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The Battle Of The Nile.[1]
Shout! for the Lord hath triumphed gloriously! Upon the shores of that renowned land, Where erst His mighty arm and outstretched hand He lifted high, And dashed, in pieces dashed the enemy; Upon that ancient coast, Where Pharaoh's chariot and his host He cast into the deep, Whilst o'er their silent pomp He bid the swoll'n sea sweep; Upon that eastern shore, That saw His awful arm revealed of yore, Again hath He arisen, and opposed His foes' defying vaunt: o'er them the deep hath closed! Shades of mighty chiefs of yore, Who triumphed on the self-same shore: Ammon, who first o'er ocean's empire wide Didst bid the bold bark stem the roaring tide; Sesac, who from the East to farthes...
William Lisle Bowles
Funeral Tree Of The Sokokis
Around Sebago's lonely lakeThere lingers not a breeze to breakThe mirror which its waters make.The solemn pines along its shore,The firs which hang its gray rocks o'er,Are painted on its glassy floor.The sun looks o'er, with hazy eye,The snowy mountain-tops which liePiled coldly up against the sky.Dazzling and white! save where the bleak,Wild winds have bared some splintering peak,Or snow-slide left its dusky streak.Yet green are Saco's banks below,And belts of spruce and cedar show,Dark fringing round those cones of snow.The earth hath felt the breath of spring,Though yet on her deliverer's wingThe lingering frosts of winter cling.Fresh grasses fringe the meadow-brooks,And mildly from its s...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Little People
Who are these strange small folk,These that come to our homes as kings,Asking nor leave nor grace,Bending our necks to their yoke,Taking the highest place,And mastery of all things?Whence they come none may know,But a wondrous land it must be;Angels in exile they!Here in this dull world belowCreatures of sinful clayWe feel near their purity.Clearer their young eyes areThan the dew in the cups of flowersGleaming, when shines at dawn,Faintly, the mornings one star,Eyes whose still gaze, indrawn,Sees things unseen by ours.Deep in those orbs serene,Little planets be-ringed and bright,Mysteries marvellous lie:Known unto us they might meanFaith, without fear, to die,All sure of the waiting ...
Victor James Daley
An Idyl Of The May.
In the beautiful May weather, Lapsing soon into June; On a golden, golden day Of the green and golden May, When our hearts were beating tune To the coming feet of June,Walked we in the woods together. Silver fine Gleamed the ash buds through the darkness of the pine,And the waters of the streamGlance and gleam,Like a silver-footed dream-- Beckoning, calling, Flashing, falling,Into shadows dun and brown Slipping down,Calling still--Oh hear! Oh follow! Follow--follow!Down through glen and ferny hollow,Lit with patches of the sky,Shining through the trees so high,Hand in hand we went together,In the golden, golden weather Of the...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Calm
Have patience, O my sorrow, and be still.You asked for night: it falls: it is here.A shadowy atmosphere enshrouds the hill,to some men bringing peace, to others care.While the vile human multitudegoes to earn remorse, in servile pleasures play,under the lash of joy, the torturer, whois pitiless, Sadness, come, far away:Give me your hand. See, where the lost yearslean from the balcony in their outdated gear,where regret, smiling, surges from the watery deeps.Underneath some archway, the dying lightsleeps, and, like a long shroud trailing from the East,listen, dear one, listen to the soft onset of night.
Charles Baudelaire
In Memoriam. - Mrs. Frederick Tyler,
Died at Hartford, Wednesday, June 19th, 1861.They multiply above, with whom we walk'dIn tender friendship, and whose steadfast step,Onward and upward, was a guide to usIn duty's path. They multiply above,Making the mansions that our Lord preparedAnd promised His redeemed, more beautifulTo us, the wayside pilgrims. One, this dayHath gone, whose memory like a loving smileLingereth behind her. She was skilled to charmAnd make her pleasant home a cloudless sceneOf happiness to children and to guests;But most to him whose heart for many yearsDid safely trust in her, finding his caresDivided and his pleasures purified.A sweet-voiced kindness, prompting word and deed,Dwelt ever ...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
Satire On The Earth.
