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An Eastern God
I saw an Eastern God to-day;My comrades laughed; lest I betrayMy secret thoughts, I mocked him too.His many hands (he had no few,This God of gifts and charity),The marble race, that smiled on me,I mocked, and said, O God unthroned,Lone exile from the faith you owned,No priest to bring you sacrifice,No censer with its breath of spice,No land to mourn your funeral pyre.O King, whose subjects felt your fire,Now dead, now stone, without a slave,Unfeared, unloved, you have no grave.Poor God, who cannot understand,And what of your fair Eastern land,What dark brows brushed your dusky feet,What warm hearts on your marble beat,With many a prayer unanswered?My comrades laughed and passed. I said,If in those lands you wander ...
Dora Sigerson Shorter
A Song Of Kabir
Oh, light was the world that he weighed in his hands!Oh, heavy the tale of his fiefs and his lands!He has gone from the guddee and put on the shroud,And departed in guise of bairagi avowed!Now the white road to Delhi is mat for his feet.The sal and the kikar must guard him from heat.His home is the camp, and waste, and the crowd,He is seeking the Way as bairagi avowed!He has looked upon Man, and his eyeballs are clear,(There was One; there is One, and but One, saith Kabir);The Red Mist of Doing has thinned to a cloud,He has taken the Path for bairagi avowed!To learn and discern of his brother the clod,Of his brother the brute, and his brother the God,He has gone from the council and put on the shroud("Can ye hear?" saith Kabir), a b...
Rudyard
To ---
Asleep within the deadest hour of nightAnd turning with the earth, I was awareHow suddenly the eastern curve was bright,As when the sun arises from his lair.But not the sun arose: it was thy hairShaken up heaven in tossing leagues of light.Since then I know that neither night nor dayMay I escape thee, O my heavenly hell!Awake, in dreams, thou springest to waylay;And should I dare to die, I know full wellWhose voice would mock me in the mourning bell,Whose face would greet me in hell's fiery way.
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols
Flowers Of France' Decoration Poem For Soldiers' Graves, Tours, France, May 30, 1918
Flowers of France in the Spring,Your growth is a beautiful thing;But give us your fragrance and bloom -Yea, give us your lives in truth,Give us your sweetness and graceTo brighten the resting-placeOf the flower of manhood and youth,Gone into the dust of the tomb.This is the vast stupendous hour of Time,When nothing counts but sacrifice and faith,Service and self-forgetfulness. SublimeAnd awful are these moments charged with deathAnd red with slaughter. Yet God's purpose thrivesIn all this holocaust of human lives.I say God's purpose thrives. Just in the measureThat men have flung away their lust for gain,Stopped in their mad pursuit of worldly pleasure,And boldly faced unprecedented painAnd dangers, without thin...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Travail Of Passion
When the flaming lute-thronged angelic door is wide;When an immortal passion breathes in mortal clay;Our hearts endure the scourge, the plaited thorns, the wayCrowded with bitter faces, the wounds in palm and side,The hyssop-heavy sponge, the flowers by Kidron stream:We will bend down and loosen our hair over you,That it may drop faint perfume, and be heavy with dew,Lilies of death-pale hope, roses of passionate dream.
William Butler Yeats
The Diameter Of The Bomb
The diameter of the bomb was thirty centimetersand the diameter of its effective range about seven meters,with four dead and eleven wounded.And around these, in a larger circleof pain and time, two hospitals are scatteredand one graveyard. But the young womanwho was buried in the city she came from,at a distance of more than a hundred kilometers,enlarges the circle considerably,and the solitary man mourning her deathat the distant shores of a country far across the seaincludes the entire world in the circle.And I wont even mention the crying of orphansthat reaches up to the throne of God andbeyond, making a circle with no end and no God.
Yehuda Amichai
Midway
Turn back, my Soul, no longer set Thy peace upon the years to come Turn back, the land of thy regret Holds nothing doubtful, nothing dumb. There are the voices, there the scenes That make thy life in living truth A tale of heroes and of queens, Fairer than all the hopes of youth.
Henry John Newbolt
The Needless Alarm. A Tale.
There is a field, through which I often pass,Thick overspread with moss and silky grass,Adjoining close to Kilwicks echoing wood,Where oft the bitch-fox hides her hapless brood,Reserved to solace many a neighbouring squire,That he may follow them through brake and brier,Contusion hazarding of neck, or spine,Which rural gentlemen call sport divine.A narrow brook, by rushy banks conceald,Runs in a bottom, and divides the field;Oaks intersperse it, that had once a head,But now wear crests of oven-wood instead;And where the land slopes to its watery bournWide yawns a gulf beside a ragged thorn;Bricks line the sides, but shiverd long ago,And horrid brambles intertwine below;A hollow scoopd, I judge, in ancient time,For baking earth, or bur...
William Cowper
The North Shore
I.September On Cape AnnThe partridge-berry flecks with flame the wayThat leads to ferny hollows where the beeDrones on the aster. Far away the seaPoints its deep sapphire with a gleam of grey.Here from this height where, clustered sweet, the bayClumps a green couch, the haw and barberryBeading her hair, sad Summer, seemingly,Has fallen asleep, unmindful of the day.The chipmunk barks upon the old stone wall;And in the shadows, like a shadow, stirsThe woodchuck where the boneset's blossom creams.Was that a phoebe with its pensive call?A sighing wind that shook the drowsy firs?Or only Summer waking from her dreams?II.In An Annisquam GardenOld phantoms haunt it of the long ago;Old ghosts of old-time l...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Two Houses
In the heart of night,When farers were not near,The left house said to the house on the right,"I have marked your rise, O smart newcomer here."Said the right, cold-eyed:"Newcomer here I am,Hence haler than you with your cracked old hide,Loose casements, wormy beams, and doors that jam."Modern my wood,My hangings fair of hue;While my windows open as they should,And water-pipes thread all my chambers through."Your gear is gray,Your face wears furrows untold."" Yours might," mourned the other, "if you held, brother,The Presences from aforetime that I hold."You have not knownMen's lives, deaths, toils, and teens;You are but a heap of stick and stone:A new house has no sense of the have-beens."Vo...
