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After The Quarrel
So we, who 've supped the self-same cup,To-night must lay our friendship by;Your wrath has burned your judgment up,Hot breath has blown the ashes high.You say that you are wronged--ah, well,I count that friendship poor, at bestA bauble, a mere bagatelle,That cannot stand so slight a test.I fain would still have been your friend,And talked and laughed and loved with you;But since it must, why, let it end;The false but dies, 't is not the true.So we are favored, you and I,Who only want the living truth.It was not good to nurse the lie;'T is well it died in harmless youth.I go from you to-night to sleep.Why, what's the odds? why should I grieve?I have no fund of tears to weepFor happenings that undeceive.The day...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The House Of Life
They are the wise who look before,Nor fear to look behind;Who in the darkness still ignorePale shadows of the mind.Who, having lost, though loss be much,Still dare to dream and do:For what was shattered at a touchIt may be mended, too.The House of Life hath many a doorThat leads to many a room;And only they who look beforeShall win beyond its gloom.Who stand and sigh and look behind,Regretful of past years,No room, of all those rooms, shall findThat is not filled with fears.'T is better not to stop or stay;But set all fear aside,Fling wide the door, whate'er the way,And enter at a stride.Who dares, may win to his desire;Or, failing, reach the tower,Whereon Life lights the beacon-...
Madison Julius Cawein
What Of The Darkness?
What of the darkness? Is it very fair?Are there great calms and find ye silence there?Like soft-shut lilies all your faces glowWith some strange peace our faces never know,With some great faith our faces never dare.Dwells it in Darkness? Do you find it there?Is it a Bosom where tired heads may lie?Is it a Mouth to kiss our weeping dry?Is it a Hand to still the pulse's leap?Is it a Voice that holds the runes of sleep?Day shows us not such comfort anywhere.Dwells it in Darkness? Do you find it there?Out of the Day's deceiving light we call,Day that shows man so great and God so small,That hides the stars and magnifies the grass;O is the Darkness too a lying glass,Or, undistracted, do you find truth there?What of the Darkness? Is...
Richard Le Gallienne
On A Pen.
In youth exalted high in air,Or bathing in the waters fair,Nature to form me took delight,And clad my body all in white.My person tall, and slender waist,On either side with fringes graced;Till me that tyrant man espied,And dragg'd me from my mother's side:No wonder now I look so thin;The tyrant stript me to the skin:My skin he flay'd, my hair he cropt:At head and foot my body lopt:And then, with heart more hard than stone,He pick'd my marrow from the bone.To vex me more, he took a freakTo slit my tongue and make me speak:But, that which wonderful appears,I speak to eyes, and not to ears.He oft employs me in disguise,And makes me tell a thousand lies:To me he chiefly gives in trustTo please his malice or his lust.<...
Jonathan Swift
Dedication
These to His Memorysince he held them dear,Perchance as finding there unconsciouslySome image of himselfI dedicate,I dedicate, I consecrate with tearsThese Idylls.And indeed He seems to meScarce other than my kings ideal knight,Who reverenced his conscience as his king;Whose glory was, redressing human wrong;Who spake no slander, no, nor listened to it;Who loved one only and who clave to herHerover all whose realms to their last isle,Commingled with the gloom of imminent war,The shadow of His loss drew like eclipse,Darkening the world. We have lost him: he is gone:We know him now: all narrow jealousiesAre silent; and we see him as he moved,How modest, kindly, all-accomplished, wise,With what sublime repression of himse...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Extracts From The Book Of Tarshish, Or "Necklace Of Pearls." (Translations From The Hebrew Poets Of Medaeval Spain.)
I.The shadow of the houses leave behind,In the cool boscage of the grove reclined,The wine of friendship from love's goblet drink,And entertain with cheerful speech the mind.Drink, friend! behold, the dreary winter's gone,The mantle of old age has time withdrawn.The sunbeam glitters in the morning dew,O'er hill and vale youth's bloom is surging on.Cup-bearer! quench with snow the goblet's fire,Even as the wise man cools and stills his ire.Look, when the jar is drained, upon the brimThe light foam melteth with the heart's desire.Cup-bearer! bring anear the silver bowl,And with the glowing gold fulfil the whole,Unto the weak new vigor it imparts,And without lance subdues the hero's soul.
