Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 253 of 298
Previous
Next
The Ghost. - A Very Serious Ballad.
"I'll be your second." - LISTON.In Middle Row, some years ago,There lived one Mr. Brown;And many folks considered himThe stoutest man in town.But Brown and stout will both wear out -One Friday he died hard,And left a widow'd wife to mourn,At twenty pence a yard.Now widow B. in two short monthsThought mourning quite a tax;And wished, like Mr. Wilberforce,To manumit her blacks.With Mr. Street she soon was sweet;The thing came thus about:She asked him in at home, and thenAt church, he asked her out!Assurance such as this the manIn ashes could not stand;So like a Phoenix he rose upAgainst the Hand in Hand!One dreary night the angry spriteAppeared before her view;
Thomas Hood
Old Greek Lovers
They put wild olive and acanthus upWith tufts of yellow wool above the doorWhen a man died in Greece and in Greek Islands, Grey stone by the blue sea,Or sage-green trees down to the water's edge. How many clanging years ago I, also withering into death, sat with him, Old man of so white hair who only, Only looked past me into the red fire.At last his words were all a jumble of plum-treesAnd white boys smelling of the sea's green wineAnd practice of his lyre. Suddenly The bleak resurgent mindCalled wonderfully clear: "What mark have I left?" Crying girls with wine and linenWashed the straight old body and wrapped up, And set the doorward feet.Later for me also under Greek sunThe pendant lea...
Edward Powys Mathers
A Legacy.
Ah, Postumus, we all must go:This keen North-Easter nips my shoulder;My strength begins to fail; I knowYou find me older;I've made my Will. Dear, faithful friend--My Muse's friend and not my purse's!Who still would hear and still commendMy tedious verses,How will you live--of these deprived?I've learned your candid soul. The venal,--The sordid friend had scarce survivedA test so penal;But you--Nay, nay, 'tis so. The restAre not as you: you hide your merit;You, more than all, deserve the bestTrue friends inherit;--Not gold,--that hearts like yours despise;Not "spacious dirt" (your own expression),No; but the rarer, dearer prize--The Life's Confession!You catch my thought? What! Can't you gues...
Henry Austin Dobson
Spleen
Pluvius, this whole city on his nerves,Spills from his urn great waves of chilling rainOn graveyards' pallid inmates, and he poursMortality in gloomy district streets.My restless cat goes scratching on the tilesTo make a litter for his scabby hide.Some poet's phantom roams the gutter-spouts,Moaning and whimpering like a freezing soul.A great bell wails-within, the smoking logPipes in falsetto to a wheezing clock,And meanwhile, in a reeking deck of cardsSome dropsied crone's foreboding legacyThe dandy Jack of Hearts and Queen of SpadesTrade sinister accounts of wasted love.
Charles Baudelaire
No Coward Soul Is Mine
No coward soul is mine,No trembler in the world,s storm-troubled sphere:I see Heaven's glories shine,And Faith shines equal arming me from Fear.O God within my breast.Almighty ever-present Deity!Life , that in me has rest,As I Undying Life, have power in thee!Vain are the thousand creedsThat move men's hearts, unutterably vain;Worthless as withered weeds,Or idlest froth amid the boundless main,To waken doubt in oneHolding so fast by Thy infinity;So surely anchored onThe steadfast rock of Immortality.With wide-embracing loveThy Spirit animates eternal years,Pervades and broods above,Changes, sustains, dissolves, creates, and rears.Though Earth and moon were gone,And suns and universes c...
Emily Bronte
In The Day's When We Are Dead
Listen! The end draws nearer,Nearer the morning, or night,And I see with a vision clearerThat the beginning was right!These shall be words to rememberWhen all has been done and said,And my fame is a dying emberIn the days when I am dead.Listen! We wrote in sorrow,And we wrote by candle light;We took no heed of the morrow,And I think that we were right,(To-morrow, but not the day after,And I think that we were right).We wrote of a world that was humanAnd we wrote of blood that was red,For a child, or a man, or a woman,Remember when we are dead.Listen! We wrote not for money,And listen! We wrote not for fame,We wrote for the milk and the honeyOf Kindness, and not for a name.We paused not...
Henry Lawson
Void.
Great streets of silence led awayTo neighborhoods of pause;Here was no notice, no dissent,No universe, no laws.By clocks 't was morning, and for nightThe bells at distance called;But epoch had no basis here,For period exhaled.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Night
Silence, and whirling worlds afarThrough all encircling skies.What floods come o'er the spirit's bar,What wondrous thoughts arise.The earth, a mantle falls away,And, winged, we leave the sod;Where shines in its eternal swayThe majesty of God.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Eternity
He who binds to himself a joyDoes the winged life destroy;But he who kisses the joy as it fliesLives in eternity's sun rise.
William Blake
Will Paget On Demos And Hogos
To Coroner Merival, greetings, but a voice Dissentient from much that goes the rounds, Concerning Elenor Murray. Here's my word: Give men and women freedom, save the land From dull theocracy - the theo, what? A blend of Demos and Jehovah! Say, Bring back your despots, bring your Louis Fourteenths, And give them thrones of gold and ivory From where with leaded sceptres they may whack King Demos driven forth. You know the face? The temples are like sea shells, hollows out, Which narrow close the space for cortex cells. There would be little brow if hair remained; But hair is gone, because the dandruff came. The eyes are close together like a weasel's; The jaws are heavy, that is character; The m...
