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Here Is The Glen.
Tune - "Banks of Cree."I. Here is the glen, and here the bower, All underneath the birchen shade; The village-bell has told the hour - O what can stay my lovely maid?II. 'Tis not Maria's whispering call; 'Tis but the balmy-breathing gale, Mix'd with some warbler's dying fall, The dewy star of eve to hail.III. It is Maria's voice I hear! So calls the woodlark in the grove, His little, faithful mate to cheer, At once 'tis music - and 'tis love.IV. And art thou come? and art thou true? O welcome, dear to love and me! And let us all our vows renew Along the flow'ry banks of Cree.
Robert Burns
A Wall
O the old wall here! How I could passLife in a long midsummer day,My feet confined to a plot of grass,My eyes from a wall not once away!And lush and lithe do the creepers clotheYon wall I watch, with a wealth of green:Its bald red bricks draped, nothing loath,In lappets of tangle they laugh between.Now, what is it makes pulsate the robe?Why tremble the sprays? What life o'erbrimsThe body, the house no eye can probe,Divined, as beneath a robe, the limbs?And there again! But my heart may guessWho tripped behind; and she sang, perhaps:So the old wall throbbed, and it's life's excessDied out and away in the leafy wraps.Wall upon wall are between us: lifeAnd song should away from heart to heart!I prison-bird, with...
Robert Browning
The Fugitive
In the hush of early evenThe clouds came flocking over,Till the last wind fell from heavenAnd no bird cried.Darkly the clouds were flocking,Shadows moved and deepened,Then paused; the poplar's rockingCeased; the light hung stillLike a painted thing, and deadly.Then from the cloud's side flickeredSharp lightning, thrusting madlyAt the cowering fields.Thrice the fierce cloud lighten'd,Down the hill slow thunder trembled;Day in her cave grew frightened,Crept away, and died.
John Frederick Freeman
All on a Christmas Morning.
The wind it blew cold, and the ice was thick,Deeper and deeper the snowdrifts grew;A young mother lay in her cottage, sick, -Her needs were many, her comforts few.Clasped to her breast was a newborn child,Unknowing, unmindful of weal or woe;And away, far away, in the tempest wild,Was a husband and father, kneedeep in the snow.All on a Christmas morning, long ago.The lamp burned low, and the fire was dead,And the snow sifted in through each crevice and crack:As she tossed and turned in her lowly bed,And murmured, "Good Lord, bring my husband back."The clocks in the city had told the hourWith a single stroke, for young was the dayBut no swelling note from the loftiest tower,Could reach that lone cot where a mother lay.All on a Christm...
John Hartley
Forerunners
Long I followed happy guides,I could never reach their sides;Their step is forth, and, ere the dayBreaks up their leaguer, and away.Keen my sense, my heart was young,Right good-will my sinews strung,But no speed of mine availsTo hunt upon their shining trails.On and away, their hasting feetMake the morning proud and sweet;Flowers they strew,--I catch the scent;Or tone of silver instrumentLeaves on the wind melodious trace;Yet I could never see their face.On eastern hills I see their smokes,Mixed with mist by distant lochs.I met many travellersWho the road had surely kept;They saw not my fine revellers,--These had crossed them while they slept.Some had heard their fair report,In the country or the court.Fleete...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Old Excursions
"What's the good of going to Ridgeway,Cerne, or Sydling Mill,Or to Yell'ham Hill,Blithely bearing Casterbridge-wayAs we used to do?She will no more climb up there,Or be visible anywhereIn those haunts we knew."But to-night, while walking weary,Near me seemed her shade,Come as 'twere to upbraidThis my mood in deeming drearyScenes that used to please;And, if she did come to me,Still solicitous, there may beGood in going to these.So, I'll care to roam to Ridgeway,Cerne, or Sydling Mill,Or to Yell'ham Hill,Blithely bearing Casterbridge-wayAs we used to do,Since her phasm may flit out there,And may greet me anywhereIn those haunts we knew.April 1913.
Thomas Hardy
Flossie Cabanis
From Bindle's opera house in the village To Broadway is a great step. But I tried to take it, my ambition fired When sixteen years of age, Seeing "East Lynne," played here in the village By Ralph Barrett, the coming Romantic actor, who enthralled my soul. True, I trailed back home, a broken failure, When Ralph disappeared in New York, Leaving me alone in the city - But life broke him also. In all this place of silence There are no kindred spirits. How I wish Duse could stand amid the pathos Of these quiet fields And read these words.
Edgar Lee Masters
The Huntsmen
Three jolly gentlemen, In coats of red,Rode their horses Up to bed.Three jolly gentlemen Snored till morn,Their horses champing The golden corn.Three jolly gentlemen, At break of day,Came clitter-clatter down the stairsAnd galloped away.
Walter De La Mare
Extempore Effusion Upon The Death Of James Hogg
When first, descending from the moorlands,I saw the Stream of Yarrow glideAlong a bare and open valley,The Ettrick Shepherd was my guide.When last along its banks I wandered,Through groves that had begun to shedTheir golden leaves upon the pathways,My steps the Border-minstrel led.The mighty Minstrel breathes no longer,'Mid mouldering ruins low he lies;And death upon the braes of Yarrow,Has closed the Shepherd-poet's eyes:Nor has the rolling year twice measured,From sign to sign, its stedfast course,Since every mortal power of ColeridgeWas frozen at its marvellous source;The rapt One, of the godlike forehead,The heaven-eyed creature sleeps in earth:And Lamb, the frolic and the gentle,Has vanished from h...