("Une terre au flanc maigre.")[Bk. III. xi., October, 1840.]A clod with rugged, meagre, rust-stained, weather-worried face,Where care-filled creatures tug and delve to keep a worthless race;And glean, begrudgedly, by all their unremitting toil,Sour, scanty bread and fevered water from the ungrateful soil;Made harder by their gloom than flints that gash their harried hands,And harder in the things they call their hearts than wolfish bands,Perpetuating faults, inventing crimes for paltry ends,And yet, perversest beings! hating Death, their best of friends!Pride in the powerful no more, no less than in the poor;Hatred in both their bosoms; love in one, or, wondrous! two!Fog in the valleys; on the mountains snowfields, ever new,That only mel...
Victor-Marie Hugo
Robert Parkes
High travelling winds by royal hillTheir awful anthem sing,And songs exalted flow and fillThe caverns of the spring.To-night across a wild wet plainA shadow sobs and strays;The trees are whispering in the rainOf long departed days.I cannot say what forest saithIts words are strange to me:I only know that in its breathAre tones that used to be.Yea, in these deep dim solitudesI hear a sound I knowThe voice that lived in Penrith woodsTwelve weary years ago.And while the hymn of other yearsIs on a listening land,The Angel of the Past appearsAnd leads me by the hand;And takes me over moaning wave,And tracts of sleepless change,To set me by a lonely graveWithin a lonely range.
Henry Kendall
Epitaphs III. O Thou Who Movest Onward With A Mind
O thou who movest onward with a mindIntent upon thy way, pause, though in haste!'Twill be no fruitless moment. I was bornWithin Savona's walls, of gentle blood.On Tiber's banks my youth was dedicateTo sacred studies; and the Roman ShepherdGave to my charge Urbino's numerous flock.Well did I watch, much laboured, nor had powerTo escape from many and strange indignities;Was smitten by the great ones of the world,But did not fall; for Virtue braves all shocks,Upon herself resting immoveably.Me did a kindlier fortune then inviteTo serve the glorious Henry, King of France,And in his hands I saw a high rewardStretched out for my acceptance, but Death came.Now, Reader, learn from this my fate, how false,How treacherous to her promise, is the wor...
William Wordsworth
She Loved Him.
She loved him--but she heeded not-- Her heart had only room for pride:All other feelings were forgot, When she became another's bride.As from a dream she then awoke, To realize her lonely state,And own it was the vow she broke That made her drear and desolate!She loved him--but the sland'rer came, With words of hate that all believed;A stain thus rested on his name-- But he was wronged and she deceived;Ah! rash the act that gave her hand, That drove her lover from her side--Who hied him to a distant land, Where, battling for a name, he died!She loved him--and his memory now Was treasured from the world apart:The calm of thought was on her brow, The seeds of death were in her heart.
George Pope Morris
An Incident
Here is a tale for men and women teachers:There was a girl who'd ceased to be a maiden;Who walked by night with heart like Lilith's laden;A child of sin anathemaed of preachers.She had been lovely once; but dye and scarlet,On hair and face, had ravaged all her beauty;Only her eyes still did her girl-soul duty,Showing the hell that hounded her poor harlot!One day a fisherman from out the riverFished her pale body, (like a branch of willlow,Or golden weed) self-murdered, drowned and broken:The sight of it had made a strong man shiver;And on her poor breast, as upon a pillow,A picture smiled, a baby's, like some token
Madison Julius Cawein
The Ballad of Soulful Sam
You want me to tell you a story, a yarn of the firin' line,Of our thin red kharki 'eroes, out there where the bullets whine;Out there where the bombs are bustin', and the cannons like 'ell-doors slam -Just order another drink, boys, and I'll tell you of Soulful Sam.Oh, Sam, he was never 'ilarious, though I've 'ad some mates as was wus;He 'adn't C. B. on his programme, he never was known to cuss.For a card or a skirt or a beer-mug he 'adn't a friendly word;But when it came down to Scriptures, say! Wasn't he just a bird!He always 'ad tracts in his pocket, the which he would haste to present,And though the fellers would use them in ways that they never was meant,I used to read 'em religious, and frequent I've been impressedBy some of them bundles of 'oly dope he ca...
