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The Battle Of The Nile.[1]
Shout! for the Lord hath triumphed gloriously! Upon the shores of that renowned land, Where erst His mighty arm and outstretched hand He lifted high, And dashed, in pieces dashed the enemy; Upon that ancient coast, Where Pharaoh's chariot and his host He cast into the deep, Whilst o'er their silent pomp He bid the swoll'n sea sweep; Upon that eastern shore, That saw His awful arm revealed of yore, Again hath He arisen, and opposed His foes' defying vaunt: o'er them the deep hath closed! Shades of mighty chiefs of yore, Who triumphed on the self-same shore: Ammon, who first o'er ocean's empire wide Didst bid the bold bark stem the roaring tide; Sesac, who from the East to farthes...
William Lisle Bowles
The Brothers
Not far from here, it lies beyondThat low-hilled belt of woods. We'll takeThis unused lane where brambles makeA wall of twilight, and the blondBrier-roses pelt the path and flakeThe margin waters of a pond.This is its fence - or that which wasIts fence once - now, rock rolled from rock,One tangle of the vine and dock,Where bloom the wild petunias;And this its gate, the iron-weeds block,Hot with the insects' dusty buzz.Two wooden posts, wherefrom has peeledThe weather-crumbled paint, still rise;Gaunt things - that groan when someone triesThe gate whose hinges, rust-congealed,Snarl open: - on each post still liesIts carven lion with a shield.We enter; and between great rowsOf locusts winds a grass-grown road;
Madison Julius Cawein
Prelude To A Volume Printed In Raised Letters For The Blind
Dear friends, left darkling in the long eclipseThat veils the noonday, - you whose finger-tipsA meaning in these ridgy leaves can findWhere ours go stumbling, senseless, helpless, blind.This wreath of verse how dare I offer youTo whom the garden's choicest gifts are due?The hues of all its glowing beds are ours,Shall you not claim its sweetest-smelling flowers?Nay, those I have I bring you, - at their birthLife's cheerful sunshine warmed the grateful earth;If my rash boyhood dropped some idle seeds,And here and there you light on saucy weedsAmong the fairer growths, remember stillSong comes of grace, and not of human will:We get a jarring note when most we try,Then strike the chord we know not how or why;Our stately verse with too aspirin...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Songs Of The Winter Nights
I. Back shining from the pane, the fire Seems outside in the snow: So love set free from love's desire Lights grief of long ago. The dark is thinned with snow-sheen fine, The earth bedecked with moon; Out on the worlds we surely shine More radiant than in June! In the white garden lies a heap As brown as deep-dug mould: A hundred partridges that keep Each other from the cold. My father gives them sheaves of corn, For shelter both and food: High hope in me was early born, My father was so good. II. The frost weaves ferns and sultry palms Across my clouded pane; Weaves melodies of ancient psalms All through my...
George MacDonald
The Sun Says his Prayers
"The sun says his prayers," said the fairy, Or else he would wither and die. "The sun says his prayers," said the fairy, "For strength to climb up through the sky. He leans on invisible angels, And Faith is his prop and his rod. The sky is his crystal cathedral. And dawn is his altar to God."
Vachel Lindsay
A Portrait
Fair faces crowd on Christmas nightLike seven suns a-row,But all beyond is the wolfish windAnd the crafty feet of the snow.But through the rout one figure goesWith quick and quiet tread;Her robe is plain, her form is frail--Wait if she turn her head.I say no word of line or hue,But if that face you see,Your soul shall know the smile of faith'sAwful frivolity.Know that in this grotesque old masqueToo loud we cannot sing,Or dance too wild, or speak too wideTo praise a hidden thing.That though the jest be old as night,Still shaketh sun and sphereAn everlasting laughterToo loud for us to hear.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Poems and Ballads - Dedication
The sea gives her shells to the shingle,The earth gives her streams to the sea;They are many, but my gift is single,My verses, the firstfruits of me.Let the wind take the green and the grey leaf,Cast forth without fruit upon air;Take rose-leaf and vine-leaf and bay-leafBlown loose from the hair.The night shakes them round me in legions,Dawn drives them before her like dreams;Time sheds them like snows on strange regions,Swept shoreward on infinite streams;Leaves pallid and sombre and ruddy,Dead fruits of the fugitive years;Some stained as with wine and made bloody,And some as with tears.Some scattered in seven years traces,As they fell from the boy that was then;Long left among idle green places,Or gathered but no...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Easter Even
(Lyra Messianica, 1864.)There is nothing more that they can do For all their rage and boast;Caiaphas with his blaspheming crew, Herod with his host,Pontius Pilate in his Judgement-hall Judging their Judge and his,Or he who led them all and passed them all, Arch-Judas with his kiss.The sepulchre made sure with ponderous Stone, Seal that same stone, O Priest;It may be thou shalt block the holy One From rising in the east:Set a watch about the sepulchre To watch on pain of death;They must hold fast the stone if One should stir And shake it from beneath.God Almighty, He can break a seal And roll away a Stone,Can grind the proud in dust who would not kneel,...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Years Ago.
Annie I dreamed a strange dream last night,At my bedside, I dreamed, you stood clad in white;Your dark curly hair 'round your snow-white brow, -(Are those locks as raven and curly now?)And those rosebud lips, which in days lang syne,I have kissed and blest, because they were mine.And thine eyes soft light,Shone as mellow and bright,As it did years ago, -Years ago.And I fancy I heard the soft soothing soundOf thy voice, that sweet melody breathed all around,Whilst enraptured I gazed, and once more the sweet smile,Made sunshine, my sorrowing heart to beguile,And thy milkwhite hands stroked my heated brow; -(Oh! what would I give could I feel them now!)But alas! Woe is me!No more can it be,As it was years ago, -Years ago.
