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To Edward Noel Long, Esq. [1]
"Nil ego contulerim jucundo sanus amico." - HORACE.Dear LONG, in this sequester'd scene,While all around in slumber lie,The joyous days, which ours have beenCome rolling fresh on Fancy's eye;Thus, if, amidst the gathering storm,While clouds the darken'd noon deform,Yon heaven assumes a varied glow,I hail the sky's celestial bow,Which spreads the sign of future peace,And bids the war of tempests cease.Ah! though the present brings but pain,I think those days may come again;Or if, in melancholy mood,Some lurking envious fear intrude,To check my bosom's fondest thought,And interrupt the golden dream,I crush the fiend with malice fraught,And, still, indulge my wonted theme.Although we ne'er again can trace,In Gra...
George Gordon Byron
Before The Battle.
By the hope within us springing, Herald of to-morrow's strife;By that sun, whose light is bringing Chains or freedom, death or life-- Oh! remember life can beNo charm for him, who lives not free! Like the day-star in the wave, Sinks a hero in his grave,Midst the dew-fall of a nation's tears. Happy is he o'er whose decline The smiles of home may soothing shineAnd light him down the steep of years:-- But oh, how blest they sink to rest, Who close their eyes on victory's breast!O'er his watch-fire's fading embers Now the foeman's cheek turns white,When his heart that field remembers, Where we tamed his tyrant might.Never let him bind againA chain; like that we broke from then. ...
Thomas Moore
The Hour
This is the world's stupendous hour - The supreme moment for the raceTo see the emptiness of power, The worthlessness of wealth and place,To see the purpose and the planConceived by God for growing man.And they who see and comprehend That ultimate and lofty aimWill wait in patience for the end, Knowing injustice cannot claimOne lasting victory, or controlLaws that bar progress for the whole.This is an epoch-making time; God thunders through the universeA message glorious and sublime, At once a blessing and a curse.Blessings for those who seek His light,Curses for those whose law is might.Ephemeral as the sunset glow Is human grandeur. Mortal lifeWas given that souls might seek an...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
All Saints.
They are flocking from the EastAnd the West,They are flocking from the NorthAnd the South,Every moment setting forthFrom realm of snake or lion,Swamp or sand,Ice or burning;Greatest and least,Palm in handAnd praise in mouth,They are flocking up the pathTo their rest,Up the path that hathNo returning.Up the steeps of ZionThey are mounting,Coming, coming,Throngs beyond man's counting;With a soundLike innumerable beesSwarming, hummingWhere flowering treesMany-tinted,Many-scented,All alike aboundWith honey, -With a swellLike a blast upswaying unrestrainableFrom a shadowed dellTo the hill-tops sunny, -With a thunderLike the ocean when in strength
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Choose For The Best.
Give house-room to the best; 'tis never knownVirtue and pleasure both to dwell in one.
Robert Herrick
To Mary.
Oh! is there not in infant smilesA witching power, a cheering ray,A charm, that every care beguiles,And bids the weary soul be gay?There surely is--for thou hast been,Child of my heart, my peaceful dove,Gladdening life's sad and chequer'd scene,An emblem of the peace above.Now all is calm, and dark, and still,And bright the beam the moonlight throwsOn ocean wave, and gentle rill,And on thy slumbering cheek of rose.And may no care disturb that breast,Nor sorrow dim that brow serene;And may thy latest years be bless'dAs thy sweet infancy has been.
Thomas Gent
Life Is A Privilege
Life is a privilege. Its youthful daysShine with the radiance of continuous Mays.To live, to breathe, to wonder and desire,To feed with dreams the heart's perpetual fire,To thrill with virtuous passions, and to glowWith great ambitions - in one hour to knowThe depths and heights of feeling - God! in truth,How beautiful, how beautiful is youth!Life is a privilege. Like some rare roseThe mysteries of the human mind unclose.What marvels lie in earth, and air, and sea!What stores of knowledge wait our opening key!What sunny roads of happiness lead outBeyond the realms of indolence and doubt!And what large pleasures smile upon and blessThe busy avenues of usefulness!Life is a privilege. Though noontide fadesAnd shadows fal...