Emma Lazarus
The Friends Burial
My thoughts are all in yonder town,Where, wept by many tears,To-day my mother's friend lays downThe burden of her years.True as in life, no poor disguiseOf death with her is seen,And on her simple casket liesNo wreath of bloom and green.Oh, not for her the florist's art,The mocking weeds of woe;Dear memories in each mourner's heartLike heaven's white lilies blow.And all about the softening airOf new-born sweetness tells,And the ungathered May-flowers wearThe tints of ocean shells.The old, assuring miracleIs fresh as heretofore;And earth takes up its parableOf life from death once more.Here organ-swell and church-bell tollMethinks but discord were;The prayerful silence of the soul...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Upon A Maid.
Hence a blessed soul is fled,Leaving here the body dead;Which since here they can't combine,For the saint we'll keep the shrine.
Robert Herrick
From Faust. Dedication.
Ye shadowy forms, again ye're drawing near,So wont of yore to meet my troubled gaze!Were it in vain to seek to keep you here?Loves still my heart that dream of olden days?Oh, come then! and in pristine force appear,Parting the vapor mist that round me plays!My bosom finds its youthful strength again,Feeling the magic breeze that marks your train.Ye bring the forms of happy days of yore,And many a shadow loved attends you too;Like some old lay, whose dream was well nigh o'er,First-love appears again, and friendship true;Upon life's labyrinthine path once moreIs heard the sigh, and grief revives anew;The friends are told, who, in their hour of pride,Deceived by fortune, vanish'd from my side.No long...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Soldier's Death.
The day was o'er, and in their tent the weaned victors met,In wine and social gaiety the carnage to forget.The merry laugh and sparkling jest, the pleasant tale were there -Each heart was free and gladsome then, each brow devoid of care.Yet one was absent from the board who ever was the firstIn every joyous, festive scene, in every mirthful burst;He also was the first to dare each perilous command,To rush on danger - yet was he the youngest of the band.Upon the battle-field he lay a damp and fearful grave;His right hand grasped the cherished flag - the flag he died to save;While the cold stars shone calmly down on heaps of fallen dead,And their pale light a halo cast round that fair sleeper's head.Say, was there none o'er that young chief to shed one...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
The Passing of the Hawthorn
The coming of the hawthorn brings on earthHeaven: all the spring speaks out in one sweet word,And heaven grows gladder, knowing that earth has heard.Ere half the flowers are jubilant in birth,The splendour of the laughter of their mirthDazzles delight with wonder: man and birdRejoice and worship, stilled at heart and stirredWith rapture girt about with awe for girth.The passing of the hawthorn takes awayHeaven: all the spring falls dumb, and all the soulSinks down in man for sorrow. Night and dayForego the joy that made them one and whole.The change that falls on every starry sprayBids, flower by flower, the knell of springtime toll.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
In Memoriam. - Mr. Samuel Tudor,
Died at Hartford, January 29th, 1862, aged 92.We saw him on a winter's day, Beneath the hallowed dome,Where for so many years his heart Had found its Sabbath-home,Yet not amid his ancient seat Or in the accustomed placeArose his fair, and reverend brow, And form of manly grace.Then Music, through the organ's soul Melodious descant gave,But yet his voice so rich and sweet Swell'd not the sacred stave,The Christmas wreaths o'er arch and nave Were lingering still to cheerHis parting visit to the fane Which he had help'd to rear.And flowers were on the coffin-lid And o'er his bosom strown,Fit offering for the friend who loved The plants of every zone,And bade them i...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision of Hell, Or The Inferno: Canto XV
One of the solid margins bears us nowEnvelop'd in the mist, that from the streamArising, hovers o'er, and saves from fireBoth piers and water. As the Flemings rearTheir mound, 'twixt Ghent and Bruges, to chase backThe ocean, fearing his tumultuous tideThat drives toward them, or the Paduans theirsAlong the Brenta, to defend their townsAnd castles, ere the genial warmth be feltOn Chiarentana's top; such were the mounds,So fram'd, though not in height or bulk to theseMade equal, by the master, whosoe'erHe was, that rais'd them here. We from the woodWere not so far remov'd, that turning roundI might not have discern'd it, when we metA troop of spirits, who came beside the pier.They each one ey'd us, as at eventideOne eyes another under...
