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Aprilian
I.Come with me where April twilightsWigwam blue the April hills;Where the shadows and the high lightsSwarm the woods that Springtime fills.Tents where dwell the tribes of beauty,Tasseled scouts whose camp-fires glowOver leagues of wild-flower bootyRescued from the camps of snow.II.A thousand windflowers blowing!They print the ways with palest pearl,As if with raiment flowingHere passed some glimmering girl.A thousand bluets breaking!They take the heart with glad surprise,As if some wild girl wakingLooked at you with bewildered eyes.A thousand buds and flowers,A thousand birds and bees:What spirit haunts the bowers!What dream that no one sees!III.Her kirtle is white as the w...
Madison Julius Cawein
Thank God For Little Children.
Thank God for little children, Bright flowers by earth's wayside,The dancing, joyous lifeboats Upon life's stormy tide.Thank God for little children; When our skies are cold and gray,They come as sunshine to our hearts, And charm our cares away.I almost think the angels, Who tend life's garden fair,Drop down the sweet wild blossoms That bloom around us here.It seems a breath of heaven Round many a cradle lies,And every little baby Brings a message from the skies.Dear mothers, guard these jewels. As sacred offerings meet,A wealth of household treasures To lay at Jesus' feet.
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
The Sylvan Cabin - A Centenary Ode On The Birth Of Lincoln
I O, fairest Dame of sylvan glades,We come to pay thee homage due,Embrace thee softly and to kissThy lovely, long-forsaken cheeks;To smooth thy flowing silver locksAnd bind about thy snowy neckA necklace golden studded fullWith rarest gems and shining pearls. Our eyes, though sometimes dimmed with tears,In purer lustre sparkle forthWhene'er they fall agaze on thee!Our ears attuned to thy sweet layCatch every flowing, cadent noteAnd bear it ever safe withinOur rapturous hearts, which gladly leapWhene'er thy name is called!Deep in our souls the quenchless fireOf love full brightly burns uponThe sacred altar, set apartFor sprite commune and sacrifice;Whose high-priest tends with loving care,A...
Edward Smyth Jones
My Castle In Spain.
There was never a castle seen So fair as mine in Spain:It stands embowered in green, Crowning the gentle slopeOf a hill by the Xenil's shoreAnd at eve its shade flaunts o'er The storied Vega plain,And its towers are hid in the mists of Hope; And I toil through years of pain Its glimmering gates to gain.In visions wild and sweetSometimes its courts I greet: Sometimes in joy its shining hallsI tread with favoured feet;But never my eyes in the light of day Were blest with its ivied walls,Where the marble white and the granite grayTurn gold alike when the sunbeams play, When the soft day dimly falls.I know in its dusky rooms Are treasures rich and rare;The spoil of Eastern looms,<...
John Hay
Seeds
What shall we be like whenWe cast this earthly body and attainTo immortality?What shall we be like then?Ah, who shall sayWhat vast expansions shall be ours that day?What transformations of this house of clay,To fit the heavenly mansions and the light of day?Ah, who shall say?But this we know,--We drop a seed into the ground,A tiny, shapeless thing, shrivelled and dry,And, in the fulness of its time, is seenA form of peerless beauty, robed and crownedBeyond the pride of any earthly queen,Instinct with loveliness, and sweet and rare,The perfect emblem of its Maker's care.This from a shrivelled seed?----Then may man hope indeed!For man is but the seed of what he shall be.When, in the fulness of his p...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Euthanasia
"O Life, O Beyond,Thou art strange, thou art sweet!"--Mrs. Browning.Dread phantom, with pale finger on thy lips, Who dost unclose the awful doors for each, That ope but once, and are unclosed no more, Turn the key gently in the mystic ward, And silently unloose the silver cord; Lay thy chill seal of silence upon speech, And mutely beckon through the soundless doorTo endless night, and silence and eclipse.Even now the soul unfettered may explore On its swift wing beyond the gates of morn, (Unravelled all the weary round of years) And stand, unfenced of time and crowding space, With love's fond instinct in that primal place, The distant north...
Kate Seymour Maclean
I Was A Stranger, And Ye Took Me In
'Neath skies that winter never knewThe air was full of light and balm,And warm and soft the Gulf wind blewThrough orange bloom and groves of palm.A stranger from the frozen North,Who sought the fount of health in vain,Sank homeless on the alien earth,And breathed the languid air with pain.God's angel came! The tender shadeOf pity made her blue eye dim;Against her woman's breast she laidThe drooping, fainting head of him.She bore him to a pleasant room,Flower-sweet and cool with salt sea air,And watched beside his bed, for whomHis far-off sisters might not care.She fanned his feverish brow and smoothedIts lines of pain with tenderest touch.With holy hymn and prayer she soothedThe trembling soul that fear...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Epitaphs Of The War
EQUALITY OF SACRIFICEA. I was a Have. B. I was a have-not.(Together.) What hast thou given which I gave not?A SERVANTWe were together since the War began.He was my servant, and the better man.A SONMy son was killed while laughing at some jest. I would I knewWhat it was, and it might serve me in a time when jests are few.AN ONLY SONI have slain none except my Mother.She (Blessing her slayer) died of grief for me.EX-CLERKPity not! The Army gaveFreedom to a timid slave:In which Freedom did he findStrength of body, will, and mind:By which strength he came to proveMirth, Companionship, and Love:For which Love to Death he went:In which Death he lies content....
Rudyard
Holidays
From fall to spring, the russet acorn,Fruit beloved of maid and boy,Lent itself beneath the forest,To be the children's toy.Pluck it now! In vain,--thou canst not;Its root has pierced yon shady mound;Toy no longer--it has duties;It is anchored in the ground.Year by year the rose-lipped maiden,Playfellow of young and old,Was frolic sunshine, dear to all men,More dear to one than mines of gold.Whither went the lovely hoyden?Disappeared in blessed wife;Servant to a wooden cradle,Living in a baby's life.Still thou playest;--short vacationFate grants each to stand aside;Now must thou be man and artist,--'T is the turning of the tide.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Harvest Time
Pillowed and hushed on the silent plain,Wrapped in her mantle of golden grain,Wearied of pleasuring weeks away,Summer is lying asleep to-day, -Where winds come sweet from the wild-rose briersAnd the smoke of the far-off prairie fires;Yellow her hair as the goldenrod,And brown her cheeks as the prairie sod;Purple her eyes as the mists that dreamAt the edge of some laggard sun-drowned stream;But over their depths the lashes sweep,For Summer is lying to-day asleep.The north wind kisses her rosy mouth,His rival frowns in the far-off south,And comes caressing her sunburnt cheek,And Summer awakes for one short week, -Awakes and gathers her wealth of grain,Then sleeps and dreams for a year again.
Emily Pauline Johnson
The Answer
When I go back to earthAnd all my joyous bodyPuts off the red and whiteThat once had been so proud,If men should pass aboveWith false and feeble pity,My dust will find a voiceTo answer them aloud:"Be still, I am content,Take back your poor compassionJoy was a flame in meToo steady to destroy.Lithe as a bending reedLoving the storm that sways herI found more joy in sorrowThan you could find in joy."
Sara Teasdale
The Grey Eros
We are desert leagues apart;Time is misty ages nowSince the warmth of heart to heartChased the shadows from my brow.Oh, I am so old, meseemsI am next of kin to Time,The historian of her dreamsFrom the long forgotten prime.You have come a path of flowers.What a way was mine to roam!Many a fallen empire's towers,Many a ruined heart my home.No, there is no comfort, none;All the dewy tender breathIdly falls when life is doneOn the starless brow of death.Though the dream of love may tire,In the ages long agoneThere were ruby hearts of fire--Ah, the daughters of the dawn!Though I am so feeble now,I remember when our prideCould not to the Mighty bow;We would sweep His stars aside....
George William Russell
The Clergymans First Tale
Love is fellow-service.A youth and maid upon a summer nightUpon the lawn, while yet the skies were light,Edmund and Emma, let their names be these,Among the shrubs within the circling trees,Joined in a game with boys and girls at play:For games perhaps too old a little they;In April she her eighteenth year begun,And twenty he, and near to twenty-one.A game it was of running and of noise;He as a boy, with other girls and boys(Her sisters and her brothers), took the fun;And when her turn, she marked not, came to run,Emma, he called, then knew that he was wrong,Knew that her name to him did not belong.Her look and manner proved his feeling true,A child no more, her womanhood she knew;Half was the colour mounted on her fa...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Dreams
I gave my life to another lover,I gave my love, and all, and allBut over a dream the past will hover,Out of a dream the past will call.I tear myself from sleep with a shiverBut on my breast a kiss is hot,And by my bed the ghostly giverIs waiting tho' I see him not.
Sunset on the Mississippi.
O beautiful hills in the purple light, That shadow the western sky,I dream of you oft in the silent night, As the golden days go by.The river that flows at my longing feet Is tinged with a deeper glow;But the song that it sings is as sad to-day As it was in the long ago.The far-off clouds in the far-off sky Are tinted with gold and red;But the lesson they tell to the hearts of men Is a lesson that never is said.The star-crowned night in her sable plumes Is veiling the eastern sky,And she trails her robes in the dying fires That far in the west do lie.A single gem from her circlet old Is lost as she wanders by,And the beautiful star with its golden light Shines out in the lo...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Sympathy
Is the way hard and thorny, oh, my brother? Do tempests beat, and adverse wild winds blow?And are you spent, and broken, at each nightfall, Yet with each morn you rise and onward go?Brother, I know, I know!I, too, have journeyed so.Is your heart mad with longing, oh, my sister? Are all great passions in your breast aglow?Does the white wonder of your own soul blind you, And are you torn with rapture and with woe?Sister, I know, I know!I, too, have suffered so.Is the road filled with snare and quicksand, pilgrim? Do pitfalls lie where roses seem to grow?And have you sometimes stumbled in the darkness, And are you bruised and scarred by many a blow?Pilgrim, I know, I know!I, too, have stumbled so.Do...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Merops
What care I, so they stand the same,--Things of the heavenly mind,--How long the power to give them nameTarries yet behind?Thus far to-day your favors reach,O fair, appeasing presences!Ye taught my lips a single speech,And a thousand silences.Space grants beyond his fated roadNo inch to the god of day;And copious language still bestowedOne word, no more, to say.
Odes Of Anacreon - Ode XXXII.
[1]Strew me a fragrant bed of leaves,Where lotus with the myrtle weaves;And while in luxury's dream I sink,Let me the balm of Bacchus drink!In this sweet hour of revelryYoung Love shall my attendant be--Drest for the task, with tunic roundHis snowy neck and shoulders bound,Himself shall hover by my side,And minister the racy tide! Oh, swift as wheels that kindling roll,Our life is hurrying to the goal;A scanty dust, to feed the wind,Is all the trace 'twill leave behind.Then wherefore waste the rose's bloomUpon the cold, insensate tomb?Can flowery breeze, or odor's breath,Affect the still, cold sense of death?Oh no; I ask no balm to steepWith fragrant tears my bed of sleep:But now, wh...
Thomas Moore