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Long Afore He Knowed Who Santy-Claus Wuz.
Jes' a little bit o' feller - I remember still, -Ust to almost cry far Christmas, like a youngster will.Fourth o' July's nothin' to it! - New-Year's ain't a smell:Easter-Sunday - Circus-day - jes' all dead in the shell!Lordy, though! at night, you know, to set around and hearThe old folks work the story off about the sledge and deer,And "Santy" skootin' round the roof, all wrapped in fur and fuzz -Long afore I knowed who "Santy-Claus" wuz!Ust to wait, and set up late, a week er two ahead:Couldn't hardly keep awake, ner wouldn't go to bed:Kittle stewin' on the fire, and Mother settin' hereDarnin' socks, and rockin' in the skreeky rockin'-cheer;Pap gap', and wunder where it wuz the money went,And quar'...
James Whitcomb Riley
Rose-Morals.
I. - Red.Would that my songs might beWhat roses make by day and night -Distillments of my clod of miseryInto delight.Soul, could'st thou bare thy breastAs yon red rose, and dare the day,All clean, and large, and calm with velvet rest?Say yea - say yea!Ah, dear my Rose, good-bye;The wind is up; so; drift away.That songs from me as leaves from thee may fly,I strive, I pray.II. - White.Soul, get thee to the heartOf yonder tuberose: hide thee there -There breathe the meditations of thine artSuffused with prayer.Of spirit grave yet light,How fervent fragrances uprisePure-born from these most rich and yet most whiteVirginities!Mulched with unsavory death,Grow, S...
Sidney Lanier
Bill's Grave
I'm gatherin' flowers by the wayside to lay on the grave of Bill;I've sneaked away from the billet, 'cause Jim wouldn't understand;'E'd call me a silly fat'ead, and larf till it made 'im ill,To see me 'ere in the cornfield, wiv a big bookay in me 'and.For Jim and me we are rough uns, but Bill was one o' the best;We 'listed and learned together to larf at the wust wot comes;Then Bill copped a packet proper, and took 'is departure West,So sudden 'e 'adn't a minit to say good-bye to 'is chums.And they took me to where 'e was planted, a sort of a measly mound,And, thinks I, 'ow Bill would be tickled, bein' so soft and queer,If I gathered a bunch o' them wild-flowers, and sort of arranged them roundLike a kind of a bloody headpiece . . . and that's the reason I'm 'er...
Robert William Service
The Tree
Oh to be free of myself,With nothing left to remember,To have my heart as bareAs a tree in December;Resting, as a tree restsAfter its leaves are gone,Waiting no more for a rain at nightNor for the red at dawn;But still, oh so stillWhile the winds come and go,With no more fear of the hard frostOr the bright burden of snow;And heedless, heedlessIf anyone pass and seeOn the white page of the skyIts thin black tracery.
Sara Teasdale
Brandons Both.
Oh fair Milly Brandon, a young maid, a fair maid!All her curls are yellow and her eyes are blue,And her cheeks were rosy red till a secret care madeHollow whiteness of their brightness as a care will do.Still she tends her flowers, but not as in the old days,Still she sings her songs, but not the songs of old:If now it be high Summer her days seem brief and cold days,If now it be high Summer her nights are long and cold.If you have a secret keep it, pure maid Milly;Life is filled with troubles and the world with scorn;And pity without love is at best times hard and chilly,Chilling sore and stinging sore a heart forlorn.Walter Brandon, do you guess Milly Brandon's secret?Many things you know, but not everything,With your locks like raven's...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Chipmunk
I.He makes a roadway of the crumbling fence,Or on the fallen tree, brown as a leafFall stripes with russet, gambols down the denseGreen twilight of the woods. We see not whenceHe comes, nor whither (in a time so brief)He vanishes swift carrier of some Fay,Some pixy steed that haunts our child-beliefA goblin glimpse upon some wildwood way.II.What harlequin mood of nature qualifiedHim so with happiness? and limbed him withSuch young activity as winds, that rideThe ripples, have, dancing on every side?As sunbeams know, that urge the sap and pithThrough hearts of trees? yet made him to delight,Gnome-like, in darkness, like a moonlight myth,Lairing in labyrinths of the under night.III.Here, by a rock, ...