John Hartley
To E. L. Zox. {89} (Melbourne.)
We thank you for a noble work well done.There is a kindness - ('tis the truer one; The better part the simpler heart doth know),The care to give the day a brighter sunTo these, the nameless crowd that drags on slowThe common toil, the common weary woe The world cares nought for. But your work securesThro' union strength and self-respect that grow.There is a courage that unflawed enduresThe sneer, the slander of earth's epicures. And here are grateful women's hearts to showThis kindness and this courage, both are yours!
Francis William Lauderdale Adams
The Deluge.
Drowning, drowning, I espyComing from my Julia's eye:'Tis some solace in our smart,To have friends to bear a part:I have none; but must be sureTh' inundation to endure.Shall not times hereafter tellThis for no mean miracle?When the waters by their fallThreaten'd ruin unto all,Yet the deluge here was knownOf a world to drown but one.
Robert Herrick
The Teak Forest
Whether I loved you who shall say?Whether I drifted down your wayIn the endless River of Chance and Change,And you woke the strangeUnknown longings that have no names,But burn us all in their hidden flames, Who shall say?Life is a strange and a wayward thing:We heard the bells of the Temples ring,The married children, in passing, sing.The month of marriage, the month of spring,Was full of the breath of sunburnt flowersThat bloom in a fiercer light than ours,And, under a sky more fiercely blue, I came to you!You told me tales of your vivid lifeWhere death was cruel and danger rife -Of deep dark forests, of poisoned trees,Of pains and passions that scorch and freeze,Of southern noontides and eastern nights,
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Blondine.
I wandered through a careless world Deceived when not deceiving,And never gave an idle heart The rapture of believing.The smiles, the sighs, the glancing eyes, Of many hundred comersSwept by me, light as rose-leaves blown From long-forgotten summers.But never eyes so deep and bright And loyal in their seeming,And never smiles so full of light Have shone upon my dreaming.The looks and lips so gay and wise, The thousand charms that wreathe them,- Almost I dare believe that truth Is safely shrined beneath them.Ah! do they shine, those eyes of thine, But for our own misleading?The fresh young smile, so pure and fine, Does it but mock our reading?Then faith is fled, and trust is dead,...
John Hay
The Ghost's Story
All my life long I heard the stepOf some one I would know,Break softly in upon my daysAnd lightly come and go.A foot so brisk I said must bearA heart that's clean and clear;If that companion blithe would come,I should be happy here.But though I waited long and well,He never came at all,I grew aweary of the void,Even of the light foot-fall.From loneliness to lonelinessI felt my spirit grope -At last I knew the uttermost,The loneliness of hope.And just upon the border land,Where flesh and spirit part,I knew the secret foot-fall wasThe beating of my heart.
Duncan Campbell Scott
The Jolly Company
The stars, a jolly company,I envied, straying late and lonely;And cried upon their revelry:"O white companionship! You onlyIn love, in faith unbroken dwell,Friends radiant and inseparable!"Light-heart and glad they seemed to meAnd merry comrades (EVEN SOGOD OUT OF HEAVEN MAY LAUGH TO SEETHE HAPPY CROWDS; AND NEVER KNOWTHAT IN HIS LONE OBSCURE DISTRESSEACH WALKETH IN A WILDERNESS).But I, remembering, pitied wellAnd loved them, who, with lonely light,In empty infinite spaces dwell,Disconsolate. For, all the night,I heard the thin gnat-voices cry,Star to faint star, across the sky.
Rupert Brooke
Time's Changes In A Household.
They grew together side by side,They filled one house with gleeTheir graves are severed far and wide -By mountain stream and tree.Mrs. HemansThey were as fair and bright a band as ever filled with prideParental hearts whose task it was children beloved to guide;And every care that love upon its idols bright may showerWas lavished with impartial hand upon each fair young flower.Theirs was the father's merry hour sharing their childish bliss,The mother's soft breathed benison and tender, nightly kiss;While strangers who by chance might see their joyous graceful play,To breathe some word of fondness kind would pause upon their way.But years rolled on, and in their course Time many changes brought,And sorrow in that household gay ...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
The Ancient Of Days
A child sits in a sunny place,Too happy for a smile,And plays through one long holidayWith balls to roll and pile;A painted wind-mill by his sideRuns like a merry tune,But the sails are the four great winds of heaven,And the balls are the sun and moon.A staring doll's-house shows to himGreen floors and starry rafter,And many-coloured graven dollsLive for his lonely laughter.The dolls have crowns and aureoles,Helmets and horns and wings.For they are the saints and seraphim,The prophets and the kings.
Behold The Earth
Behold the earth swung in among the starsFit home for gods if men were only kind -Do thou thy part to shape it to those ends,By shaping thine own life to perfectness.Seek nothing for thyself or thine own kinThat robs another of one hope or joy,Let no man toil in poverty and painTo give thee unearned luxury and ease.Feed not the hungry servitor with stones,That idle guests may fatten on thy bread.Look for the good in stranger and in foe,Nor save thy praises for the cherished few;And let the weakest sinner find in theeAn impetus to reach receding heights.Behold the earth swung in among the stars -Fit home for gods; wake thou the God withinAnd by the broad example of thy loveCommunicate Omnipotence to men.All men are unawakened gods: ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox