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The Statue of Victor Hugo
I.Since in Athens God stood plain for adoration,Since the sun beheld his likeness reared in stone,Since the bronze or gold of human consecrationGave to Greece her guardians form and feature shown,Never hand of sculptor, never heart of nation,Found so glorious aim in all these ages flownAs is theirs who rear for all times acclamationHere the likeness of our mightiest and their own.2.Theirs and ours and all mens living who behold himCrowned with garlands multiform and manifold;Praise and thanksgiving of all mankind enfold himWho for all men casts abroad his gifts of gold.With the gods of song have all mens tongues enrolled him,With the helpful gods have all mens hearts enrolled:Ours he is who love him, ours whose hear...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Into Space
If the sad old world should jump a cog Sometime, in its dizzy spinning,And go off the track with a sudden jog, What an end would come to the sinning,What a rest from strife and the burdens of life For the millions of people in it,What a way out of care, and worry and wear, All in a beautiful minute.As 'round the sun with a curving sweep It hurries and runs and races,Should it lose its balance, and go with a leap Into the vast sea-spaces,What a blest relief it would bring to the grief, And the trouble and toil about us,To be suddenly hurled from the solar world And let it go on without us.With not a sigh or a sad good-bye For loved ones left behind us,We would go with a lunge and a mighty plunge...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Raven, Sexton, And Worm.
(To Laura.) My Laura, your rebukes are prudish; For although flattery is rudish, Yet deference, not more than just, May be received without disgust. Am I a privilege denied Assumed by every tongue beside? And are you, fair and feminine, Prone to reject a verse benign? And is it an offence to tell A fact which all mankind knows well? Or with a poet's hand to trace The beaming lustre of your face? Nor tell in metaphor my tale, How the moon makes the planets pale? I check my song; and only gaze, Admiring what I may not praise. If you reject my tribute due, I'll moralise - despite...
John Gay
In Time Of "The Breaking Of Nations"[1]
IOnly a man harrowing clodsIn a slow silent walkWith an old horse that stumbles and nodsHalf asleep as they stalk.IIOnly thin smoke without flameFrom the heaps of couch-grass;Yet this will go onward the sameThough Dynasties pass.IIIYonder a maid and her wightCome whispering by:War's annals will cloud into nightEre their story die.1915.
Thomas Hardy
On The Edge Of The Wilderness.
Puellae.Whence comest thou, and whither goest thou?Abide! abide! longer the shadows grow;What hopest thou the dark to thee will show?Abide! abide! for we are happy here.Amans.Why should I name the land across the seaWherein I first took hold on misery?Why should I name the land that flees from me?Let me depart, since ye are happy here.Puellae.What wilt thou do within the desert placeWhereto thou turnest now thy careful face?Stay but a while to tell us of thy case.Abide! abide! for we are happy here.Amans.What, nigh the journey's end shall I abide,When in the waste mine own love wanders wide,When from all men for me she still doth hide?
William Morris
To William Shelley.
1.The billows on the beach are leaping around it,The bark is weak and frail,The sea looks black, and the clouds that bound itDarkly strew the gale.Come with me, thou delightful child,Come with me, though the wave is wild,And the winds are loose, we must not stay,Or the slaves of the law may rend thee away.2.They have taken thy brother and sister dear,They have made them unfit for thee;They have withered the smile and dried the tearWhich should have been sacred to me.To a blighting faith and a cause of crimeThey have bound them slaves in youthly prime,And they will curse my name and theeBecause we fearless are and free.3.Come thou, beloved as thou art;Another sleepeth stillNear thy sweet mother's anxious...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
To The Pious Memory Of The Accomplished Young Lady Mrs Anne Killigrew,[1] Excellent In The Two Sister Arts Of Poesy And Painting.
An Ode. 1685.I. Thou youngest virgin-daughter of the skies, Made in the last promotion of the blest; Whose palms, new pluck'd from Paradise, In spreading branches more sublimely rise, Rich with immortal green above the rest: Whether, adopted to some neighbouring star, Thou roll'st above us, in thy wandering race, Or, in procession fix'd and regular, Mov'st with the heavens' majestic pace; Or, call'd to more superior bliss, Thou tread'st, with seraphims, the vast abyss: Whatever happy region is thy place, Cease thy celestial song a little space; Thou wilt have time enough for hymns divine, Since Heaven's eternal year is thine. Hear then a mortal Muse th...
John Dryden
Noli Aemulari
In controversial foul impurenessThe peace that is thy light to theeQuench not: in faith and inner surenessPossess thy soul and let it be.No violenceperversepersistentWhat cannot be can bring to be;No zeal what is make more existent,And strife but blinds the eyes that see.What though in blood their souls embruing,The great, the good and wise they curse,Still sinning, what they know not doing;Stand still, forbear, nor make it worse.By curses, by denunciation,The coming fate they cannot stay;Nor thou, by fiery indignation,Though just, accelerate the day.
Arthur Hugh Clough
Farewell Lines
"Hign bliss is only for a higher state,"But, surely, if severe afflictions borneWith patience merit the reward of peace,Peace ye deserve; and may the solid good,Sought by a wise though late exchange, and hereWith bounteous hand beneath a cottage-roofTo you accorded, never be withdrawn,Nor for the world's best promises renounced.Most soothing was it for a welcome Friend,Fresh from the crowded city, to beholdThat lonely union, privacy so deep,Such calm employments, such entire content.So when the rain is over, the storm laid,A pair of herons oft-times have I seen,Upon a rocky islet, side by side,Drying their feathers in the sun, at ease;And so, when night with grateful gloom had fallen,Two glow-worms in such nearness that they shared,...
