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Two June Nights.
A red rose in my lady's hair, A white rose in her fingers, A wild bird singing low, somewhere, A song that pulses, lingers. The sound of dancing and of mirth, The fiddle's merry chiming, A smell of earth, of fresh, warm earth, And honeysuckle climbing; My lady near, yet far away - Ah, lonely June of yesterday! A big white night of velvet sky, And Milky Way a-gleaming, The fragrant blue smoke drifting by From camp-fire brightly beaming; The stillness of the Northland far - God's solitudes of splendor - My road a trail, my chart a star. Wind, 'mong the balsams slender, Sing low: O glad June of to-day, My lady's near, though far away!
Jean Blewett
Satiety
The heart of the rose - how sweetIts fragrance to drain,Till the greedy brainReels and grows faintWith the garnered scent,Reels as a dream on its silver feet.Sweet thus to drain - then to sleep:For, beware how you stayTill the joy pass away,And the jaded brainSeeketh fragrance in vain,And hates what it may not reap.
Richard Le Gallienne
The Pomander Bracelet.
To me my Julia lately sentA bracelet richly redolent:The beads I kissed, but most lov'd herThat did perfume the pomander.
Robert Herrick
The Wonder-Child
'Our little babe,' each said, 'shall beLike unto thee' - 'Like unto thee!''Her mother's' - 'Nay, his father's' - 'eyes,''Dear curls like thine' - but each replies,'As thine, all thine, and nought of me.'What sweet solemnity to seeThe little life upon thy knee,And whisper as so soft it lies, -'Our little babe!'For, whether it be he or she,A David or a Dorothy,'As mother fair,' or 'father wise,'Both when it's 'good,' and when it cries,One thing is certain, - it will beOur little babe.
The Silent One
The moon to-night is like the sunThrough blossomed branches seen;Come out with me, dear silent one,And trip it on the green."Nay, Lad, go you within its light,Nor stay to urge me so--'Twas on another moonlit nightMy heart broke long ago."Oh loud and high the pipers playTo speed the dancers on;Come out and be as glad as they,Oh, little Silent one."Nay, Lad, where all your mates are metGo you the selfsame way,Another dance I would forgetWherein I too was gay."But here you sit long day by dayWith those whose joys are done;What mates these townfolk old and greyFor you dear Silent one."Nay, Lad, they're done with joys and fears.Rare comrades should we prove,For they are very old with ...
Theodosia Garrison
Ther's sunshine an storm
Ther's sunshine an storm as we travel along,Throo life's journey whear ivver we be;An its wiser to leeten yor heart wi' a song,Nor to freeat at wbat fate may decree;Yo'll find gooid an bad amang th' fowk 'at yo meet,An' form friendships maybe yo'll regret;But tho' some may deceive an lay snares for yor feet,Pass 'em by, - an' Forgive an' Forget.
John Hartley
Dirge
Place this bunch of mignonetteIn her cold, dead hand;When the golden sun is set,Where the poplars stand,Bury her from sun and day,Lay my little love awayFrom my sight.She was like a modest flowerBlown in sunny June,Warm as sun at noon's high hour,Chaster than the moon.Ah, her day was brief and bright,Earth has lost a star of light;She is dead.Softly breathe her name to me,--Ah, I loved her so.Gentle let your tribute be;None may better knowHer true worth than I who weepO'er her as she lies asleep--Soft asleep.Lay these lilies on her breast,They are not more whiteThan the soul of her, at rest'Neath their petals bright.Chant your aves soft and low,Solemn be your tread an...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Arab Song
When her eyes' sudden challenge first halted my feet on the path, I stood like a shivering caught fugitive, and strained at my breath, And the Truth in her eyes was the portent of Love and of Death, For I am of the tribe of Ben Asra, who die when they love. O you who have faded because girls were contemptuous and cold, I pitied you; but mine I have won, and her breast I enfold Despairing, and in agony long for the thing that I hold: For I am of the tribe of Ben Asra, who die when they love. She is fair; and her eyes in her hair are like stars in a stream. She is kind: never vaporous sleep-eddying maid in a dream Leaning over my darkness-drowned pillow more tender did seem. But her beauty and sweetness are as blasts from the s...
John Collings Squire, Sir
Our Indian Summer
1856You 'll believe me, dear boys, 't is a pleasure to rise,With a welcome like this in your darling old eyes;To meet the same smiles and to hear the same toneWhich have greeted me oft in the years that have flown.Were I gray as the grayest old rat in the wall,My locks would turn brown at the sight of you all;If my heart were as dry as the shell on the sand,It would fill like the goblet I hold in my hand.There are noontides of autumn when summer returns.Though the leaves are all garnered and sealed in their urns,And the bird on his perch, that was silent so long,Believes the sweet sunshine and breaks into song.We have caged the young birds of our beautiful June;Their plumes are still bright and their voices in tune;One moment ...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Love And Folly.
