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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 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
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
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
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
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto XV
True love, that ever shows itself as clearIn kindness, as loose appetite in wrong,Silenced that lyre harmonious, and still'dThe sacred chords, that are by heav'n's right handUnwound and tighten'd, flow to righteous prayersShould they not hearken, who, to give me willFor praying, in accordance thus were mute?He hath in sooth good cause for endless grief,Who, for the love of thing that lasteth not,Despoils himself forever of that love.As oft along the still and pure serene,At nightfall, glides a sudden trail of fire,Attracting with involuntary heedThe eye to follow it, erewhile at rest,And seems some star that shifted place in heav'n,Only that, whence it kindles, none is lost,And it is soon extinct; thus from the horn,That on the dext...
Dante Alighieri
Atonement Evening Prayer
Atonement Day--evening pray'r--sadness profound.The soul-lights, so clear once, are dying around.The reader is spent, and he barely can speak;The people are faint, e'en the basso is weak.The choristers pine for the hour of repose.Just one--two chants more, and the pray'r book we close!And now ev'ry Jew's supplication is ended,And Nilah* approaching, and twilight descended.The blast of the New Year is blown on the horn,All go; by the Ark I am standing forlorn,And thinking: "How shall it be with us anon,When closed is the temple, and ev'ryone gone!"
Morris Rosenfeld
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
The Reformers
Not in the camp his victory liesOr triumph in the market-place,Who is his Nation's sacrificeTo turn the judgement from his race.Happy is he who, bred and taughtBy sleek, sufficing Circumstance,Whose Gospel was the apparelled thought,Whose Gods were Luxury and Chance,Seese, on the threshold of his days,The old life shrivel like a scroll,And to unheralded dismaysSubmits his body and his soul;The fatted shows wherein he stoodForegoing, and the idiot pride,That he may prove with his own bloodAll that his easy sires denied,Ultimate issues, primal springs,Demands, abasements, penalties,The imperishable plinth of thingsSeen and unseen, that touch our peace.For, though ensnaring ritual dimHis ...
Rudyard
The Stimulus, Beyond The Grave
The stimulus, beyond the graveHis countenance to see,Supports me like imperial dramsAfforded royally.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Not With These Eyes
Let me not see your grief!O, let not any seeThat grief,Nor how your heart still rocksLike a temple with long earthquake shocks.Let me not seeYour grief.These eyes have seen such wrong,Yet remained cold:Ills grown strong,Corruption's many-headed wormDestroying feet that moved so firm--Shall these eyes seeYour grief?And that black worm has crawledInto the brainWhere thought had walkedNobly, and love and honour moved as one,And brave things bravely were begun....Now, can thought seeUnabashed your grief?Into that brain your griefHas run like cleansing fire:Your griefThrough these unfaithful eyes has leaptAnd touched honour where it lightly slept.Now when I seeIn mem...
John Frederick Freeman
To Any One
Go not forth to call Dame SorrowFrom the dim fields of Tomorrow;Let her roam there all unheeded,She will come when she is needed;Then, when she draws near thy door,She will find God there before.
George MacDonald
The King Of Denmark's Sons.
In Denmark gone is many a year,So fair upriseth the rim of the sun,Two sons of Gorm the King there were,So grey is the sea when day is done.Both these were gotten in lawful bedOf Thyrre Denmark's Surety-head.Fair was Knut of face and limbAs the breast of the Queen that suckled him.But Harald was hot of hand and heartAs lips of lovers ere they part.Knut sat at home in all men's love,But over the seas must Harald rove.And for every deed by Harald won,Gorm laid more love on Knut alone.On a high-tide spake the King in hall,"Old I grow as the leaves that fall."Knut shall reign when I am dead,So shall the land have peace and aid."But many a ship shall Harald have,For I de...
William Morris
Of The Three Seekers.
There met three knights on the woodland way,And the first was clad in silk array:The second was dight in iron and steel,But the third was rags from head to heel."Lo, now is the year and the day come roundWhen we must tell what we have found."The first said: "I have found a kingWho grudgeth no gift of anything."The second said: "I have found a knightWho hath never turned his back in fight."But the third said: "I have found a loveThat Time and the World shall never move."Whither away to win good cheer?"With me," said the first, "for my king is near."So to the King they went their ways;But there was a change of times and days."What men are ye," the great King said,"That ye should eat my children's bread?My waste has fed full many...
Presentiment.
"Sister, you've sat there all the day,Come to the hearth awhile;The wind so wildly sweeps away,The clouds so darkly pile.That open book has lain, unread,For hours upon your knee;You've never smiled nor turned your head;What can you, sister, see?""Come hither, Jane, look down the field;How dense a mist creeps on!The path, the hedge, are both concealed,Ev'n the white gate is goneNo landscape through the fog I trace,No hill with pastures green;All featureless is Nature's face.All masked in clouds her mien."Scarce is the rustle of a leafHeard in our garden now;The year grows old, its days wax brief,The tresses leave its brow.The rain drives fast before the wind,The sky is blank and grey;O Jane, what s...
Charlotte Bronte
Unsuccess
A modern Poet addresses his Muse, to whom he has devoted the best Years of his LifeI.Not here, O belovéd! not here let us part, in the city, but there!Out there where the storm can enfold us, on the hills, where its breast is made bare:Its breast, that is rainy and cool as the fern that drips by the fallIn the luminous night of' the woodland where winds to the waters call.Not here, O belovéd! not here! but there! out there in the storm!The rush and the reel of the heavens, the tem pest, whose rapturous armShall seize us and sweep us together, resistless as passions seize men,Through the rocking world of the woodland, with its multitude music, and then,With the rain on our lips, belovéd! in the heart of the night's wild hell,One last, long kiss forever, and...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Heart Of The Woman
O what to me the little roomThat was brimmed up with prayer and rest;He bade me out into the gloom,And my breast lies upon his breast.O what to me my mothers care,The house where I was safe and warm;The shadowy blossom of my hairWill hide us from the bitter storm.O hiding hair and dewy eyes,I am no more with life and death,My heart upon his warm heart lies,My breath is mixed into his breath.
William Butler Yeats
The Three Urgandas.
Cast on sleep there came to meThree Urgandas; and the seaIn lost lands of BriogneSounded moaning, moaning:Cloudy clad in awful white;And each face a lucid lightRayed and blossomed out of night, -And a wind was groaning.In my sleep I saw them rest,Each a long hand at her breast,A soft flame that lulls the West; -And the sea was moaning, moaning; -Hair like hoarded ingots rolledDown white shoulders glossy gold,Streaks of molten moonlight cold, -And a wind was groaning.Rosy 'round each high brow bentFour-fold starry gold that sentBarbs of fire redolent; -And the sea was moaning, moaning; -'Neath their burning crowns their eyesBurned like southern stars the skiesRock in shattered storm that flies, -