Dante Alighieri
To Melvin Gardner: Suicide
A flight of doves, with wanton wings, Flash white against the sky. In the leafy copse an oriole sings, And a robin sings hard by. Sun and shadow are out on the hills; The swallow has followed the daffodils; In leaf and blade, life throbs and thrills Through the wild, warm heart of May. To have seen the sun come back, to have seen Children again at play, To have heard the thrush where the woods are green Welcome the new-born day, To have felt the soft grass cool to the feet, To have smelt earth's incense, heavenly sweet, To have shared the laughter along the street, And, then, to have died in May! ...
John Charles McNeill
The Forsaken Merman
Come, dear children, let us away;Down and away below!Now my brothers call from the bay,Now the great winds shoreward blow,Now the salt tides seaward flow;Now the wild white horses play,Champ and chafe and toss in the spray.Children dear, let us away!This way, this way!Call her once before you goCall once yet!In a voice that she will know:"Margaret! Margaret!"Children's voices should be dear(Call once more) to a mother's ear;Children's voices, wild with painSurely she will come again!Call her once and come away;This way, this way!"Mother dear, we cannot stay!The wild white horses foam and fret."Margaret! Margaret!Come, dear children, come away down;Call no more!One last look at th...
Matthew Arnold
Madhouse Cell - Johannes Agricola In Meditation
Theres Heaven above, and night by night,I look right through its gorgeous roofNo sun and moons though eer so brightAvail to stop me; splendour-proofI keep the broods of stars aloof:For I intend to get to God,For tis to God I speed so fast,For in Gods breast, my own abode,Those shoals of dazzling glory past,I lay my spirit down at last.I lie where I have always lain,God smiles as he has always smiled;Ere suns and moons could wax and wane,Ere stars were thundergirt, or piledThe Heavens, God thought on me his child;Ordained a life for me, arrayedIts circumstances, every oneTo the minutest; ay, God saidThis head this hand should rest uponThus, ere he fashioned star or sun.And having thus created me,Thus rooted me, ...
Robert Browning
Good-Bye
Good-bye, proud world! I'm going home:Thou art not my friend, and I'm not thine.Long through thy weary crowds I roam;A river-ark on the ocean brine,Long I've been tossed like the driven foam:But now, proud world! I'm going home.Good-bye to Flattery's fawning face;To Grandeur with his wise grimace;To upstart Wealth's averted eye;To supple Office, low and high;To crowded halls, to court and street;To frozen hearts and hasting feet;To those who go, and those who come;Good-bye, proud world! I'm going home.I am going to my own hearth-stone,Bosomed in yon green hills alone,--secret nook in a pleasant land,Whose groves the frolic fairies planned;Where arches green, the livelong day,Echo the blackbird's roundelay,And...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Elegy On The Death Of Chatterton
When to the region of the tuneful Nine,Rapt in poetic vision, I retire,Listening intent to catch the strain divineWhat a dead silence hangs upon the lyre!Lo! with disorder'd locks, and streaming eyes,Stray the fair daughters of immortal song;Aonia's realm resounds their plaintive cries,And all her murmuring rills the grief prolong.O say! celestial maids, what cause of wo?Why cease the rapture-breathing strains to soar?A solemn pause ensues: then falters lowThe voice of sorrow: 'Chatterton's no more!''Child of our fondest hopes! whose natal hourSaw each poetic star indulgent shine;E'en Phoebus' self o'erruled with kindliest power,And cried: "ye Nine rejoice! the Birth is mine."'Soon did he drink of this inspiring spring;<...
Thomas Oldham