Robert William Service
To Postumous In October
When you and I were younger the world was passing fair;Our days were sped with laughter, our steps were free as air;Life lightly lured us onward, and ceased not to unrollIn endless shining vistas a playground for the soul.But now no glory fires us; we linger in the cold,And both of us are weary, and both are growing old;Come, Postumus, and face it, and, facing it, confessYour years are half a hundred, and mine are nothing less.When you and I were twenty, my Postumus, we keptIn tidy rooms in College, and there we snugly slept.And still, when I am dreaming, the bells I can recallThat ordered us to chapel or welcomed us to hall.The towers repeat our voices, the grey and ancient CourtsAre filled with mirth and movement, and echo to our sports;Then riverw...
R. C. Lehmann
Derne
Night on the city of the Moor!On mosque and tomb, and white-walled shore,On sea-waves, to whose ceaseless knockThe narrow harbor gates unlock,On corsair's galley, carack tall,And plundered Christian caraval!The sounds of Moslem life are still;No mule-bell tinkles down the hill;Stretched in the broad court of the khan,The dusty Bornou caravanLies heaped in slumber, beast and man;The Sheik is dreaming in his tent,His noisy Arab tongue o'erspent;The kiosk's glimmering lights are gone,The merchant with his wares withdrawn;Rough pillowed on some pirate breast,The dancing-girl has sunk to rest;And, save where measured footsteps fallAlong the Bashaw's guarded wall,Or where, like some bad dream, the JewCreeps stealthily his quar...
Sonnet LXI.
Io non fu' d' amar voi lassato unquanco.UNLESS LAURA RELENT, HE IS RESOLVED TO ABANDON HER. Yet was I never of your love aggrieved,Nor never shall while that my life doth last:But of hating myself, that date is past;And tears continual sore have me wearied:I will not yet in my grave be buried;Nor on my tomb your name have fixèd fast,As cruel cause, that did the spirit soon hasteFrom the unhappy bones, by great sighs stirr'd.Then if a heart of amorous faith and willContent your mind withouten doing grief;Please it you so to this to do relief:If otherwise you seek for to fulfilYour wrath, you err, and shall not as you ween;And you yourself the cause thereof have been.WYATT. Weary I never was,...
Francesco Petrarca
Rich And Poor.
'Neath the radiance faint of the starlit skyThe gleaming snow-drifts lay wide and high;O'er hill and dell stretched a mantle white,The branches glittered with crystal bright;But the winter wind's keen icy breathWas merciless, numbing and chill as death.It clamored around a handsome pile -Abode of modern wealth and styleWhere smiling guests had gathered to greetIts master's birth-day with welcome meet;And clink of glasses and loud gay tone,With song and jest, drowned the wind's wild moan.Yet, farther on, another abodeIts pillared portico proudly showed.From its windows high flowed streams of light,Mingling with outside shadows of night;And the strains of music rapid, gay -Told well how within sped the hours away.Ste...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Burial Of Barber
Bear him, comrades, to his grave;Never over one more braveShall the prairie grasses weep,In the ages yet to come,When the millions in our room,What we sow in tears, shall reap.Bear him up the icy hill,With the Kansas, frozen stillAs his noble heart, below,And the land he came to tillWith a freeman's thews and will,And his poor hut roofed with snow!One more look of that dead face,Of his murder's ghastly trace!One more kiss, O widowed one!Lay your left hands on his brow,Lift you right hands up and vowThat his work shall yet be done.Patience, friends! The eye of GodEvery path by Murder trodWatches, lidless, day and night;And the dead man in his shroud,And his widow weeping loud,And our hearts, ...
To M. C. N.
Thou hast no wealth, nor any pride of power,Thy life is offered on affection's altar.Small sacrifices claim thee, hour by hour,Yet on the tedious path thou dost not falter.To the unknowing, well thy days might seemCircled by solitude and tireless duty,Yet is thy soul made radiant by a dreamOf delicate and rainbow-coloured beauty.Never a flower trembles in the wind,Never a sunset lingers on the sea,But something of its fragrance joins thy mind,Some sparkle of its light remains with thee.Thus when thy spirit enters on its rest,Thy lips shall say, "I too have known the best!"
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson