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Pine Needles
O little lances, dipped in grey, And set in order straight and clean, How delicately clear and keen Your points against the sapphire day! Attesting Nature's perfect art Ye fringe the limpid firmament, O little lances, keenly sent To pierce with beauty to the heart!
Clark Ashton Smith
The Mother Of A Poet
She is too kind, I think, for mortal things,Too gentle for the gusty ways of earth;God gave to her a shy and silver mirth,And made her soul as clearAnd softly singing as an orchard spring'sIn sheltered hollows all the sunny year,A spring that thru the leaning grass looks upAnd holds all heaven in its clarid cup,Mirror to holy meadows high and blueWith stars like drops of dew.I love to think that never tears at nightHave made her eyes less bright;That all her girlhood thruNever a cry of love made over-tenseHer voice's innocence;That in her hands have lain,Flowers beaten by the rain,And little birds before they learned to singDrowned in the sudden ecstasy of spring.I love to think that with a wistful wonderShe ...
Sara Teasdale
Curfew
I.Solemnly, mournfully, Dealing its dole,The Curfew Bell Is beginning to toll.Cover the embers, And put out the light;Toil comes with the morning, And rest with the night.Dark grow the windows, And quenched is the fire;Sound fades into silence,-- All footsteps retire.No voice in the chambers, No sound in the hall!Sleep and oblivion Reign over all!II.The book is completed, And closed, like the day;And the hand that has written it Lays it away.Dim grow its fancies; Forgotten they lie;Like coals in the ashes, They darken and die.Song sinks into silence, The story is told,The windows ar...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Poems From "A Shropshire Lad" - XX
Oh fair enough are sky and plain,But I know fairer far:Those are as beautiful againThat in the water are;The pools and rivers wash so cleanThe trees and clouds and air,The like on earth was never seen,And oh that I were there.These are the thoughts I often thinkAs I stand gazing downIn act upon the cressy brinkTo strip and dive and drown;But in the golden-sanded brooksAnd azure meres I spyA silly lad that longs and looksAnd wishes he were I.
Alfred Edward Housman
Coleridge, Southey And Wordsworth.
England had triplets at a birth, Coleridge, Southey and Wordsworth, And these three are widely famed, And the "Lake Poets" they were named. With joy they did pursue their themes, 'Mong England's lakes and hills and streams, From there with gladness they could view The distant Scottish mountains blue.
James McIntyre
To An Intrusive Butterfly.
"Kill not--for Pity's sake--and lest ye slayThe meanest thing upon its upward way."Five Rules of Buddha.I watch you through the garden walks,I watch you float betweenThe avenues of dahlia stalks,And flicker on the green;You hover round the garden seat,You mount, you waver. Why,--Why storm us in our still retreat,O saffron Butterfly!Across the room in loops of flightI watch you wayward go;Dance down a shaft of glancing light,Review my books a-row;Before the bust you flaunt and flitOf "blind Mæonides"--Ah, trifler, on his lips there litNot butterflies, but bees!You pause, you poise, you circle upAmong my old Japan;You find a comrade on a cup,A friend upon a fan;You wind anon, a bre...
Henry Austin Dobson
To Be Merry
Let's now take our time,While we're in our prime,And old, old age is afar off;For the evil, evil daysWill come on apace,Before we can be aware of.
Robert Herrick
Mariposa
Butterflies are white and blue In this field we wander through. Suffer me to take your hand. Death comes in a day or two. All the things we ever knew Will be ashes in that hour, Mark the transient butterfly, How he hangs upon the flower. Suffer me to take your hand. Suffer me to cherish you Till the dawn is in the sky. Whether I be false or true, Death comes in a day or two.
Edna St. Vincent Millay
October, 1803
One might believe that natural miseriesHad blasted France, and made of it a landUnfit for men; and that in one great bandHer sons were bursting forth, to dwell at ease.But 'tis a chosen soil, where sun and breezeShed gentle favours: rural works are there,And ordinary business without care;Spot rich in all things that can soothe and please!How piteous then that there should be such dearthOf knowledge; that whole myriads should uniteTo work against themselves such fell despite:Should come in phrensy and in drunken mirth,Impatient to put out the only lightOf Liberty that yet remains on earth!
William Wordsworth
Outward Bound
A grievous day of wrathful winds,Of low-hung clouds, which scud and fly,And drop cold rains, then lift and showA sullen realm of upper sky.The sea is black as night; it roarsFrom lips afoam with cruel spray,Like some fierce, many-throated packOf wolves, which scents and chases prey.Crouched in my little wind-swept nook,I hear the menacing voices call,And shudder, as above the deckTopples and swings the weltering wall.It seems a vast and restless grave,Insatiate, hungry, beckoningWith dreadful gesture of commandTo every free and living thing."O Lord," I cry, "Thou makest lifeAnd hope and all sweet things to be;Rebuke this hovering, following Death,--This horror never born of Thee."A sudden gl...
Susan Coolidge
Familiar Haunts.
I.Give me the patches on my pants, the freckles on my face--The happy heart where cankering care had never found a place--And let my bare feet walk again that dirt road down the hillThat led me to the river's brink, beyond the old Mock Mill!II.Give me the youthful friends I knew, now scattered far and wide--The loved ones who have passed beyond the bounds of time and tide--And let me see the rose's hue that mantled every cheekWhen we were run-aways from school, a-fishing in the creek.III.Give me the stone-bruise on my heel, the hat without a crown--The unkempt suit of yellow hair the sun had burnt to brown--And let me go and soak myself, just where we used to walk,In that old swimmin' pool we had, up on the Hanging...
George W. Doneghy
Lines Recited At The Berkshire Jubilee, Pittsfield, Mass., August 23, 1844
Come back to your mother, ye children, for shame,Who have wandered like truants for riches or fame!With a smile on her face, and a sprig in her cap,She calls you to feast from her bountiful lap.Come out from your alleys, your courts, and your lanes,And breathe, like young eagles, the air of our plains;Take a whiff from our fields, and your excellent wivesWill declare it 's all nonsense insuring your lives.Come you of the law, who can talk, if you please,Till the man in the moon will allow it's a cheese,And leave "the old lady, that never tells lies,"To sleep with her handkerchief over her eyes.Ye healers of men, for a moment declineYour feats in the rhubarb and ipecac line;While you shut up your turnpike, your neighbors can goThe ol...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
A Memory Of Youth
The moments passed as at a play;I had the wisdom love brings forth;I had my share of mother-wit,And yet for all that I could say,And though I had her praise for it,A cloud blown from the cut-throat NorthSuddenly hid Love's moon away.Believing every word I said,I praised her body and her mindTill pride had made her eyes grow bright,And pleasure made her cheeks grow red,And vanity her footfall light,Yet we, for all that praise, could findNothing but darkness overhead.We sat as silent as a stone,We knew, though she'd not said a word,That even the best of love must die,And had been savagely undoneWere it not that Love upon the cryOf a most ridiculous little birdTore from the clouds his marvellous moon.Although crowds g...
William Butler Yeats
Piscataqua River
Thou singest by the gleaming isles, By woods, and fields of corn, Thou singest, and the sunlight smiles Upon my birthday morn. But I within a city, I, So full of vague unrest, Would almost give my life to lie An hour upon upon thy breast. To let the wherry listless go, And, wrapt in dreamy joy, Dip, and surge idly to and fro, Like the red harbor-buoy; To sit in happy indolence, To rest upon the oars, And catch the heavy earthy scents That blow from summer shores; To see the rounded sun go down, And with its parting fires Light up the windows of the town And burn the tapering spires; And then to hear...
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
By A Child's Bed
She breathèd deep,And stepped from out life's streamUpon the shore of sleep;And parted from the earthly noise,Leaving her world of toys,To dwell a little in a dell of dream.Then brooding on the love I hold so free,My fond possessions come to beClouded with grief;These fairy kisses,This archness innocent,Sting me with sorrow and disturbed content:I think of what my portion might have been;A dearth of blisses,A famine of delights,If I had never had what now I value most;Till all I have seems something I have lost;A desert underneath the garden shows,And in a mound of cinders roots the rose.Here then I linger by the little bed,Till all my spirit's sphere,Grows one half brightness and the other dead,O...
Duncan Campbell Scott
In Lands I Never Saw, They Say,
In lands I never saw, they say,Immortal Alps look down,Whose bonnets touch the firmament,Whose sandals touch the town, --Meek at whose everlasting feetA myriad daisies play.Which, sir, are you, and which am I,Upon an August day?
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
A Childs Battles
Praise of the knights of oldMay sleep: their tale is told,And no man cares:The praise which fires our lips isA knights whose fame eclipsesAll of theirs.The ruddiest light in heavenBlazed as his birth-star sevenLong years ago:All glory crown that old yearWhich brought our stout small soldierWith the snow!Each baby born has oneStar, for his friends a sun,The first of stars:And we, the more we scan it,The more grow sure your planet,Child, was Mars.For each one flower, perchance,Blooms as his cognizance:The snowdrop chill,The violet unbeholden,For some: for you the goldenDaffodilErect, a fighting flower,It breasts the breeziest hourThat ever blew,And bent or ...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Woodnotes II
As sunbeams stream through liberal spaceAnd nothing jostle or displace,So waved the pine-tree through my thoughtAnd fanned the dreams it never brought.'Whether is better, the gift or the donor?Come to me,'Quoth the pine-tree,'I am the giver of honor.My garden is the cloven rock,And my manure the snow;And drifting sand-heaps feed my stock,In summer's scorching glow.He is great who can live by me:The rough and bearded foresterIs better than the lord;God fills the script and canister,Sin piles the loaded board.The lord is the peasant that was,The peasant the lord that shall be;The lord is hay, the peasant grass,One dry, and one the living tree.Who liveth by the ragged pineFounde...
Ralph Waldo Emerson