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Lament For Israel.
Where is thy home in thy promised land? Desolate and forsaken!The stranger's arm hath seized thy brand,Thou art bowed beneath the stranger's hand, And the stranger thy birthright hath taken.Where is the mark of thy chosen race? Infamous and degraded!It hath fallen on thee, on thy dwelling-place,And that heaven-stamped sign to a foul disgrace And the scoff of the world, has faded.First-born of nations! upon thy brow, Resistless and revenging,The fiery finger of God hath nowWritten the sentence of thy wo, The innocent blood avenging!Lion of Judah! thy glory is past, Vanished and fled for ever.Homeless and scattered, thy race is castLike chaff in the breath of the sweeping blast, To rally...
Frances Anne Kemble
Lines Written In Dejection
When have I last looked onThe round green eyes and the long wavering bodiesOf the dark leopards of the moon?All the wild witches, those most noble ladies,For all their broom-sticks and their tears,Their angry tears, are gone.The holy centaurs of the hills are banished;I have nothing but the harsh sun;Heroic mother moon has vanished,And now that I have come to fifty yearsI must endure the timid sun.
William Butler Yeats
To A Young Lady, Who Was Fond Of Fortune-Telling
You, Madam, may, with safety goDecrees of destiny to know;For at your birth kind planets reign'd,And certain happiness ordain'd:Such charms as yours are only givenTo chosen favourites of Heaven.But such is my uncertain state'Tis dangerous to try my fate;For I would only know from artThe future motions of your hert,And what predestinated doomAttends my love for years to come,No secrets else that mortals learnMy cares deserve, or life concern;But this will so important beI dread to search the dark decree;For while the smallest hope remainsFaint joys are mingled with my pains.Vain distant views my fancy please,And give some intermitting ease;But should the stars too plainly showThat you have doom'd my endless wo,
Matthew Prior
The Flight.
Here in the silent doorway let me lingerOne moment, for the porch is still and lonely;That shadow's but the rose vine in the moonlight;All are asleep in peace, I waken only,And he I wait, by my own heart's beatingI know how slow to him the tide creeps by,Nor life, nor death, could bar our hearts from meeting;Were worlds between, his soul to mine would fly.Oh, shame! to think a heap of paltry metalShould overbalance manhood's noblest graces;A film of gold had gilt his worth and honor,Warming to smiles the coldness of their faces;Gentle to me, they rise in condemnation,And plead with me than words more powerfully.Oh! well I love them - but they have wealth and stationTo fill their hearts, and he has only me.But oh, my roses, how their...
Marietta Holley
The Wood-Cutter
The sky is like an envelope, One of those blue official things;And, sealing it, to mock our hope, The moon, a silver wafer, clings.What shall we find when death gives leaveTo read - our sentence or reprieve?I'm holding it down on God's scrap-pile, up on the fag-end of earth;O'er me a menace of mountains, a river that grits at my feet;Face to face with my soul-self, weighing my life at its worth;Wondering what I was made for, here in my last retreat.Last! Ah, yes, it's the finish. Have ever you heard a man cry?(Sobs that rake him and rend him, right from the base of the chest.)That's how I've cried, oh, so often; and now that my tears are dry,I sit in the desolate quiet and wait for the infinite Rest.Rest! Well, it's restful a...
Robert William Service
To The Fever, Not To Trouble Julia.
Thou'st dar'd too far; but, fury, now forbearTo give the least disturbance to her hair:But less presume to lay a plait uponHer skin's most smooth and clear expansion.'Tis like a lawny firmament as yet,Quite dispossess'd of either fray or fret.Come thou not near that film so finely spread,Where no one piece is yet unlevelled.This if thou dost, woe to thee, fury, woe,I'll send such frost, such hail, such sleet, and snow,Such flesh-quakes, palsies, and such fears as shallDead thee to th' most, if not destroy thee all.And thou a thousand thousand times shalt beMore shak'd thyself than she is scorch'd by thee.
Robert Herrick
Sonnet: - XXII.
Dark, dismal day - the first of many such!The wind is sighing through the plaintive trees,In fitful gusts of a half-frenzied woe;Affrighted clouds the hand might almost touch,Their black wings bend so mournfully and low,Sweep through the skies like night-winds o'er the seas.There is no chirp of bird through all the grove,Save that of the young fledgeling rudely flungFrom its warm nest; and like the clouds aboveMy soul is dark, and restless as the breezeThat leaps and dances over Couchiching.Soon will the last duett be sweetly sung;But through the years to come our hearts will ringWith memories, as dear as time and love can bring.
Charles Sangster
Tim Turpin. - A Pathetic Ballad.
Tim Turpin he was gravel blind,And ne'er had seen the skies:For Mature, when his head was made,Forgot to dot his eyes.So, like a Christmas pedagogue,Poor Tim was forc'd to do -Look out for pupils, for he hadA vacancy for two.There's some have specs to help their sightOf objects dim and small:But Tim had specks within his eyes,And could not see at all.Now Tim he woo'd a servant-maid,And took her to his arms;For he, like Pyramus, had castA wall-eye on her charms.By day she led him up and downWhere'er he wished to jog,A happy wife, altho' she ledThe life of any dog.But just when Tim had liv'd a monthIn honey with his wife,A surgeon ope'd his Milton eyes,Like oysters, wi...
Thomas Hood
To Robert Southey, Esq. On Reading His "Remains Of Henry Kirke White."