[1]Love bears a world of mystery -His arrows, quiver, torch, and infancy:'Tis not a trifling work to soundA sea of science so profound:And, hence, t' explain it all to-dayIs not my aim; but, in my simple way,To show how that blind archer lad(And he a god!) came by the loss of sight,And eke what consequence the evil had,Or good, perhaps, if named aright -A point I leave the lover to decide,As fittest judge, who hath the matter tried.Together on a certain day,Said Love and Folly were at play:The former yet enjoy'd his eyes.Dispute arose. Love thought it wiseBefore the council of the gods to go,Where both of them by birth held stations;But Folly, in her lack of patience,Dealt on his forehead such a blow
Jean de La Fontaine
The Wild Iris
That day we wandered 'mid the hills, so loneClouds are not lonelier, the forest layIn emerald darkness round us. Many a stoneAnd gnarly root, gray-mossed, made wild our way:And many a bird the glimmering light alongShowered the golden bubbles of its song.Then in the valley, where the brook went by,Silvering the ledges that it rippled from,An isolated slip of fallen sky,Epitomizing heaven in its sum,An iris bloomed blue, as if, flower-disguised,The gaze of Spring had there materialized.I have forgotten many things since thenMuch beauty and much happiness and grief;And toiled and dreamed among my fellow-men,Rejoicing in the knowledge life is brief."'Tis winter now, " so says each barren bough;And face and hair proclaim 'tis wint...
Madison Julius Cawein
Ballad. "When Nature's Beauty Shone Complete."
When nature's beauty shone complete.With summer's lovely weather,And even, shadowing day's retreat,Brought swains and maids together;Then I did meet a charming face,But who--I'll be discreet:Though lords themselves without disgraceMight love whom I did meet."Good evening, lovely lass," said I,To make her silence break;The instant evening's blushing skyWas rival'd in her cheek;Her eyes were turn'd upon the ground,She made me no reply,But downward looks my bosom found:"You've won me," whisper'd I.And I did try all love could do,And she try'd all to fly,Now lingering slow to let me go,Then hurrying to pass by:"My love," said I, "you've me mistook,No harm from me you'll meet;"She only answer'd with a ...
John Clare
To Dianeme
Dear, though to part it be a hell,Yet, Dianeme, now farewell!Thy frown last night did bid me go,But whither, only grief does know.I do beseech thee, ere we part,(If merciful, as fair thou art;Or else desir'st that maids should tellThy pity by Love's chronicle)O, Dianeme, rather killMe, than to make me languish still!'Tis cruelty in thee to th' height,Thus, thus to wound, not kill outright;Yet there's a way found, if thou please,By sudden death, to give me ease;And thus devised,--do thou but this,--Bequeath to me one parting kiss!So sup'rabundant joy shall beThe executioner of me.
The Garden of Proserpine
Here, where the world is quiet;Here, where all trouble seemsDead winds and spent waves riotIn doubtful dreams of dreams;I watch the green field growingFor reaping folk and sowing,For harvest-time and mowing,A sleepy world of streams.I am tired of tears and laughter,And men that laugh and weep;Of what may come hereafterFor men that sow to reap:I am weary of days and hours,Blown buds of barren flowers,Desires and dreams and powersAnd everything but sleep.Here life has death for neighbour,And far from eye or earWan waves and wet winds labour,Weak ships and spirits steer;They drive adrift, and whitherThey wot not who make thither;But no such winds blow hither,And no such things grow here.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Divine Comedy by Dante: The Vision Of Paradise: Canto XXX
Noon's fervid hour perchance six thousand milesFrom hence is distant; and the shadowy coneAlmost to level on our earth declines;When from the midmost of this blue abyssBy turns some star is to our vision lost.And straightway as the handmaid of the sunPuts forth her radiant brow, all, light by light,Fade, and the spangled firmament shuts in,E'en to the loveliest of the glittering throng.Thus vanish'd gradually from my sightThe triumph, which plays ever round the point,That overcame me, seeming (for it did)Engirt by that it girdeth. Wherefore love,With loss of other object, forc'd me bendMine eyes on Beatrice once again.If all, that hitherto is told of her,Were in one praise concluded, 't were too weakTo furnish out this turn. Mine ey...
Dante Alighieri
The Grave By The Lake
Where the Great Lake's sunny smilesDimple round its hundred isles,And the mountain's granite ledgeCleaves the water like a wedge,Ringed about with smooth, gray stones,Rest the giant's mighty bones.Close beside, in shade and gleam,Laughs and ripples Melvin stream;Melvin water, mountain-born,All fair flowers its banks adorn;All the woodland's voices meet,Mingling with its murmurs sweet.Over lowlands forest-grown,Over waters island-strown,Over silver-sanded beach,Leaf-locked bay and misty reach,Melvin stream and burial-heap,Watch and ward the mountains keep.Who that Titan cromlech fills?Forest-kaiser, lord o' the hills?Knight who on the birchen treeCarved his savage heraldry?Priest o' the pine-...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Dawn Wind
Wind, just arisen -(Off what cool mattress of marsh-mossIn tented boughs leaf-drawn before the stars,Or niche of cliff under the eagles?)You of living things,So gay and tender and full of play -Why do you blow on my thoughts - like cut flowersGathered and laid to dry on this paper, rolled out of dead wood?I see youShaking that flower at me with soft invitationAnd frisking away,Deliciously rumpling the grass...So you fluttered the curtains about my cradle,Prattling of fieldsBefore I had had my milk...Did I stir on my pillow, making to follow you, Fleet One?I - swaddled, unwinged, like a bird in the egg.Let beMy dreams that crackle under your breath...You have the dust of the world to blow on...Do not tag...
Lola Ridge
Response
There is a music of immaculate love,That beats within the virgin veins of Spring,And trillium blossoms, like the stars that clingTo fairies' wands; and, strung on sprays above,White-hearts and mandrake blooms that look enoughLike the elves' washing white with launderingOf May-moon dews; and all pale-openingWild-flowers of the woods are born thereof.There is no sod Spring's white foot brushes butMust feel the music that vibrates within,And thrill to the communicated touchResponsive harmonies, that must unshutThe heart of Beauty for Song's concrete kin,Emotions that are flowers born of such.