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Lines Suggested By A Portrait From The Pencil Of F. Stone
Beguiled into forgetfulness of careDue to the day's unfinished task; of penOr book regardless, and of that fair sceneIn Nature's prodigality displayedBefore my window, oftentimes and longI gaze upon a Portrait whose mild gleamOf beauty never ceases to enrichThe common light; whose stillness charms the air,Or seems to charm it, into like repose;Whose silence, for the pleasure of the ear,Surpasses sweetest music. There she sitsWith emblematic purity attiredIn a white vest, white as her marble neckIs, and the pillar of the throat would beBut for the shadow by the drooping chinCast into that recess, the tender shade,The shade and light, both there and everywhere,And through the very atmosphere she breathes,Broad, clear, and toned harmon...
William Wordsworth
The Woman Answers.
What will I say when face to face with GodMy naked soul shall come, seared with the stainThat men call sin? Why, God will understand;He knew my pitiful story long beforeMy frail dust quickened with the breath of life;He knew the mystery of that day of daysWhen, thrilled with virgin wonder, I should comeBearing the lily of my stainless loveTo plant upon the desert of desire.I do not fear His judgment; He knows all.I do not fear His judgment lest it beThat I shall look no more upon his faceWho taught my heart to love; and, surely, OneWho wrought a perfect note from these poor stringsWill not condemn to discord when the strainHas reached the fullness of its harmony.I do not fear His judgment, but I weepFor him who slew the lily w...
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
An Inspiration
However the battle is ended, Though proudly the victor comesWith fluttering flags and prancing nags And echoing roll of drums,Still truth proclaims this motto In letters of living light, -No question is ever settled Until it is settled right.Though the heel of the strong oppressor May grind the weak in the dust;And the voices of fame with one acclaim May call him great and just,Let those who applaud take warning. And keep this motto in sight, -No question is ever settled Until it is settled right.Let those who have failed take courage; Though the enemy seems to have won,Though his ranks are strong, if he be in the wrong The battle is not yet done;For, sure as the morning follows<...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Dying Year
With dirge-like music, low,Sounds forth again the solemn harp of Time;Mass for the buried hours, a funeral chimeO'er human joy and woe.The sere leaves wail around thy passing bier,Speed to thy dreamless rest, departing year!Yet, ere thy sable pallCross the wide threshold of the mighty Past,Give back the treasures on thy bosom cast;Earth would her gems recall:Give back the lily's bloom and violet's breath,The summer leaves that bowed before the reaper Death.Give back the dreams of fame,The aspirations strong for glory won;Hopes that went out perchance when set thy sun,Nor left nor trace nor name:Give back the wasted hours, half-uttered prayer,The high resolves forgot that stained thine annals fair.Give back the flow...
Mary Gardiner Horsford
Fresh From His Fastnesses
To J. A. C.Fresh from his fastnessesWholesome and spacious,The North Wind, the mad huntsman,Halloas on his white houndsOver the grey, roaringReaches and ridges,The forest of ocean,The chace of the world.Hark to the pealOf the pack in full cry,As he thongs them before him,Swarming voluminous,Weltering, wide-wallowing,Till in a ruiningChaos of energy,Hurled on their quarry,They crash into foam!Old Indefatigable,Time's right-hand man, the seaLaughs as in joyFrom his millions of wrinkles:Laughs that his destiny,Great with the greatnessOf triumphing order,Shows as a dwarfBy the strength of his heartAnd the might of his hands.Master of masters,O make...
William Ernest Henley
Anxiety
The hoar-frost crumbles in the sun,The crisping steam of a trainMelts in the air, while two black birdsSweep past the window again.Along the vacant road, a redBicycle approaches; I waitIn a thaw of anxiety, for the boyTo leap down at our gate.He has passed us by; but is itRelief that starts in my breast?Or a deeper bruise of knowing that stillShe has no rest.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
The Wife's Watch.