Madison Julius Cawein
My Thoughts To-Night.
I sit by the fire musing, With sad and downcast eye,And my laden breast gives utt'rance To many a weary sigh;Hushed is each worldly feeling, Dimmed is each day-dream bright -O heavy heart, can'st tell me Why I'm so sad to-night?'Tis not that I mourn the freshness Of youth fore'er gone by -Its life with pulse high springing, Its cloudless, radiant eye -Finding bliss in every sunbeam, Delight in every part,Well springs of purest pleasure In its high ardent heart.Nor yet is it for those dear ones Who've passed from earth awayThat I grieve - in spirit kneeling Above their beds of clay;O, no! while my glance upraising To yon calm shining sky,My pale lips, quivering, mur...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Homespun
If heart be tired and soul be sadAs life goes on in homespun clad,Drab, colorless, with much of care,Not even a ribbon in her hair;Heart-broken for the near and new,And sick to do what others do,And quit the road of toil and tears,Doffing the burden of the years:And if beside you one should rise,Doubt, with a menace, in its eyesWhat then?Why, look Life in the face;And there again you may retraceThe dream that once in youth you hadWhen life was full of hope and glad,And knew no doubt, no dread, that trailsIn darkness by, and sighs, "All fails!"And in its every look and breathA shudder, old as night, that saith,With something of finality,"There is no immortality!"Confusing faith who stands aloneLike a green tre...
The Beatific Vision
Through what fierce incarnations, furledIn fire and darkness, did I go,Ere I was worthy in the worldTo see a dandelion grow?Well, if in any woes or warsI bought my naked right to be,Grew worthy of the grass, nor gaveThe wren, my brother, shame for me.But what shall God not ask of himIn the last time when all is told,Who saw her stand beside the hearth,The firelight garbing her in gold?
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Sonnet CX.
Come talora al caldo tempo suole.HE LIKENS HIMSELF TO THE INSECT WHICH, FLYING INTO ONE'S EYES, MEETS ITS DEATH. As when at times in summer's scorching heats.Lured by the light, the simple insect flies,As a charm'd thing, into the passer's eyes,Whence death the one and pain the other meets,Thus ever I, my fatal sun to greet,Rush to those eyes where so much sweetness liesThat reason's guiding hand fierce Love defies,And by strong will is better judgment beat.I clearly see they value me but ill,And, for against their torture fails my strength.That I am doom'd my life to lose at length:But Love so dazzles and deludes me still,My heart their pain and not my loss laments,And blind, to its own death my soul consents....
Francesco Petrarca
Song: A Spirit Haunts The Years Last Hours
I.A spirit haunts the years last hoursDwelling amid these yellowing bowers:To himself he talks;For at eventide, listening earnestly,At his work you may hear him sob and sighIn the walks;Earthward he boweth the heavy stalksOf the mouldering flowers:Heavily hangs the broad sunflowerOver its grave i the earth so chilly;Heavily hangs the hollyhock,Heavily hangs the tiger-lily.II.The air is damp, and hushd, and close,As a sick mans room when he taketh reposeAn hour before death;My very heart faints and my whole soul grievesAt the moist rich smell of the rotting leaves,And the breathOf the fading edges of box beneath,And the years last rose.Heavily hangs the broad sunflower<...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Seasons' Comfort
Dry thine eyes, Doll! the stars above us shine;God of His goodness made them mine and thine;His silver have we gotten, and His gold,Whilst there's a sun to call us in the mornTo ply the hook among amid the yellow corn,That such a mine of pretty gems doth hold:For there's the poppy half in sorrow,Greeting sleepy-eyed the morrow,And the corn-flower, dainty tire for a sweetheart sunny-poll'd.Dry thine eyes, Doll! the woods are all our own,The woods that soon shall take a braver tone,What time the frosts first silver Nature's hair;The birds shall sing their best for thee and me;And every sunrise listeners will we be,And so of singing get the goodliest share;When the thrushes sing so sweetly,We would fain be footing featly,But our hearts...