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXXVIII.
Spirto felice, che sì dolcemente.BEHOLDING IN FANCY THE SHADE OF LAURA, HE TELLS HER THE LOSS THAT THE WORLD SUSTAINED IN HER DEPARTURE. Blest spirit, that with beams so sweetly clearThose eyes didst bend on me, than stars more bright,And sighs didst breathe, and words which could delightDespair; and which in fancy still I hear;--I see thee now, radiant from thy pure sphereO'er the soft grass, and violet's purple light,Move, as an angel to my wondering sight;More present than earth gave thee to appear.Yet to the Cause Supreme thou art return'd:And left, here to dissolve, that beauteous veilIn which indulgent Heaven invested thee.Th' impoverish'd world at thy departure mourn'd:For love departed, and the sun grew pale,And de...
Francesco Petrarca
The Fortune-Tellers.
'Tis oft from chance opinion takes its rise,And into reputation multiplies.This prologue finds pat applicationsIn men of all this world's vocations;For fashion, prejudice, and party strife,Conspire to crowd poor justice out of life.What can you do to counteractThis reckless, rushing cataract?'Twill have its course for good or bad,As it, indeed, has always had.A dame in Paris play'd the Pythoness[1]With much of custom, and, of course, success.Was any trifle lost, or didSome maid a husband wish,Or wife of husband to be rid,Or either sex for fortune fish,Resort was had to her with gold,To get the hidden future told.Her art was made of various tricks,Wherein the dame contrived to mix,With much assurance, lea...
Jean de La Fontaine
Ave Caesar! Morituri te salutant
The coup detat is blotted outWith fresher blood, with blacker crime,As midnight horrors put to routThe vaguer ghosts of twilight-time.Greeting from those who are to die!Hail Caesar! Draw the curtains round.In vain! That mournful mocking cryPierces the purple with its sound.And they who raise it enter too,With spectral looks and noiseless tread,Unbidden, hold their dread review,Beside the Emperors very bed.They sought in his deserted tent;They found him in the German camp.They tarry till the oil be spentThat feeds his lifes poor flickering lamp.The hope of France, the gilded youth,So answering the trumpets pealAs if revealing how, in sooth,The gilding oft oerlies the steel.Soldiers A...
Mary Hannay Foott
The Friendly Meeting.
In spreading mantle to my chin conceald,I trod the rocky path, so steep and grey,Then to the wintry plain I bent my wayUneasily, to flight my bosom steel'd.But sudden was the newborn day reveal'd:A maiden came, in heavenly bright array,Like the fair creatures of the poet's layIn realms of song. My yearning heart was heal'd.Yet turn'd I thence, till she had onward pass'd,While closer still the folds to draw I tried,As though with heat self-kindled to grow warm;But follow'd her. She stood. The die was cast!No more within my mantle could I hide;I threw it off, she lay within mine arm.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
To Eliza. (Written In Her Album.)
I dare not spoil this spotless pageWith any feeble verse of mine;The Poet's fire has lost its rage,Around his lyre no myrtles twine.The voice of fame cannot recalThose fairy days of past delight,When pleasure seem'd to welcome all,And morning hail'd a welcome night.E'en love has lost its soothing power,Its spells no more can chain my soul;I must not venture in the bower,Where Wit and Verse and Wine controul.And yet, I fear, in thoughtless mirthI once did say, Eliza, dear!That I would tell the world thy worth,And write the living record here.Come Love, and Truth, and Friendship, come,Enwreath'd in Virtue's snowy arms,With magic rhymes the page illume,And fancy sketch her varied charms--Which ...
Bite Bigger.