William Wordsworth
The Memory Of Burns
How sweetly come the holy psalmsFrom saints and martyrs down,The waving of triumphal palmsAbove the thorny crownThe choral praise, the chanted prayersFrom harps by angels strung,The hunted Cameron's mountain airs,The hymns that Luther sung!Yet, jarring not the heavenly notes,The sounds of earth are heard,As through the open minster floatsThe song of breeze and birdNot less the wonder of the skyThat daisies bloom below;The brook sings on, though loud and highThe cloudy organs blow!And, if the tender ear be jarredThat, haply, hears by turnsThe saintly harp of Olney's bard,The pastoral pipe of Burns,No discord mars His perfect planWho gave them both a tongue;For he who sings the love of manThe ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Ode to Simplicity
O thou, by Nature taughtTo breathe her genuine thoughtIn numbers warmly pure, and sweetly strong;Who first on mountains wild,In Fancy, loveliest child,Thy babe, or Pleasure's, nurs'd the pow'rs of song!Thou, who with hermit heart,Disdain'st the wealth of art,And gauds, and pageant weeds, and trailing pall,But com'st a decent maid,In Attic robe array'd,O chaste, unboastful nymph, to thee I call!By all the honey'd storeOn Hybla's thymy shore;By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear;By her whose lovelorn woeIn ev'ning musings slowSooth'd sweetly sad Electra's poet's ear:By old Cephisus deep,Who spread his wavy sweepIn warbled wand'rings round thy green retreat;On whose enamell'd side,When ho...
William Collins
Time To Be Wise
Yes; I write verses now and then,But blunt and flaccid is my pen,No longer talkd of by young menAs rather clever;In the last quarter are my eyes,You see it by their form and size;Is it not time then to be wise?Or now or never.Fairest that ever sprang from Eve!While Time allows the short reprieve,Just look at me! would you believeT was once a lover?I cannot clear the five-bar gate;But, trying first its timbers state,Climb stiffly up, take breath, and waitTo trundle over.Through gallopade I cannot swingThe entangling blooms of Beautys spring:I cannot say the tender thing,Be t true or false,And am beginning to opineThose girls are only half divineWhose waists yon wicked boys entwineIn gidd...
Walter Savage Landor
The Storm
The rough old Mr. Storm Is whirling, swirling past He makes the treetops bow their heads And trembles at his blast. He never stops to think Of the damage he may do, He's always rushing in and out And hitting, batting you. He pushes big, black clouds Against the mountain tops; The rain and hail comes rushing down In large, round crystal drops. The storm will soon be over; See the rainbow in the sky. The birds will sing on airy wing, And the bright sun shine on high.
Alan L. Strang
Fickle Summer
Fickle Summer's fled away, Shall we see her face again? Hearken to the weeping rain,Never sunbeam greets the day.More inconstant than the May, She cares nothing for our pain, Nor will hear the birds complainIn their bowers that once were gay.Summer, Summer, come once more, Drive the shadows from the field, All thy radiance round thee fling,Be our lady as of yore; Then the earth her fruits shall yield, Then the morning stars shall sing.
Robert Fuller Murray
The White Doe Of Rylstone, Or, The Fate Of The Nortons - Canto Sixth
Why comes not Francis? From the doleful CityHe fled, and, in his flight, could hearThe death-sounds of the Minster-bell:That sullen stroke pronounced farewellTo Marmaduke, cut off from pity!To Ambrose that! and then a knellFor him, the sweet half-opened Flower!For all all dying in one hour!Why comes not Francis? Thoughts of loveShould bear him to his Sister dearWith the fleet motion of a dove;Yea, like a heavenly messengerOf speediest wing, should he appear.Why comes he not? for westward fastAlong the plain of York he past;Reckless of what impels or leads,Unchecked he hurries on; nor heedsThe sorrow, through the Villages,Spread by triumphant crueltiesOf vengeful military force,And punishment without remorse.He mark...
The Mountain Squatter
Here in my mountain home,On rugged hills and steep,I sit and watch you come,O Riverinia Sheep!You come from the fertile plainsWhere saltbush (sometimes) grows,And flats that (when it rains)Will blossom like the rose.But when the summer sunGleams down like burnished brass,You have to leave your runAnd hustle off for grass.'Tis then that, forced to roam,You come to where I keep,Here in my mountain home,A boarding-house for sheep.Around me where I sitThe wary wombat goes,A beast of little wit,But what he knows, he knows.The very same remarkApplies to me also;I don't give out a spark,But what I know, I know.My brain perhaps would showNo convolutions deep,
Andrew Barton Paterson
The Soldier's Home.
My untried muse shall no high tone assume,Nor strut in arms; - farewell my cap and plume:Brief be my verse, a task within my power,I tell my feelings in one happy hour;But what an hour was that! when from the mainI reach'd this lovely valley once again!A glorious harvest fill'd my eager sight,Half shock'd, half waving in a flood of light;On that poor cottage roof where I was bornThe sun look'd down as in life's early morn.I gazed around, but not a soul appear'd,I listen'd on the threshold, nothing heard;I call'd my father thrice, but no one came;It was not fear or grief that shook my frame,But an o'erpowering sense of peace and home,Of toils gone by, perhaps of joys to come.The door invitingly stood open wide,I shook my dust, and set my s...
Robert Bloomfield
The Palm and the Pine.
From the German of Heine.In the far North stands a Pine-tree, lone,Upon a wintry height;It sleeps: around it snows have thrownA covering of white.It dreams forever of a PalmThat, far i' the Morning-land,Stands silent in a most sad calmMidst of the burning sand.Point Lookout Prison, 1864.
Sidney Lanier