Sleep on, my darling, sleep on,I am keeping watch by your side,I have drawn in the curtains close,And banished the world outside;Rest as the reaper may rest,When the harvest work is doneRest as the soldier may rest,When the victor's work is won.You smile in your happy sleep:Are the children with you now?Sweet baby Willie, so early called,And Nellie with thoughtful brow,And May, our loving daughter.Ah, the skies grew dark, my love,When the sunshine of her presenceVanished to Heaven above.While you're resting, my darling,I dream of the shadowy hour,When one of us looks the lastOn the light of its household bower,Then a sad sigh heaves my breast,And tears from my eyelids burst,As I ask of the future ...
Harriet Annie Wilkins
Mature Reflections.
O Love! divinest dream of youth,Thy day of ecstacy is o'er,My bosom, touch'd by time and truth,Thrills at thy dear deceits no more.Nor thou, Ambition! e'er again,With splendour dazzling to betray,And aspirations fierce and vain,Shall tempt my steps--away! away!Alas! by stern Experience cleft,When life's romance is turn'd to sport;If man hath consolation leftOn this side death--'tis good old port.And thou, Advice! who glum and chill,Do'st the third bottle still gainsay;Smile, and partake it, if you will,But if you wont--away! away!
Thomas Gent
The Prayer of the South
My brow is bent beneath a heavy rod!My face is wan and white with many woes!But I will lift my poor chained hands to God,And for my children pray, and for my foes.Beside the graves where thousands lowly lieI kneel, and weeping for each slaughtered son,I turn my gaze to my own sunny sky,And pray, O Father, let Thy will be done!My heart is filled with anguish, deep and vast!My hopes are buried with my children's dust!My joys have fled, my tears are flowing fast!In whom, save Thee, our Father, shall I trust?Ah! I forgot Thee, Father, long and oft,When I was happy, rich, and proud, and free;But conquered now, and crushed, I look aloft,And sorrow leads me, Father, back to Thee.Amid the wrecks that mark the foeman's pathI kneel, and...
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Voice of the Soul
In Youth, when through our veins runs fastThe bright red stream of life,The Souls Voice is a trumpet-blastThat calls us to the strife.The Spirit spurns its prison-bars,And feels with force enduedTo scale the ramparts of the starsAnd storm Infinitude.Youth passes; like a dungeon growsThe Spirits house of clay:The voice that once in music roseIn murmurs dies away.But in the day when sickness soreSmites on the bodys walls,The Souls Voice through the breach once moreLike to a trumpet calls.Well shall it be with him who heedsThe mystic summons then!His after-life with loving deedsShall blossom amongst men.He shall have gifts, the gift that feelsThe germ within the clod,And hears t...
Victor James Daley
A Death in the Bush
The hut was built of bark and shrunken slabs,That wore the marks of many rains, and showedDry flaws wherein had crept and nestled rot.Moreover, round the bases of the barkWere left the tracks of flying forest fires,As you may see them on the lower boleOf every elder of the native woods.For, ere the early settlers came and stockedThese wilds with sheep and kine, the grasses grewSo that they took the passing pilgrim inAnd whelmed him, like a running sea, from sight.And therefore, through the fiercer summer months,While all the swamps were rotten; while the flatsWere baked and broken; when the clayey riftsYawned wide, half-choked with drifted herbage past,Spontaneous flames would burst from thence and raceAcross the prairies all day lo...
Henry Kendall
Occasional Lines Repeated At An Elegant Entertainment
Given By Lieutenant-Colonel D ---- To His Friends In The Ruins Of Berry Castle, Devonshire.[A]By your permission, Ladies! I address ye,And for the boon you grant, my Muse shall bless ye.I do not mean in solemn verse to tellWhat fate the race of Pomeroy befell;To trace the castle-story of each year,To learn how many owls have hooted here;What was the weight of stone, which form'd this pile,Will on your lovely cheeks awake no smile:Such antiquarian sermons suit not me,Nor any soul who loves festivity.Past times I heed not; be the present hourIn life, while yet it blooms, my chosen flow'r,For well I know, what Time cannot disown,Amidst this mossy pile of mould'ring stone,That Hospitality was never seenTo spread more socia...
John Carr
October.