Arthur Shearly Cripps
Song
All suddenly the wind comes soft,And Spring is here again;And the hawthorn quickens with buds of green,And my heart with buds of pain.My heart all Winter lay so numb,The earth so dead and frore,That I never thought the Spring would come,Or my heart wake any more.But Winter's broken and earth has woken,And the small birds cry again;And the hawthorn hedge puts forth its buds,And my heart puts forth its pain.
Rupert Brooke
In Time Of Wars And Tumults
"Would that I'd not drawn breath here!" some one said,"To stalk upon this stage of evil deeds,Where purposelessly month by month proceedsA play so sorely shaped and blood-bespread."Yet had his spark not quickened, but lain deadTo the gross spectacles of this our day,And never put on the proffered cloak of clay,He had but known not things now manifested;Life would have swirled the same. Morns would have dawnedOn the uprooting by the night-gun's strokeOf what the yester noonshine brought to flower;Brown martial brows in dying throes have wannedDespite his absence; hearts no fewer been brokeBy Empery's insatiate lust of power.1915.
Thomas Hardy
The Landlord's Tale. - Paul Revere's Ride. - The Wayside Inn - Part First
Listen, my children, and you shall hearOf the midnight ride of Paul Revere,On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five;Hardly a man is now aliveWho remembers that famous day and year.He said to his friend, "If the British marchBy land or sea from the town to-night,Hang a lantern aloft in the belfry archOf the North Church tower as a signal light,--One, if by land, and two, if by sea;And I on the opposite shore will be,Ready to ride and spread the alarmThrough every Middlesex village and farmFor the country folk to be up and to arm,"Then he said, "Good night!" and with muffled oarSilently rowed to the Charlestown shore,Just as the moon rose over the bay,Where swinging wide at her moorings layThe Somerset, British man-of-w...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Pentucket
How sweetly on the wood-girt townThe mellow light of sunset shone!Each small, bright lake, whose waters stillMirror the forest and the hill,Reflected from its waveless breastThe beauty of a cloudless west,Glorious as if a glimpse were givenWithin the western gates of heaven,Left, by the spirit of the starOf sunset's holy hour, ajar!Beside the river's tranquil floodThe dark and low-walled dwellings stood,Where many a rood of open landStretched up and down on either hand,With corn-leaves waving freshly greenThe thick and blackened stumps between.Behind, unbroken, deep and dread,The wild, untravelled forest spread,Back to those mountains, white and cold,Of which the Indian trapper told,Upon whose summits never yet
John Greenleaf Whittier
To James Russell Lowell
This is your month, the month of "perfect days,"Birds in full song and blossoms all ablaze.Nature herself your earliest welcome breathes,Spreads every leaflet, every bower inwreathes;Carpets her paths for your returning feet,Puts forth her best your coming steps to greet;And Heaven must surely find the earth in tuneWhen Home, sweet Home, exhales the breath of June.These blessed days are waning all too fast,And June's bright visions mingling with the past;Lilacs have bloomed and faded, and the roseHas dropped its petals, but the clover blows,And fills its slender tubes with honeyed sweets;The fields are pearled with milk-white margarites;The dandelion, which you sang of old,Has lost its pride of place, its crown of gold,But still displays ...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Highland Hut
See what gay wild flowers deck this earth-built Cot,Whose smoke, forth-issuing whence and how it may,Shines in the greeting of the sun's first rayLike wreaths of vapour without stain or blot.The limpid mountain rill avoids it not;And why shouldst thou? If rightly trained and bred,Humanity is humble, finds no spotWhich her Heaven-guided feet refuse to tread.The walls are cracked, sunk is the flowery roof,Undressed the pathway leading to the door;But love, as Nature loves, the lonely Poor;Search, for their worth, some gentle heart wrong-proof,Meek, patient, kind, and, were its trials fewer,Belike less happy. Stand no more aloof!
William Wordsworth