, and hate the new.I spurn the Past, my mind disdains its nod,Nor kneels in homage to so mean a God.I laugh at those who, while they gape and gaze,The bald antiquity of China praise.Youth is (whatever cynic tubs pretend)The fault that boys and nati...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
God, Soul, And World.
Who trusts in God,Fears not His rod.-This truth may be by all believed:Whom God deceives, is well deceived.-How? when? and where? No answer comes from high;Thou wait'st for the Because, and yet thou ask'st not Why?-If the whole is ever to gladden thee,That whole in the smallest thing thou must see.-Water its living strength first shows,When obstacles its course oppose.-Transparent appears the radiant air,Though steel and stone in its breast it may bear;At length they'll meet with fiery power,And metal and stones on the earth will shower. Whate'er a living flame may surround,No longer is shapeless, or earthly bound.'Tis now invisible, flies from earth,And hastens on high to the place of its birth.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Rattlesnake
Coiled like a clod, his eyes the home of hate, Where rich the harvest bows, he lies in wait, Linking earth's death and music, mate with mate. Is 't lure, or warning? Those small bells may sing Like Ariel sirens, poised on viewless wing, To lead stark life where mailed death is king; Else nature's voice, in that cold, earthy thrill, Bids good avoid the venomed fang of ill, And life and death fight equal in her will.
John Charles McNeill
The Sonnets L - How heavy do I journey on the way
How heavy do I journey on the way,When what I seek, my weary travels end,Doth teach that ease and that repose to say,Thus far the miles are measured from thy friend!The beast that bears me, tired with my woe,Plods dully on, to bear that weight in me,As if by some instinct the wretch did knowHis rider lovd not speed, being made from thee:The bloody spur cannot provoke him on,That sometimes anger thrusts into his hide,Which heavily he answers with a groan,More sharp to me than spurring to his side;For that same groan doth put this in my mind,My grief lies onward, and my joy behind.
William Shakespeare
Change
Just as this wood, cast on the snaky fire,Crushes the curling heads till smoke is thickenedAnd the ash sinks beneath the billet's weight,And then again the hissing heads are quickened:Just as this wood, by fretful fangs new stung,Glows angrily, then whitens in the grateAnd slowly smouldering smoulders away,And dies defeated every famished tongueAnd nothing's left but a memory of heatAnd the sunk crimson telling warmth was sweet:Just as this wood, once green with Spring's swift fireDies to a pinch of ashes cold and gray....Just as this wood----
John Frederick Freeman
In Time Of Sorrow
Despair is in the suns that shine, And in the rains that fall,This sad forsaken soul of mine Is weary of them all.They fall and shine on alien streets From those I love and know.I cannot hear amid the heats The North Sea's freshening flowThe people hurry up and down, Like ghosts that cannot lie;And wandering through the phantom town The weariest ghost am I.
Robert Fuller Murray
A Shadow
I said unto myself, if I were dead, What would befall these children? What would be Their fate, who now are looking up to me For help and furtherance? Their lives, I said,Would be a volume wherein I have read But the first chapters, and no longer see To read the rest of their dear history, So full of beauty and so full of dread.Be comforted; the world is very old, And generations pass, as they have passed, A troop of shadows moving with the sun;Thousands of times has the old tale been told; The world belongs to those who come the last, They will find hope and strength as we have done.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
En-Dor
"Behold there is a woman that hath a familiar spirit at En-dor." I Samuel, xxviii. 7.The road to En-dor is easy to treadFor Mother or yearning Wife.There, it is sure, we shall meet our DeadAs they were even in life.Earth has not dreamed of the blessing in storeFor desolate hearts on the road to En-dor.Whispers shall comfort us out of the darkHands ah God! that we knew!Visions .and voices, look and hark!Shall prove that the tale is true,An that those who have passed to the further shoreMay' be hailed at a price on the road to En-dor.But they are so deep in their new eclipseNothing they say can reach,Unless it be uttered by alien lipsAnd I framed in a stranger's speech.The son must send word to the mother that bore,<...
Rudyard
Vain Transient World.
Vain transient World, what charms are thine? And what do mortals in thee see, That they should worship at thy shrine, And sacrifice their all to thee? Thy brightest gifts, thy happiest hours Fly past on pinions of the wind; They fade like blooms upon the flowers, And leave a painful want behind. Thou art a road, though not of space, Which rich and poor alike must tread; Thy starting point we cannot trace, Thine end - the country of the dead. A pathway paved with want and woe, With pleasures painful, incomplete; Like stones upon the way below, Which wound the weary pilgrim's feet. Thou'rt hedged with visions of despair, With w...
W. M. MacKeracher
Tam, The Chapman.
As Tam the Chapman on a day, Wi' Death forgather'd by the way, Weel pleas'd he greets a wight so famous, And Death was nae less pleas'd wi' Thomas, Wha cheerfully lays down the pack, And there blaws up a hearty crack; His social, friendly, honest heart, Sae tickled Death they could na part: Sac after viewing knives and garters, Death takes him hame to gie him quarters.
Robert Burns
Closing Rhymes
While I, from that reed-throated whispererWho comes at need, although not now as onceA clear articulation in the airBut inwardly, surmise companionsBeyond the fling of the dull asss hoof,Ben Jonsons phrase, and find when June is comeAt Kyle-na-no under that ancient roofA sterner conscience and a friendlier home,I can forgive even that wrong of wrongs,Those undreamt accidents that have made meSeeing that Fame has perished this long whileBeing but a part of ancient ceremony,Notorious, till all my priceless thingsAre but a post the passing dogs defile.
William Butler Yeats
Statio Prima
Why do I make so much of Aber Fall?Four years agoMy little boy was with me here,Thats all,He died next year:He died just seven years old,A very gentle child, yet bold,Having no fear.You have seen such?They are not much?No . . . no.And yet he was a very righteous child,Stood up for what was right,Intolerant of wrong, Pure azure lightWas cisterned in his eyes;We thought him wiseBeyond his years, so sweet and mild,But strongFor justice, doing what he could,Poor little soul, to make all children good.I almost think, and yet I am to blame,He was a different child from others;He had three sisters and two brothers:He seemed a little king:Among the children, ah I tis a common thing,Parents are all...
Thomas Edward Brown