Thomas Hardy
Winners Or Losers?
Unless our Souls win back to Thee,We shall have lost this fight.Yes, though we win on field and sea,Though mightier still our might may be,We still shall lose if we win not Thee. Help us to climb, as in Thy sight, The Great High Way of Thy Delight.It is the world-old strife again,--The fight 'twixt good and ill.Since first the curse broke out in Cain,Each age has worn the grim red chain,And ill fought good for sake of gain. Help us, through all life's conflict, still To battle upwards to Thy Will.Are we to be like all the rest,Or climb we loftier height?Can we our wayward steps arrest?--All life with nobler life invest?--And so fulfil our Lord's behest? Help us, through all the world's dark night,
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
The Going Of The Battery - Wives' Lament
(November 2, 1899)IO it was sad enough, weak enough, mad enough -Light in their loving as soldiers can be -First to risk choosing them, leave alone losing themNow, in far battle, beyond the South Sea! . . .II- Rain came down drenchingly; but we unblenchinglyTrudged on beside them through mirk and through mire,They stepping steadily - only too readily! -Scarce as if stepping brought parting-time nigher.IIIGreat guns were gleaming there, living things seeming there,Cloaked in their tar-cloths, upmouthed to the night;Wheels wet and yellow from axle to felloe,Throats blank of sound, but prophetic to sight.IVGas-glimmers drearily, blearily, eerilyLit our pale faces outstretched ...
The Last Farewell
LINES WRITTEN BY THE AUTHOR'S BROTHER, EDWARD BLISS EMERSON, WHILST SAILING OUT OF BOSTON HARBOR, BOUND FOR THE ISLAND OF PORTO RICO, IN 1832Farewell, ye lofty spiresThat cheered the holy light!Farewell, domestic firesThat broke the gloom of night!Too soon those spires are lost,Too fast we leave the bay,Too soon by ocean tostFrom hearth and home away,Far away, far away.Farewell the busy town,The wealthy and the wise,Kind smile and honest frownFrom bright, familiar eyes.All these are fading now;Our brig hastes on her way,Her unremembering prowIs leaping o'er the sea,Far away, far away.Farewell, my mother fond,Too kind, too good to me;Nor pearl nor diamondWould pay my debt to thee.But ev...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Conclusion To......
If these brief Records, by the Muses' artProduced as lonely Nature or the strifeThat animates the scenes of public lifeInspired, may in thy leisure claim a part;And if these Transcripts of the private heartHave gained a sanction from thy falling tears;Then I repent not. But my soul hath fearsBreathed from eternity; for, as a dartCleaves the blank air, Life flies: now every dayIs but a glimmering spoke in the swift wheelOf the revolving week. Away, away,All fitful cares, all transitory zeal!So timely Grace the immortal wing may heal,And honour rest upon the senseless clay.
William Wordsworth
The Funeral
They dressed us up in black,Susan and Tom and me -And, walking through the fieldsAll beautiful to see,With branches high in the airAnd daisy and buttercup,We heard the lark in the clouds -In black dressed up.They took us to the graves,Susan and Tom and me,Where the long grasses growAnd the funeral tree:We stood and watched; and the windCame softly out of the skyAnd blew in Susan's hair,As I stood close by.Back through the fields we came,Tom and Susan and me,And we sat in the nursery together,And had our tea.And, looking out of the window,I heard the thrushes sing;But Tom fell asleep in his chair,He was so tired, poor thing.
Walter De La Mare
Sonnet - On An Old Book With Uncut Leaves
Emblem of blasted hope and lost desire,No finger ever traced thy yellow pageSave Time's. Thou hast not wrought to noble rageThe hearts thou wouldst have stirred. Not any fireSave sad flames set to light a funeral pyreDost thou suggest. Nay,--impotent in age,Unsought, thou holdst a corner of the stageAnd ceasest even dumbly to aspire.How different was the thought of him that writ.What promised he to love of ease and wealth,When men should read and kindle at his wit.But here decay eats up the book by stealth,While it, like some old maiden, solemnly,Hugs its incongruous virginity!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Abner And The Widow Jones, - A Familiar Ballad.
Well! I'm determin'd; that's enough: -Gee, Bayard! move your poor old bones,I'll take to-morrow, smooth or rough,To go and court the Widow Jones.Our master talks of stable-room,And younger horses on his grounds;'Tis easy to foresee thy doom,Bayard, thou'lt go to feed the hounds.The first Determination.But could I win the widow's hand,I'd make a truce 'twixt death and thee;For thou upon the best of landShould'st feed, and live, and die with me.And must the pole-axe lay thee low?And will they pick thy poor old bones?No - hang me if it shall be so, -If I can win the Widow Jones.Twirl went his stick; his curly pateA bran-new hat uplifted bore;And Abner, as he leapt the gate,Had never look'd so g...
Robert Bloomfield
Epitaph On General Gordon
Warrior of God, mans friend, and tyrants foe,Now somewhere dead far in the waste Soudan,Thou livest in all hearts, for all men knowThis earth has never borne a nobler man.
Alfred Lord Tennyson