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Wild Flowers
Content Primroses, With hearts at rest in your thick leaves' soft care, Peeping as from his mother's lap the child Who courts shy shelter from his own open air!-- Hanging Harebell, Whose blue heaven to no wanderer ever closes, Though thou still lookest earthward from thy domed cell!-- Fluttering-wild Anemone, so well Named of the Wind, to whom thou, fettered-free, Yieldest thee, helpless--wilfully, With Take me or leave me, Sweet Wind, I am thine own Anemone!-- Thirsty Arum, ever dreaming Of lakes in wildernesses gleaming!-- Fire-winged Pimpernel, Communing with some hidden well, And secrets with the sun-god holding, At fixed hour folding and unfolding!-- How ...
George MacDonald
Gipsies
Yet are they here the same unbroken knotOf human Beings, in the self-same spot!Men, women, children, yea the frameOf the whole spectacle the same!Only their fire seems bolder, yielding light,Now deep and red, the colouring of night;That on their Gipsy-faces falls,Their bed of straw and blanket-walls.Twelve hours, twelve bounteous hours are gone, while IHave been a traveller under open sky,Much witnessing of change and cheer,Yet as I left I find them here!The weary Sun betook himself to rest;Then issued Vesper from the fulgent west,Outshining like a visible GodThe glorious path in which he trod.And now, ascending, after one dark hourAnd one night's diminution of her power,Behold the mighty Moon! this wayShe looks as if at them ...
William Wordsworth
Perennials.
Life is a journey, and its fairest flowersLie in our path beneath pride's trampling feet;Oh, let us stoop to virtue's humble bowers,And gather those, which, faded, still are sweet.These way-side blossoms amulets are of price;They lead to pleasure, yet from dangers warn;Turn toil to bliss, this earth to Paradise,And sunset death to heaven's eternal morn.A good deed done hath memory's blest perfume,A day of self-forgetfulness, all givenTo holy charity, hath perennial bloomThat goes, undrooping, up from earth to heaven.Forgiveness, too, will flourish in the skiesJustice, transplanted thither, yields fair fruit;And if repentance, borne to heaven, dies,'Tis that no tears are there to wet its root.
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
The Meadow
Here when the cloudless April days begin,And the quaint crows flock thicker day by day,Filling the forests with a pleasant din,And the soiled snow creeps secretly away,Comes the small busy sparrow, primed with glee,First preacher in the naked wilderness,Piping an end to all the long distressFrom every fence and every leafless tree.Now with soft slight and viewless artificeWinter's iron work is wondrously undone;In all the little hollows cored with iceThe clear brown pools stand simmering in the sun,Frail lucid worlds, upon whose tremulous floorsAll day the wandering water-bugs at will,Shy mariners whose oars are never still,Voyage and dream about the heightening shores.The bluebird, peeping from the gnarlèd thorn,Prattles upon...
Archibald Lampman
Childhood.
What trifles touch our feelings, when we viewThe simple scenes of Childhood's early day,Pausing on spots where gather'd blossoms grew,Or favour'd seats of many a childish play;Bush, dyke, or wood, where painted pooties lay,Where oft we've crept and crept the shades among,Where ivy hung old roots bemoss'd with grey,Where nettles oft our infant fingers stung,And tears would weep the gentle wounds away:--Ah, gentle wounds indeed, I well may say,To those sad Manhood's tortur'd passage found,Where naked Fate each day new pangs doth feel,Clearing away the brambles that surround,Inflicting tortures death can only heal.
John Clare
Household Art.
"Mine be a cot," for the hours of play,Of the kind that is built by MISS GREENAWAY;Where the walls are low, and the roofs are red,And the birds are gay in the blue o'erhead;And the dear little figures, in frocks and frills,Go roaming about at their own sweet wills,And "play with the pups," and "reprove the calves,"And do nought in the world (but Work) by halves,From "Hunt the Slipper" and "Riddle-me-ree"To watching the cat in the apple-tree.O Art of the Household! Men may prateOf their ways "intense" and Italianate,--They may soar on their wings of sense, and floatTo the au delà and the dim remote,--Till the last sun sink in the last-lit West,'Tis the Art at the Door that will please the best;To the end of Time 'twill be still the same,
Henry Austin Dobson
Morning in the Bush (A Juvenile Fragment.)
Above the skirts of yellow clouds,The god-like Sun, arrayedIn blinding splendour, swiftly rose,And looked athwart the glade;The sleepy dingo watched him breakThe bonds that curbed his flight;And from his golden tresses shakeThe fading gems of Night!And wild goburras laughed aloudTheir merry morning songs,As Echo answered in the depthsWith a thousand thousand tongues;The gully-depths where many a vineOf ancient growth had crept,To cluster round the hoary pine,Where scanty mosses wept.Huge stones, and damp and broken crags,In wild chaotic heap,Were lying at the barren baseOf the ferny hillside steep;Between those fragments hollows lay,Upfilled with fruitful ground,Where many a modest floweret grew,T...
Henry Kendall
Human Life
If dead, we cease to be; if total gloomSwallow up life's brief flash for aye, we fareAs summer-gusts, of sudden birth and doom,Whose sound and motion not alone declare,But are their whole of being! If the breathBe Life itself, and not its task and tent,If even a soul like Milton's can know death;O Man! thou vessel purposeless, unmeant,Yet drone-hive strange of phantom purposes!Surplus of Nature's dread activity,Which, as she gazed on some nigh-finished vase,Retreating slow, with meditative pause,She formed with restless hands unconsciously.Blank accident! nothing's anomaly!If rootless thus, thus substanceless thy state,Go, weigh thy dreams, and be thy hopes, thy fears,The counter-weights! Thy laughter and thy tearsMean but themselves, eac...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Old And New: A Parable
See how the autumn leaves float by decaying,Down the wild swirls of the rain-swollen stream.So fleet the works of men, back to their earth again;Ancient and holy things fade like a dream.Nay! see the spring-blossoms steal forth a-maying,Clothing with tender hues orchard and glen;So, though old forms pass by, ne'er shall their spirit die,Look! England's bare boughs show green leaf again.Eversley, 1848.
Charles Kingsley
Desire We Past Illusions To Recall
Desire we past illusions to recall?To reinstate wild Fancy, would we hideTruths whose thick veil Science has drawn aside?No, let this Age, high as she may, installIn her esteem the thirst that wrought man's fall,The universe is infinitely wide;And conquering Reason, if self-glorified,Can nowhere move uncrossed by some new wallOr gulf of mystery, which thou alone,Imaginative Faith! canst overleap,In progress toward the fount of Love, the throneOf Power whose ministers the records keepOf periods fixed, and laws established, lessFlesh to exalt than prove its nothingness.
Musings On A Landscape Of Gaspar Poussin.
Poussin! most pleasantly thy pictur'd scenesBeguile the lonely hour; I sit and gazeWith lingering eye, till charmed FANCY makesThe lovely landscape live, and the rapt soulFrom the foul haunts of herded humankindFlies far away with spirit speed, and tastesThe untainted air, that with the lively hueOf health and happiness illumes the cheekOf mountain LIBERTY. My willing soulAll eager follows on thy faery flightsFANCY! best friend; whose blessed witcheriesWith loveliest prospects cheat the travellerO'er the long wearying desart of the world.Nor dost thou FANCY with such magic mockMy heart, as, demon-born, old Merlin knew,Or Alquif, or Zarzafiel's sister sage,Whose vengeful anguish for so many a yearHeld in the jacinth sepulchre entranced
Robert Southey
While Beams Of Orient Light Shoot Wide And High
While beams of orient light shoot wide and high,Deep in the vale a little rural TownBreathes forth a cloud-like creature of its own,That mounts not toward the radiant morning sky,But, with a less ambitious sympathy,Hangs o'er its Parent waking to the caresTroubles and toils that every day prepares.So Fancy, to the musing Poet's eye,Endears that Lingerer. And how blest her sway(Like influence never may my soul reject)If the calm Heaven, now to its zenith deckedWith glorious forms in numberless array,To the lone shepherd on the hills discloseGleams from a world in which the saints repose.
