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Chapter Headings - Lifes Handicap
The doors were wide, the story saith,Out of the night came the patient wraith.He might not speak, and he could not stirA hair of the Barons minniver.Speechless and strengthless, a shadow thin,He roved the castle to find his kin.And oh! twas a piteous sight to seeThe dumb ghost follow his enemy!The Return of Imray.Before my Spring I garnered Autumn's gain,Out of her time my field was white with grain,The year gave up her secrets, to my woe.Forced and deflowered each sick season layIn mystery of increase and decay;I saw the sunset ere men see the day,Who am too wise in all I should not know.Without Benefit of Clergy.Theres a convict more in the Central Jail,Behind the old mud wall;Theres a...
Rudyard
Gold Hair - A Story Of Pornic
I.Oh, the beautiful girl, too white,Who lived at Pornic, down by the sea,Just where the sea and the Loire unite!And a boasted name in BrittanyShe bore, which I will not write.II.Too white, for the flower of life is red;Her flesh was the soft seraphic screenOf a soul that is meant (her parents said)To just see earth, and hardly be seen,And blossom in heaven instead.III.Yet earth saw one thing, one how fair!One grace that grew to its full on earthSmiles might be sparse on her cheek so spare,And her waist want half a girdles girth,But she had her great gold hair.IV.Hair, such a wonder of flix and floss,Freshness and fragrance, floods of it, too!Gold, did I say? Nay, golds mere dross:Here, Lif...
Robert Browning
The Comforters
Until thy feet have trod the RoadAdvise not wayside folk,Nor till thy back has borne the LoadBreak in upon the broke.Chase not with undesired largesseOf sympathy the heartWhich, knowing her own bitterness,Presumes to dwell apart.Employ not that glad hand to raiseThe God-forgotten headTo Heaven and all the neighbours' gaze,Cover thy mouth instead.The quivering chin, the bitten lip,The cold and sweating brow,Later may yearn for fellowship,Not now, you ass, not now!Time, not thy ne'er so timely speech,Life, not thy views thereon,Shall furnish or deny to eachHis consolation.Or, if impelled to interfere,Exhort, uplift, advise,Lend not a base, betraying earTo all the victim's cri...
On Himself.
Young I was, but now am old,But I am not yet grown cold;I can play, and I can twine'Bout a virgin like a vine:In her lap too I can lieMelting, and in fancy die;And return to life if sheClaps my cheek, or kisseth me:Thus, and thus it now appearsThat our love outlasts our years.
Robert Herrick
Au Revoir.
Love left one day his leafy bower, And roamed in sportive vein,Where Vanity had built a tower, For Fashion's sparkling train.The mistress to see he requested, Of one who attended the door:"Not home," said the page, who suggested That he'd leave his card.--"Au Revoir."Love next came to a lowly bower: A maid who knew no guile,Unlike the lady of the tower, Received him with a smile.Since then the cot beams with his brightness Though often at Vanity's doorLove calls, merely out of politeness, And just leaves his card.--"Au Revoir."
George Pope Morris
In The Night She Came
I told her when I left one dayThat whatsoever weight of careMight strain our love, Time's mere assaultWould work no changes there.And in the night she came to me,Toothless, and wan, and old,With leaden concaves round her eyes,And wrinkles manifold.I tremblingly exclaimed to her,"O wherefore do you ghost me thus!I have said that dull defacing TimeWill bring no dreads to us.""And is that true of YOU?" she criedIn voice of troubled tune.I faltered: "Well . . . I did not thinkYou would test me quite so soon!"She vanished with a curious smile,Which told me, plainlier than by word,That my staunch pledge could scarce beguileThe fear she had averred.Her doubts then wrought their shape in me,And when next day I ...
Thomas Hardy
The Soul's Expression
With stammering lips and insufficient soundI strive and struggle to deliver rightThat music of my nature, day and nightWith dream and thought and feeling interwoundAnd inly answering all the senses roundWith octaves of a mystic depth and heightWhich step out grandly to the infiniteFrom the dark edges of the sensual ground.This song of soul I struggle to outbearThrough portals of the sense, sublime and whole,And utter all myself into the air:But if I did it, as the thunder-rollBreaks its own cloud, my flesh would perish there,Before that dread apocalypse of soul.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Croluis - To G. W.
The beach was crowded. Pausing now and then,He groped and fiddled doggedly along,His worn face glaring on the thoughtless throngThe stony peevishness of sightless men.He seemed scarce older than his clothes. Again,Grotesquing thinly many an old sweet song,So cracked his fiddle, his hand so frail and wrong,You hardly could distinguish one in ten.He stopped at last, and sat him on the sand,And, grasping wearily his bread-winner,Stared dim towards the blue immensity,Then leaned his head upon his poor old hand.He may have slept: he did not speak nor stir:His gesture spoke a vast despondency.