William Wordsworth
The Operation
In the sunlight doctors tear a woman apart.Here the open red body gapes. And heavy bloodFlows, dark wine, into a white bowl. One seesVery clearly the rose-red cyst. Lead gray,The limp head hangs down. The hollow mouthRattles. The sharp yellow chin points upward.The room shines, cool and friendly. A nurseSavors quite a bit of sausage in the background.
Alfred Lichtenstein
The Poets Of The Tomb
Last salvo in "The Bush Controversy".The later poem "A Voice From the Town" (Banjo Patterson) continues the theme.The world has had enough of bards who wish that they were dead,Tis time, the people passed a law to knock 'em on the head,For 'twould be lovely if their friends could grant the rest they crave,Those bards Of "tears" and "vanished hopes," those poets of the grave.They say that life's an awful thing and full of care and gloom,They talk of peace and restfulness connected with the tomb.They say that man is made of dirt, and die, of course, he must;But, all the same, a man is made of pretty solid dust,There is a thing that they forget, so let it here be writ,That some are made of common mud, and some are made of grit;Some try to help the...
Henry Lawson
In The Prison Pen
Listless he eyes the palisadesAnd sentries in the glare;'Tis barren as a pelican-beachBut his world is ended there.Nothing to do; and vacant handsBring on the idiot-pain;He tries to think--to recollect,But the blur is on his brain.Around him swarm the plaining ghostsLike those on Virgil's shore--A wilderness of faces dim,And pale ones gashed and hoar.A smiting sun. No shed, no tree;He totters to his lair--A den that sick hands dug in earthEre famine wasted there,Or, dropping in his place, he swoons,Walled in by throngs that press,Till forth from the throngs they bear him dead--Dead in his meagreness.
Herman Melville
Wages
Sometimes the spirit that never leaves me quiteTaps at my heart when thou art in the way,Saying, Now thy Queen cometh: therefore pray,Lest she should see thee vile, and at the sightShiver and fly back piteous to the lightThat wanes when she is absent. Then, as I may,I wash my soilèd hands and muttering, say,Lord, make me clean; robe Thou me in Thy white!So for a brief space, clad in ecstasy,Pure, disembodied, I fall to kiss thy feet,And sense thy glory throbbing round about;Whereafter, rising, I hold thee in a sweetAnd gentle converse that lifts me up to be,When thou art gone, strange to the gross world's rout.
Maurice Henry Hewlett
The Spirits For Good
We come with peace and reason,We come with love and light,To banish black self-treasonAnd everlasting night.We know no god nor devil,We neither drive nor lead,We come to banish evilIn thought as well as deed.And this our grandest mission,And this our purest worth;To banish superstition,The blackest curse on earth.We come to pass no sentence,For ours is not the power,The cowards vain repentanceBut wastes the waiting hour.Tis not for us to lengthenThe years of wasted lives;We come to help and strengthenThe goodness that survives.We promise nought hereafter,We cannot conquer pain,But work, and rest, and laughter,Will soothe the tortured brain.That which is lost, ...
Requiescat In Pace!
My heart is sick awishing and awaiting:The lad took up his knapsack, he went, he went his way;And I looked on for his coming, as a prisoner through the gratingLooks and longs and longs and wishes for its opening day.On the wild purple mountains, all alone with no other,The strong terrible mountains he longed, he longed to be;And he stooped to kiss his father, and he stooped to kiss his mother,And till I said, "Adieu, sweet Sir," he quite forgot me.He wrote of their white raiment, the ghostly capes that screen them,Of the storm winds that beat them, their thunder-rents and scars,And the paradise of purple, and the golden slopes atween them,And fields, where grow God's gentian bells, and His crocus stars.He wrote of frail gauzy clouds, that drop on the...
Jean Ingelow
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto IV
Between two kinds of food, both equallyRemote and tempting, first a man might dieOf hunger, ere he one could freely choose.E'en so would stand a lamb between the mawOf two fierce wolves, in dread of both alike:E'en so between two deer a dog would stand,Wherefore, if I was silent, fault nor praiseI to myself impute, by equal doubtsHeld in suspense, since of necessityIt happen'd. Silent was I, yet desireWas painted in my looks; and thus I spakeMy wish more earnestly than language could.As Daniel, when the haughty king he freedFrom ire, that spurr'd him on to deeds unjustAnd violent; so look'd Beatrice then."Well I discern," she thus her words address'd,"How contrary desires each way constrain thee,So that thy anxious thought is ...
Dante Alighieri
The Coward
He found the road so long and loneThat he was fain to turn again.The bird's faint note, the bee's low droneSeemed to his heart to monotoneThe unavailing and the vain,And dirge the dreams that life had slain.And for a while he sat him thereBeside the way, and bared his head:He felt the hot sun on his hair;And weed-warm odors everywhereWaked memories, forgot or dead,Of days when love this way had ledTo that old house beside the roadWith white board-fence and picket gate,And garden plot that gleamed and glowedWith color, and that overflowedWith fragrance; where, both soon and late,She 'mid the flowers used to wait.Was it the same? or had it changed,As he and she, with months and years?How long now had they been estranged?
Madison Julius Cawein
I Saw Thy Form In Youthful Prime.
I saw thy form in youthful prime, Nor thought that pale decayWould steal before the steps of Time, And waste its bloom away, Mary!Yet still thy features wore that light, Which fleets not with the breath;And life ne'er looked more truly bright Than in thy smile of death, Mary!As streams that run o'er golden mines, Yet humbly, calmly glide,Nor seem to know the wealth that shines Within their gentle tide, Mary!So veiled beneath the simplest guise, Thy radiant genius shone,And that, which charmed all other eyes, Seemed worthless in thy own, Mary!If souls could always dwell above, Thou ne'er hadst left that sphere;Or could we keep the souls we love, We ne'er had lost thee here, Mary!<...
Thomas Moore