I would not ask thee back, fair May, With all your bright-eyed flowers;Nor would I welcome April days With all their laughing showers;For each bright season of the year Can claim its own sweet pleasures;And we must take them as they come-- These gladly-given treasures.There's music in the rain that falls In bright October weather;And we must learn to love them both-- The sun and rain together.A mist is 'round the mountain-tops Of gold-encircled splendor;A dreamy spell is in the air Of beauty sad and tender.The winter hath not wooed her yet, This fair October maiden;And she is free to wander still With fruits and flowers laden.She shakes the dew-drops from her hair In one...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
The Child of the Poet
The sunshine of thy Father's fameSleeps in the shadows of thy eyes,And flashes sometimes when his nameLike a lost star seeks its skies.In the horizons of thy heartHis memory shines for aye,A light that never shall departNor lose a single ray.Thou passest thro' the crowds unknown,So gentle, so sweet, and so shy;Thy heart throbs fast and sometimes may grow low; Then aloneArt the star in thy Father's sky.'Tis fame enough for thee to bear his name --Thou couldst not ask for more;Thou art the jewel of thy Father's fame,He waiteth on the bright and golden shore;He prayeth in the great EternityBeside God's throne for thee.
Trafalgar Square
These verses have I pilfered like a beeOut of a letter from my C. C. C. In London, showing what befell him there,With other things, of interest to me.One page described a night in open airHe spent last summer in Trafalgar Square, With men and women who by want are drivenThither for lodging, when the nights are fair.No roof there is between their heads and heaven,No warmth but what by ragged clothes is given, No comfort but the company of thoseWho with despair, like them, have vainly striven.On benches there uneasily they doze,Snatching brief morsels of a poor repose, And if through weariness they might sleep sound,Their eyes must open almost ere they close.With even tramp upon the paven ground,Twice eve...
Robert Fuller Murray
Love Of Nature
I love thee, Nature, with a boundless love!The calm of earth, the storm of roaring woods!The winds breathe happiness where'er I rove!There's life's own music in the swelling floods!My heart is in the thunder-melting clouds,The snow-cap't mountain, and the rolling sea!And hear ye not the voice where darkness shroudsThe heavens? There lives happiness for me!My pulse beats calmer while His lightnings play!My eye, with earth's delusions waxing dim,Clears with the brightness of eternal day!The elements crash round me! It is He!Calmly I hear His voice and never start.From Eve's posterity I stand quite free,Nor feel her curses rankle round my heart.Love is not here. Hope is, and at His voice--The rolling thunder and the roaring sea--...
John Clare
Tom's Garland; upon the Unemployed
Tom - garlanded with squat and surly steelTom; then Tom's fallowbootfellow piles pickBy him and rips out rockfire homeforth - sturdy Dick;Tom Heart-at-ease, Tom Navvy: he is all for his mealSure, 's bed now. Low be it: lustily he his low lot (feelThat ne'er need hunger, Tom; Tom seldom sick,Seldomer heartsore; that treads through, prickproof, thickThousands of thorns, thoughts) swings though. Common- wealLittle I reck ho! lacklevel in, if all had bread:What! Country is honour enough in all us - lordly head,With heaven's lights high hung round, or, mother-groundThat mammocks, mighty foot. But no way sped,Nor mind nor mainstrength; gold go garlandedWith, perilous, O nó; nor yet plod safe shod sound; Undenizened, beyond boundOf earth's glory, earth's...
Gerard Manley Hopkins
Discord.
The goddess Discord, having made, on high,Among the gods a general grapple,And thence a lawsuit, for an apple,Was turn'd out, bag and baggage, from the sky.The animal call'd man, with open arms,Received the goddess of such naughty charms, -Herself and Whether-or-no, her brother,With Thine-and-mine, her stingy mother.In this, the lower universe,Our hemisphere she chose to curse:For reasons good she did not pleaseTo visit our antipodes -Folks rude and savage like the beasts,Who, wedding-free from forms and priests,In simple tent or leafy bower,Make little work for such a power.That she might know exactly whereHer direful aid was in demand,Renown flew courier through the land,Reporting each dispute with care;Then she, outru...
Jean de La Fontaine