Who Fancied What A Pretty Sight
Who fancied what a pretty sightThis Rock would be if edged aroundWith living snow-drops? circlet bright!How glorious to this orchard-ground!Who loved the little Rock, and setUpon its head this coronet?Was it the humour of a child?Or rather of some gentle maid,Whose brows, the day that she was styledThe shepherd-queen, were thus arrayed?Of man mature, or matron sage?Or old man toying with his age!I asked 'twas whispered; The deviceTo each and all might well belong:It is the Spirit of ParadiseThat prompts such work, a Spirit strong,That gives to all the self-same bentWhere life is wise and innocent.
Progression
To each progressive soul there comes a day When all things that have pleased and satisfiedGrow flavourless, the springs of joy seem dried. No more the waters of youth's fountains play;Yet out of reach, tiptoeing as they may, The more mature and higher pleasures hide.Life, like a careless nurse, fails to provide New toys for those the soul has cast away.Upon a strange land's border all alone, Awhile it stands dismayed and desolate.Nude too, since its old garments are outgrown; Till clothed with strength befitting its estate,It grasps at length those raptures that are known To souls who learn to labour, and to wait.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Nursery Rhyme. DXXXV. Natural History. [Bird boy's song.]
Eat, Birds, eat, and make no waste, I lie here and make no haste; If my master chance to come, You must fly, and I must run.
Unknown
The Necessitarian
I know not in Whose hands are laidTo empty upon earthFrom unsuspected ambuscadeThe very Urns of Mirth;Who bids the Heavenly Lark ariseAnd cheer our solemn round,The Jest beheld with streaming eyesAnd grovellings on the ground;Who joins the flats of Time and ChanceBehind the prey preferred,And thrones on Shrieking CircumstanceThe Sacredly Absurd,Till Laughter, voiceless through excess,Waves mute appeal and sore,Above the midriff's deep distress,For breath to laugh once more.No creed hath dared to hail Him Lord,No raptured choirs proclaim,And Nature's strenuous OverwordHath nowhere breathed His Name.Yet, it must be, on wayside jape,The selfsame Power bestowsThe selfsame power as we...
Rudyard
The Christian Tourists
No aimless wanderers, by the fiend UnrestGoaded from shore to shore;No schoolmen, turning, in their classic quest,The leaves of empire o'er.Simple of faith, and bearing in their heartsThe love of man and God,Isles of old song, the Moslem's ancient marts,And Scythia's steppes, they trod.Where the long shadows of the fir and pineIn the night sun are cast,And the deep heart of many a Norland mineQuakes at each riving blast;Where, in barbaric grandeur, Moskwa stands,A baptized Scythian queen,With Europe's arts and Asia's jewelled hands,The North and East between!Where still, through vales of Grecian fable, strayThe classic forms of yore,And beauty smiles, new risen from the spray,And Dian weeps once more;Where every tongue i...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The High Oaks
Fourscore years and sevenLight and dew from heavenHave fallen with dawn on these glad woods each daySince here was born, even here,A birth more bright and dearThan ever a younger yearHath seen or shall till all these pass away,Even all the imperious pride of these,The woodland ways majestic now with towers of trees.Love itself hath noughtTouched of tenderest thoughtWith holiest hallowing of memorial graceFor memory, blind with bliss,To love, to clasp, to kiss,So sweetly strange as this,The sense that here the sun first hailed her face,A babe at Her glad mother's breast,And here again beholds it more beloved and blest.Love's own heart, a livingSpring of strong thanksgiving,Can bid no strength of welling song find way
Algernon Charles Swinburne