William Ernest Henley
A Sequence of Sonnets on the Death of Robert Browning
IThe clearest eyes in all the world they readWith sense more keen and spirit of sight more trueThan burns and thrills in sunrise, when the dewFlames, and absorbs the glory round it shed,As they the light of ages quick and dead,Closed now, forsake us: yet the shaft that slewCan slay not one of all the works we knew,Nor death discrown that many-laurelled head.The works of words whose life seems lightning wrought,And moulded of unconquerable thought,And quickened with imperishable flame,Stand fast and shine and smile, assured that noughtMay fade of all their myriad-moulded fame,Nor England's memory clasp not Browning's name.December 13, 1889.IIDeath, what hast thou to do with one for whomTime is not lord, but servant? What ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Tree-Toad
"'S cur'ous-like," said the tree-toad,"I've twittered fer rain all day;And I got up soon,And hollered tel noon -But the sun, hit blazed away,Tell I jest clumb down in a crawfish-hole,Weary at hart, and sick at soul!"Dozed away fer an hour,And I tackled the thing agin: And I sung, and sung, Tel I knowed my lungWas jest about give in; And THEN, thinks I, ef hit don't rain NOW, They's nothin' in singin', anyhow!"Onc't in a while some farmerWould come a-drivin' past; And he'd hear my cry, And stop and sigh -Tel I jest laid back, at last, And I hollered rain tel I thought my th'oat Would bust wide open at ever' note!"But I FETCHED her! - O I FETCHED her! -'Cause a l...
James Whitcomb Riley
The Dean Of Faculty. - A New Ballad.
I. Dire was the hate at old Harlaw, That Scot to Scot did carry; And dire the discord Langside saw, For beauteous, hapless Mary: But Scot with Scot ne'er met so hot, Or were more in fury seen, Sir, Than 'twixt Hal and Bob for the famous job, Who should be Faculty's Dean, Sir.II. This Hal for genius, wit, and lore, Among the first was number'd; But pious Bob, 'mid learning's store, Commandment tenth remember'd. Yet simple Bob the victory got, And won his heart's desire; Which shows that heaven can boil the pot, Though the devil p--s in the fire.III. Squire Hal besides had in this case Pretensions rather ...
Robert Burns
Farm Breakfast
Maids shout to breakfast in a merry strife,And the cat runs to hear the whetted knife,And dogs are ever in the way to watchThe mouldy crust and falling bone to catch.The wooden dishes round in haste are set,And round the table all the boys are met;All know their own save Hodge who would be first,But every one his master leaves the worst.On every wooden dish, a humble claim,Two rude cut letters mark the owner's name;From every nook the smile of plenty calls,And rusty flitches decorate the walls,Moore's Almanack where wonders never cease--All smeared with candle snuff and bacon grease.
John Clare
The Salt of the Earth
If childhood were not in the world,But only men and women grown;No baby-locks in tendrils curled,No baby-blossoms blown;Though men were stronger, women fairer,And nearer all delights in reach,And verse and music uttered rarerTones of more godlike speech;Though the utmost life of lifes best hoursFound, as it cannot now find, words;Though desert sands were sweet as flowersAnd flowers could sing like birds,But children never heard them, neverThey felt a childs foot leap and run:This were a drearier star than everYet looked upon the sun.
December Night
Take off your cloak and your hatAnd your shoes, and draw up at my hearthWhere never woman sat.I have made the fire up bright;Let us leave the rest in the darkAnd sit by firelight.The wine is warm in the hearth;The flickers come and go.I will warm your feet with kissesUntil they glow.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
The First House
That is the earliest thing that I remember--The narrow house in the long narrow street,Dark rooms within and darkness out of doorsWhere grasses in the garden lift in the wind,Long grasses clinging round unsteady feet.The sunlight through one narrow passage pours,As through the keyhole into a dusty room,Striking with a golden rod the greening gloom.The tall, tall timber-stacks have yet been kind,Letting the sun fling his rod clear between,Lest there should be no gold upon the green,And no light then for a child to dream upon,And day be of day's brightness all forlorn.I saw those timber piles first dark and tall,And then men clambered up, and stumbled down,Each with a heavy and long timber borneUpon broad shoulders, leather-covered, bent.Ho...
John Frederick Freeman
Over The May Hill
All through the night time, and all through the day time, Dreading the morning and dreading the night,Nearer and nearer we drift to the May time Season of beauty and season of blight,Leaves on the linden, and sun on the meadow, Green in the garden, and bloom everywhere,Gloom in my heart, and a terrible shadow, Walks by me, sits by me, stands by my chair.Oh, but the birds by the brooklet are cheery, Oh, but the woods show such delicate greens,Strange how you droop and how soon you are weary - Too well I know what that weariness means.But how could I know in the crisp winter weather (Though sometimes I noticed a catch in your breath),Riding and singing and dancing together, How could I know you were racing with death?
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Jubilate
"The very last time I ever was here," he said,"I saw much less of the quick than I saw of the dead."- He was a man I had met with somewhere before,But how or when I now could recall no more."The hazy mazy moonlight at one in the morningSpread out as a sea across the frozen snow,Glazed to live sparkles like the great breastplate adorningThe priest of the Temple, with Urim and Thummim aglow."The yew-tree arms, glued hard to the stiff stark air,Hung still in the village sky as theatre-scenesWhen I came by the churchyard wall, and halted thereAt a shut-in sound of fiddles and tambourines."And as I stood hearkening, dulcimers, haut-boys, and shawms,And violoncellos, and a three-stringed double-bass,Joined in, and were intermixed with a singing...
Fancies.
The ceaseless whirr of crickets fills the earFrom underneath each hedge and bush and tree,Deep in the dew-drenched grasses everywhere.The simple sound dispels the fantasyOf gloom and terror gathering round the mind.It seems a pleasant thing to breathe, to be,To hear the many-voiced, soft summer windLisp through the dark thick leafage overhead -To see the rosy half-moon soar behindThe black slim-branching elms. Sad thoughts have fled,Trouble and doubt, and now strange reveriesAnd odd caprices fill us in their stead.From yonder broken disk the redness dies,Like gold fruit through the leaves the half-sphere gleams,Then over the hoar tree-tops climbs the skies,Blanched ever more and more, unt...
Emma Lazarus