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Epitaph In Old Mode
The leaves fall gently on the grass, And all the willow trees, and poplar trees, and elder trees That bend above her where she sleeps, O all the willow trees, the willow trees Breathe sighs upon her tomb. O pause and pity, as you pass, She loved so tenderly, so quietly, so hopelessly; And sometimes comes one here and weeps: She loved so tenderly, so tenderly, And never told them whom.
John Collings Squire, Sir
Obsession
Great forests you frighten me, like vast cathedrals:You roar like an organ, and in our condemned souls,aisles of eternal mourning, where past death-rattlessound, the echo of your De Profundis rolls.I hate you, Ocean! My mind, in your tumultuous main,sees itself: I hear the vast laughter of your seas,the bitter laughter of defeated men,filled with the sound of sobs and blasphemies.How you would please me without your stars, O Night!I know the language that their light employs!Since I search for darkness, nakedness, the Void!But the shadows themselves seem, to my sightcanvases, where thousands of lost beings, alive,and with a familiar gaze, leap from my eyes.
Charles Baudelaire
Lament IX
Thou shouldst be purchased, Wisdom, for much goldIf all they say of thee is truly told:That thou canst root out from the mind the hostOf longings and canst change a man almostInto an angel whom no grief can sap,Who is not prone to fear nor evil hap.Thou seest all things human as they are -Trifles. Thou bearest in thy breast a starFixed and tranquil, and dost contemplateDeath unafraid, still calm, inviolate.Of riches, one thing thou dost hold the measure:Proportion to man's needs - not gold nor treasure;Thy searching eyes have power to beholdThe beggar housed beneath the roof of gold,Nor dost thou grudge the poor man fame as blestIf he but hearken him to thy behest.Oh, hapless, hapless man am I, who soughtIf I might gain thy thresholds by ...
Jan Kochanowski
Garrison
The storm and peril overpast,The hounding hatred shamed and still,Go, soul of freedom! take at lastThe place which thou alone canst fill.Confirm the lesson taught of oldLife saved for self is lost, while theyWho lose it in His service holdThe lease of God's eternal day.Not for thyself, but for the slaveThy words of thunder shook the world;No selfish griefs or hatred gaveThe strength wherewith thy bolts were hurled.From lips that Sinai's trumpet blewWe heard a tender under song;Thy very wrath from pity grew,From love of man thy hate of wrong.Now past and present are as one;The life below is life above;Thy mortal years have but begunThy immortality of love.With somewhat of thy lofty faithWe lay thy outworn garment by...
John Greenleaf Whittier
To A Thunder-Cloud.
Oh, melancholy fragment of the nightDrawing thy lazy web against the sun,Thou shouldst have waited till the day was doneWith kindred glooms to build thy fane aright,Sublime amid the ruins of the light!But thus to shape our glories one by oneWith fearful hands, ere we had well begunTo look for shadows--even in the bright!Yet may we charm a lesson from thy breast,A secret wisdom from thy folds of thunder:There is a wind that cometh from the westWill rend thy tottering piles of gloom asunder,And fling thee ruinous along the grass,To sparkle on us as our footsteps pass!
George MacDonald
The Ballet
They crush together - a rustling heap of flesh -Of more than flesh, a heap of souls; and thenThey part, enmesh,And crush together again,Like the pink petals of a too sanguine roseFrightened shut just when it blows.Though all alike in their tinsel livery,And indistinguishable at a sweeping glance,They muster, maybe,As lives wide in irrelevance;A world of her own has each one underneath,Detached as a sword from its sheath.Daughters, wives, mistresses; honest or false, sold, bought;Hearts of all sizes; gay, fond, gushing, or penned,Various in thoughtOf lover, rival, friend;Links in a one-pulsed chain, all showing one smile,Yet severed so many a mile!
Thomas Hardy
In Clay
Here went a horse with heavy laboring strideAlong the woodland side;Deep in the clay his iron hoof-marks show,Patient and slow,Where with his human burden yesterdayHe passed this way.Would that this wind that tramples 'round me here,Among the sad and sereOf winter-weary forests, were a steed,Mighty indeed,And tameless as the tempest of its pace,Upon whom man might place.The boundless burden of his mortal cares,Life's griefs, despairs,And ruined dreams that bow the spirit so!And let him goBearing them far from the sad world, ah me!Leaving it free.As in that Age of Gold, of which men tell,When Earth was glad and gods came here to dwell.
Madison Julius Cawein
Ogyges
Stand out, swift-footed leaders of the horns,And draw strong breath, and fill the hollowy cliffWith shocks of clamour, let the chasm takeThe noise of many trumpets, lest the huntShould die across the dim Aonian hills,Nor break through thunder and the surf-white caveThat hems about the old-eyed OgygesAnd bars the sea-wind, rain-wind, and the sea!Much fierce delight hath old-eyed Ogyges(A hairless shadow in a lions skin)In tumult, and the gleam of flying spears,And wild beasts vexed to death; for, sayeth he,Here lying broken, do I count the daysFor every trouble; being like the treeThe many-wintered father of the trunksOn yonder ridges: wherefore it is wellTo feel the dead blood kindling in my veinsAt sound of boar or battle; yea ...
Henry Kendall
Patriotism 2: Nelson, Pitt, Fox
To mute and to material thingsNew life revolving summer brings;The genial call dead Nature hears,And in her glory reappears.But oh, my Country's wintry stateWhat second spring shall renovate?What powerful call shall bid ariseThe buried warlike and the wise;The mind that thought for Britain's weal,The hand that grasp'd the victor steel?The vernal sun new life bestowsEven on the meanest flower that blows;But vainly, vainly may he shineWhere glory weeps o'er Nelson's shrine;And vainly pierce the solemn gloomThat shrouds, O Pitt, thy hallow'd tomb!Deep graved in every British heart,O never let those names depart!Say to your sons, Lo, here his grave,Who victor died on Gadite wave!To him, as to the burning levin,
Walter Scott
On The Death Of Sir James Hunter Blair.