As aw hurried throo th' taan to mi wark,(Aw wur lat, for all th' whistles had gooan,)Aw happen'd to hear a remark,At ud fotch tears throo th' heart ov a stooan. -It wur raanin, an snawin, an cowd,An th' flagstoans wur covered wi muck,An th' east wind booath whistled an howl'd,It saanded like nowt but ill luck;When two little lads, donn'd i' rags,Baght stockins or shoes o' ther feet,Coom trapesin away ower th' flags,Booath on em sodden'd wi th' weet. -Th' owdest mud happen be ten,Th' young en be hauf on't, - noa moor;As aw luk'd on, aw sed to misen,God help fowk this weather at's poor!Th' big en sam'd summat off th' graand,An aw luk'd just to see what 't could be;'Twur a few wizend flaars he'd faand,An they seem'd to ha fill'd ...
John Hartley
To An Hour-Glass.
Old-fashioned uncouth measurer of the day,I love to watch thy filtering burthen pass;Though some there are that live would bid thee stay;But these view reasons through a different glassFrom him, Time's meter, who addresses thee.The world has joys which they may deem as such;The world has wealth to season vanity,And wealth is theirs to make their vainness much:But small to do with joys and Fortune's feeHath he, Time's chronicler, who welcomes thee.So jog thou on, through hours of doom'd distress;So haste thou on the glimpse of hopes to come;As every sand-grain counts a trouble less,As every drain'd glass leaves me nearer home.
John Clare
Lines Suggested By The Conversation Of A Brother And Sister In The Chamber Of A Deceased And Highly Valued Parent.
My father! Oh! I cannot dwellOn hours when we shall meet again;I only feel, I only knowThat all my prayers for thee were vain."Come, brother, take a last farewell;Soon, soon they'll bear him far away.""No, sister, no, he is not there,I parted with him yesterday."Our father is in Heaven now,Forever free from care and pain;And, if a half-formed wish could bringHis sainted spirit back again,"The selfish wish I would not breathe;'Twould cloud with woe that placid brow,Round which a seraph seems to wreatheA crown of glory even now."How deep the gloom that mantled there!How sweetly, too, 'twas all withdrawn!Thus, ever thus, night's darkest hourPrecedes the day's triumphant dawn."Oh! while h...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
In Peace
A track of moonlight on a quiet lake,Whose small waves on a silver-sanded shoreWhisper of peace, and with the low winds makeSuch harmonies as keep the woods awake,And listening all night long for their sweet sakeA green-waved slope of meadow, hovered o'erBy angel-troops of lilies, swaying lightOn viewless stems, with folded wings of white;A slumberous stretch of mountain-land, far seenWhere the low westering day, with gold and green,Purple and amber, softly blended, fillsThe wooded vales, and melts among the hills;A vine-fringed river, winding to its restOn the calm bosom of a stormless sea,Bearing alike upon its placid breast,With earthly flowers and heavenly' stars impressed,The hues of time and of eternitySuch are the pictures which th...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Ode On Venice[234]
I.Oh Venice! Venice! when thy marble wallsAre level with the waters, there shall beA cry of nations o'er thy sunken halls,A loud lament along the sweeping sea!If I, a northern wanderer, weep for thee,What should thy sons do? - anything but weep:And yet they only murmur in their sleep.In contrast with their fathers - as the slime,The dull green ooze of the receding deep,Is with the dashing of the spring-tide foam,That drives the sailor shipless to his home,Are they to those that were; and thus they creep,Crouching and crab-like, through their sapping streets.Oh! agony - that centuries should reapNo mellower harvest! Thirteen hundred years[235]Of wealth and glory turned to dust and tears;And every monument the stranger meet...
The Song Of The Young Page
All that I know of love I seeIn eyes that never look at me;All that I know of love I guessBut from another's happiness.A beggar at the window I,Who, famished, looks on revelry;A slave who lifts his torch to guideThe happy bridegroom to his bride.My granddam told me once of oneWhom all her village spat upon,Seeing the church from out its breastHad cast him cursed and unconfessed.An outcast he who dared not takeThe wafer that God's vicars break,But dull-eyed watched his neighbours passWith shining faces from the Mass.Oh thou, my brother, take my hand,More than one God hath blessed and bannedAnd hidden from man's anguished glanceThe glory of his countenance.All that I know of love I seeIn...
Theodosia Garrison