Southey! high placed on the contested throneOf modern verse, a Muse, herself unknown,Sues that her tears may consecrate the strainsPour'd o'er the urn enrich'd with WHITE'S Remains!While touch'd to transport, Taste's responding toneMakes the rapt poet's ecstasies thine own;Ah! think that he, whose hand supremely skill'd,The heart's fine chords with deep vibration thrill'd,In stagnant silence and petrific gloom,Unconscious sleeps, the tenant of the tomb!Extinct that spirit, whose strong-bidding drewFrom Fancy's confines Wonder's wild-eyed crew,Which bade Despair's terrific phantoms passLike Macbeth's monarchs in the mystic glass.Before the youthful bard's impassion'd eye,Like him, led on, to triumph and to die;Like him, by mighty magic compass'd...
Thomas Gent
The Shock
Thinking of these, of beautiful brief things,Of things that are of sense and spirit made,Of meadow flowers, dense hedges and dark bushesWith roses trailing over nests of thrushes;Of dews so pure and bright and flush'd and cool,And like the flowers as brief as beautiful;Thinking of the tall grass and daisies tallAnd whispered music of the waving bents;Of these that like a simple child I loveSince they are life and life is flowers and grass;Thinking of trees, and water at their feetAnswering the trees with murmur childlike sweet;Thinking of those high thoughts that passed like the windYet left their brightness lying on the mind,As the white blossoms the raw airs shake downThat lie awhile yet lovely on the chill grass;Think...
John Frederick Freeman
Lines To Miss C. On Her Leaving The Country.
Since Friendship soon must bid a fond adieu,And, parting, wish your charms she never knew,Dear Laura hear one genuine thought express'd,Warm from the heart, and to the heart address'd: -Much do I wish you all your soul holds dear,To sooth and sweeten ev'ry trouble here;But heav'n has yielded such an ample store,You cannot ask, nor can I wish you, more;Bless'd with a sister's love, whose gentle mind,Still pure tho' polish'd, virtuous and refin'd,Will aid your tend'rer years and innocenceBeneath the shelter of her riper sense.Charm'd with the bright example may you move,And, loving, richly copy what you love.Adieu! and blame not if an artless pray'rShould, self-directed, ask one moment's care: -When years and absence shall their shade extend,
John Carr
The Parting Of Ways
The skies from black to pearly greyHad veered without a star or sun;Only a burning opal rayFell on your brow when all was done.Aye, after victory, the crown;Yet through the fight no word of cheer;And what would win and what go downNo word could help, no light make clear.A thousand ages onward ledTheir joys and sorrows to that hour;No wisdom weighed, no word was said,For only what we were had power.There was no tender leaning thereOf brow to brow in loving mood;For we were rapt apart, and wereIn elemental solitude.We knew not in redeeming dayWhether our spirits would be foundFloating along the starry way,Or in the earthly vapours drowned.Brought by the sunrise-coloured flameTo earth, un...
George William Russell
Cuchulain Comforted
A man that had six mortal wounds, a manViolent and famous, strode among the dead;Eyes stared out of the branches and were gone.Then certain Shrouds that muttered head to headCame and were gone. He leant upon a treeAs though to meditate on wounds and blood.A Shroud that seemed to have authorityAmong those bird-like things came, and let fallA bundle of linen. Shrouds by two and thrceCame creeping up because the man was still.And thereupon that linen-carrier said:"Your life can grow much sweeter if you will"Obey our ancient rule and make a shroud;Mainly because of what we only knowThe rattle of those arms makes us afraid."We thread the needles' eyes, and all we doAll must together do.' That done, the manTook up ...
he Scorpion
The Scorpion is as black as soot,He dearly loves to bite;He is a most unpleasant bruteTo find in bed at night.
Hilaire Belloc
Nursery Rhyme. XLIX. Tales.
Solomon Grundy, Born on a Monday, Christened on Tuesday, Married on Wednesday, Took ill on Thursday, Worse on Friday, Died on Saturday, Buried on Sunday: This is the end Of Solomon Grundy.
Unknown
The New School
(For My Mother)The halls that were loud with the merry tread of young and careless feetAre still with a stillness that is too drear to seem like holiday,And never a gust of laughter breaks the calm of the dreaming streetOr rises to shake the ivied walls and frighten the doves away.The dust is on book and on empty desk, and the tennis-racquet and ballsLie still in their lonely locker and wait for a game that is never played,And over the study and lecture-room and the river and meadow fallsA stern peace, a strange peace, a peace that War has made.For many a youthful shoulder now is gay with an epaulet,And the hand that was deft with a cricket-bat is defter with a sword,And some of the lads will laugh to-day where the trench is red and wet,A...
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
M * * *
When I am dead, and all will soon forgetMy words, and face, and ways --I, somehow, think I'll walk beside thee yetAdown thy after days.I die first, and you will see my grave;But child! you must not cry;For my dead hand will brightest blessings waveO'er you from yonder sky.You must not weep; I believe I'd hear your tearsTho' sleeping in a tomb:My rest would not be rest, if in your yearsThere floated clouds of gloom.For -- from the first -- your soul was dear to mine,And dearer it became,Until my soul, in every prayer, would twineThy name -- my child! thy name.You came to me in girlhood pure and fair,And in your soul -- and face --I saw a likeness to another thereIn every trace and grace.You c...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Translation Of The Epitaph On Virgil And Tibullus, By Domitius Marsus.
He who, sublime, in epic numbers roll'd,And he who struck the softer lyre of Love,By Death's unequal[1] hand alike controul'd,Fit comrades in Elysian regions move!
George Gordon Byron