The lamp of day, with ill-presaging glare, Dim, cloudy, sunk beneath the western wave; Th' inconstant blast howl'd thro' the darkening air, And hollow whistled in the rocky cave. Lone as I wander'd by each cliff and dell, Once the lov'd haunts of Scotia's royal train;[1] Or mus'd where limpid streams once hallow'd well,[2] Or mould'ring ruins mark the sacred fane.[3] Th' increasing blast roared round the beetling rocks, The clouds, swift-wing'd, flew o'er the starry sky, The groaning trees untimely shed their locks, And shooting meteors caught the startled eye. The paly moon rose in the livid east, And 'mong the cliffs disclos'd a stately for...
Robert Burns
Methought I Saw My Late Espoused Saint
Methought I saw my late espoused SaintBrought to me like Alcestus from the grave,Who Jove's great Son to her glad Husband gave,Rescu'd from death by force though pale and faint.Mine as whom washt from spot of child-bed taintPurification in the old Law did save,And such as yet once more I trust to haveFull sight of her in Heav'n without restraint,Came vested all in white, pure as her mind:Her face was veil'd, yet to my fancied sightLove, sweetness, goodness in her person shin'dSo clear, as in no face with more delight.But O as to embrace me she enclin'dI wak'd, she fled, and day brought back my night.
John Milton
Granta. A Medley.
[Greek: Argureais logchaisi machou kai panta krataeseo.] [1](Reply of the Pythian Oracle to Philip of Macedon.)1.Oh! could LE SAGE'S [2] demon's giftBe realis'd at my desire,This night my trembling form he'd liftTo place it on St. Mary's spire.2.Then would, unroof'd, old Granta's halls,Pedantic inmates full display;Fellows who dream on lawn or stalls,The price of venal votes to pay.3.Then would I view each rival wight,PETTY and PALMERSTON survey;Who canvass there, with all their might,Against the next elective day. [3]4.Lo! candidates and voters lieAll lull'd in sleep, a goodly number!A race renown'd for piety,<...
George Gordon Byron
Desire And Possession 1727
'Tis strange what different thoughts inspireIn men, Possession and Desire!Think what they wish so great a blessing;So disappointed when possessing! A moralist profoundly sage(I know not in what book or page,Or whether o'er a pot of ale)Related thus the following tale. Possession, and Desire, his brother,But still at variance with each other,Were seen contending in a race;And kept at first an equal pace;'Tis said, their course continued long,For this was active, that was strong:Till Envy, Slander, Sloth, and Doubt,Misled them many a league about;Seduced by some deceiving light,They take the wrong way for the right;Through slippery by-roads, dark and deep,They often climb, and often creep. Desire, the swifter ...
Jonathan Swift
The Mystic.
When, wild and spent, I fly beforeSome steadfast Fate, serene, malign,Let me not think, Lord, I imploreThose dark and awful eyes are thine!Oh, when the dogs of life are loose,And, raging, follow on my track.Let me not dream, by chance or use.The leash was thine that held the pack!Nay, hunted, breathless, faint and prone.With my last gaze, ah, let me seeThe shape I know, nor shall disown.Thy shape, oh Grod, that runs with me!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Epigram 1. - To Stella.
FROM THE GREEK OF PLATO.Thou wert the morning star among the living,Ere thy fair light had fled; -Now, having died, thou art as Hesperus, givingNew splendour to the dead.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Anno Aetatis 19. At a Vacation Exercise in the Colledge, part Latin, part English. The Latin speeches ended, the English thus began.
Hail native Language, that by sinews weakDidst move my first endeavouring tongue to speak,And mad'st imperfect words with childish tripps,Half unpronounc't, slide through my infant-lipps,Driving dum silence from the portal dore,Where he had mutely sate two years before:Here I salute thee and thy pardon ask,That now I use thee in my latter task:Small loss it is that thence can come unto thee,I know my tongue but little Grace can do thee:Thou needst not be ambitious to be first,Believe me I have thither packt the worst:And, if it happen as I did forecast,The daintest dishes shall be serv'd up last.I pray thee then deny me not thy aideFor this same small neglect that I have made:But haste thee strait to do me once a Pleasure,And from thy war...
Cities Of The Plain
Where are the cabalists, the insidious committees,The panders who betray the idiot citiesFor miles and miles toward the prairie sprawled,Ignorant, soul-less, rich,Smothered in fumes of pitch? * * * * *Rooms of mahogany in tall sky scrapersSee the unfolding and the folding upOf ring-clipped papers,And letters which keep drugged the public cup.The walls hear whispers and the semi-tonesOf voices in the corner, over telephonesMuffled by Persian padding, gemmed with brass spittoons.Butts of cigars are on the glass topped table,And through the smoke, gracing the furtive Babel,The bishop's picture blesses the picaroons,Who start or stop the life of millions movingUnconscious of obedience, the plasti...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Devil's Bag (The Adventures Of Seumas Beg)
I saw the Devil walking down the lane Behind our house., There was a heavy bag Strapped tightly on his shoulders, and the rain Sizzled when it hit him. He picked a rag Up from the ground and put it in his sack, And grinned and rubbed his hands. There was a thing Moving inside the bag upon his back, It must have been a soul! I saw it fling And twist about inside, and not a hole Or cranny for escape! Oh, it was sad! I cried, and shouted out, "Let out that soul!" But he turned round, and, sure, his face went mad, And twisted up and down, and he said "Hell!" And ran away.... Oh, mammy! I'm not well.
James Stephens