Edgar Lee Masters
Despondency. - An Ode.
I. Oppress'd with grief, oppress'd with care, A burden more than I can bear, I set me down and sigh: O life! thou art a galling load, Along a rough, a weary road, To wretches such as I! Dim-backward as I cast my view, What sick'ning scenes appear! What sorrows yet may pierce me thro' Too justly I may fear! Still caring, despairing, Must be my bitter doom; My woes here shall close ne'er But with the closing tomb!II. Happy, ye sons of busy life, Who, equal to the bustling strife, No other view regard! Ev'n when the wished end's deny'd, Yet while the busy means are ply'd, They b...
Robert Burns
The Nut-Brown Maid. A Poem.
Written three hundred years since.Be it right or wrong, these men amongOn women do complayne;Affyrmynge this, how that it isA labour spent in vaineTo love them wele; for never a deleThey love a man againe:For lete a man do what he canTher favour to attayne,Yet yf a new do them pursue,Ther furst trew lover thanLaboureth for nought; for from her thoughtHe is a banishyd man.I say not nay, but that all dayIt is bothe writ and saydeThat woman's fayth is as who saythe,All utterly decayed.But nevertheless right good witnessI' this case might be layde,That they love trewe, and continew,Record the Nut-brown Mayde;Which from her love (whan her to proveHe came to make his mone)Wold not depart, for in her her...
Matthew Prior
Given And Taken.
The snow-flakes were softly falling Adown on the landscape white,When the violet eyes of my first born Opened unto the light;And I thought as I pressed him to me, With loving, rapturous thrill,He was pure and fair as the snow-flakes That lay on the landscape still.I smiled when they spoke of the weary Length of the winter's night,Of the days so short and so dreary, Of the sun's cold cheerless light -I listened, but in their murmurs Nor by word nor thought took part,For the smiles of my gentle darling Brought light to my home and heart.Oh! quickly the joyous springtime Came back to our ice-bound earth,Filling meadows and woods with sunshine, And hearts with gladsome mirth,But, ah!...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Wolf And Hound
The hills like giants at a hunting layChin upon hand, to see the game at bay.- Browning.Youll take my tale with a little salt,But it needs none, nevertheless,I was foild completely, fairly at fault,Disheartend, too, I confess.At the splitters tent I had seen the trackOf horse-hoofs fresh on the sward,And though Darby Lynch and Donovan Jack(Who could swear through a ten-inch board)Solemnly swore he had not been there,I was just as sure that they lied,For to Darby all that is foul was fair,And Jack for his life was tried.We had run him for seven miles and moreAs hard as our nags could split;At the start they were all too weary and sore,And his was quite fresh and fit.Young Marsdens pony had ...
Adam Lindsay Gordon
Athanasia
To that gaunt House of Art which lacks for naughtOf all the great things men have saved from Time,The withered body of a girl was broughtDead ere the world's glad youth had touched its prime,And seen by lonely Arabs lying hidIn the dim womb of some black pyramid.But when they had unloosed the linen bandWhich swathed the Egyptian's body, lo! was foundClosed in the wasted hollow of her handA little seed, which sown in English groundDid wondrous snow of starry blossoms bearAnd spread rich odours through our spring-tide air.With such strange arts this flower did allureThat all forgotten was the asphodel,And the brown bee, the lily's paramour,Forsook the cup where he was wont to dwell,For not a thing of earth it seemed to be,But st...
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
Liebestod
I who, conceived beneath another star,Had been a prince and played with life, insteadHave been its slave, an outcast exiled farFrom the fair things my faith has merited.My ways have been the ways that wanderers treadAnd those that make romance of poverty -Soldier, I shared the soldier's board and bed,And Joy has been a thing more oft to meWhispered by summer wind and summer seaThan known incarnate in the hours it liesAll warm against our hearts and laughs into our eyes.I know not if in risking my best daysI shall leave utterly behind me hereThis dream that lightened me through lonesome waysAnd that no disappointment made less dear;Sometimes I think that, where the hilltops rearTheir white entrenchments back of tangled wire,Behind th...
Alan Seeger
The Gravedigger
Oh, the shambling sea is a sexton old,And well his work is done.With an equal grave for lord and knave,He buries them every one.Then hoy and rip, with a rolling hip,He makes for the nearest shore;And God, who sent him a thousand ship,Will send him a thousand more;But some he'll save for a bleaching grave,And shoulder them in to shore,--Shoulder them in, shoulder them in,Shoulder them in to shore.Oh, the ships of Greece and the ships of TyreWent out, and where are they?In the port they made, they are delayedWith the ships of yesterday.He followed the ships of England far,As the ships of long ago;And the ships of France they led him a dance,But he laid them all arow.Oh, a loafing, idle lubber to him...
Bliss Carman
Desespoir
The seasons send their ruin as they go,For in the spring the narciss shows its headNor withers till the rose has flamed to red,And in the autumn purple violets blow,And the slim crocus stirs the winter snow;Wherefore yon leafless trees will bloom againAnd this grey land grow green with summer rainAnd send up cowslips for some boy to mow.But what of life whose bitter hungry seaFlows at our heels, and gloom of sunless nightCovers the days which never more return?Ambition, love and all the thoughts that burnWe lose too soon, and only find delightIn withered husks of some dead memory.