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Sonnet CXVIII.
Nom d' atra e tempestosa onda marina.HE IS LED BY LOVE TO REASON. No wearied mariner to port e'er fledFrom the dark billow, when some tempest's nigh,As from tumultuous gloomy thoughts I fly--Thoughts by the force of goading passion bred:Nor wrathful glance of heaven so surely spedDestruction to man's sight, as does that eyeWithin whose bright black orb Love's DeitySharpens each dart, and tips with gold its head.Enthroned in radiance there he sits, not blind,Quiver'd, and naked, or by shame just veil'd,A live, not fabled boy, with changeful wing;Thence unto me he lends instruction kind,And arts of verse from meaner bards conceal'd,Thus am I taught whate'er of love I write or sing.NOTT. Ne'er...
Francesco Petrarca
All On A Golden Summer Day
All on a golden summer day,As through the leaves a single rayOf yellow sunshine finds its way So bright, so bright;The wakened birds that blithely singSeem welcoming another spring;While all the woods are murmuring So light, so light.All on a golden summer day,When to my heart a single rayOf tender kindness finds its way, So bright, so bright;Then comes sweet hope and bravely daresTo break the chain that sorrow wears -And all my burdens, all my cares Are light, so light!
Arthur Macy
1492.
Thou two-faced year, Mother of Change and Fate,Didst weep when Spain cast forth with flaming sword,The children of the prophets of the Lord,Prince, priest, and people, spurned by zealot hate.Hounded from sea to sea, from state to state,The West refused them, and the East abhorred.No anchorage the known world could afford,Close-locked was every port, barred every gate.Then smiling, thou unveil'dst, O two-faced year,A virgin world where doors of sunset part,Saying, "Ho, all who weary, enter here!There falls each ancient barrier that the artOf race or creed or rank devised, to rearGrim bulwarked hatred between heart and heart!"1883.
Emma Lazarus
Content.
In some lone hamlet it were better farTo live unknown amid Contentment's isle,Than court the bauble of an air-blown star,Or barter honour for a prince's smile!Hail! tranquil-brow'd Content, forth sylvan god,Who lov'st to sit beside some cottage fire,Where the brown presence of the blazing clodRegales the aspect of the aged sire.There, when the Winter's children, bleak and cold,Are through December's gloomy regions led;The church-yard tale of sheeted ghost is told,While fix'd attention dares not turn its head.Or if the tale of ghost, or pigmy sprite,Is stripp'd by theme more cheerful of its power,The song employs the early dim of night,Till village-curfew counts a later hour.And oft the welcome neighbour loves to stop,
Thomas Gent
Daisy's Valentines.
All night through Daisy's sleep, it seems,Have ceaseless "rat-tats" thundered;All night through Daisy's rosy dreamsHave devious Postmen blundered,Delivering letters round her bed,--Mysterious missives, sealed with red,And franked of course with due Queen's-head,--While Daisy lay and wondered.But now, when chirping birds begin,And Day puts off the Quaker,--When Cook renews her morning din,And rates the cheerful baker,--She dreams her dream no dream at all,For, just as pigeons come at call,Winged letters flutter down, and fallAround her head, and wake her.Yes, there they are! With quirk and twist,And fraudful arts directed;(Save Grandpapa's dear stiff old "fist,"Through all disguise detected;)But which is his,-...
Henry Austin Dobson
The Pilgrim's Dream - Or, The Star And The Glow-Worm
A Pilgrim, when the summer dayHad closed upon his weary way,A lodging begged beneath a castle's roof;But him the haughty Warder spurned;And from the gate the Pilgrim turned,To seek such covert as the fieldOr heath-besprinkled copse might yield,Or lofty wood, shower-proof.He paced along; and, pensively,Halting beneath a shady tree,Whose moss-grown root might serve for couch or seat,Fixed on a Star his upward eye;Then, from the tenant of the skyHe turned, and watched with kindred look,A Glow-worm, in a dusky nook,Apparent at his feet.The murmur of a neighbouring streamInduced a soft and slumbrous dream,A pregnant dream, within whose shadowy boundsHe recognised the earth-born Star,And 'That' which glittered from...
William Wordsworth
Vagabondia.
Off with the fettersThat chafe and restrain!Off with the chain!Here Art and Letters,Music and wine,And Myrtle and Wanda,The winsome witches,Blithely combine.Here are true riches,Here is Golconda,Here are the Indies,Here we are free--Free as the wind is,Free, as the sea.Free!Houp-la!What have weTo do with the wayOf the Pharisee?We go or we stayAt our own sweet will;We think as we say,And we say or keep stillAt our own sweet will,At our own sweet will.Here we are freeTo be good or bad,Sane or mad,Merry or grimAs the mood may be,--Free as the whimOf a spook on a spree,--Free to be oddities,Not mere commodities,Stupid and sa...
Bliss Carman
Monna Innominata. A Sonnet Of Sonnets.
Beatrice, immortalized by "altissimo poeta ... cotanto amante;" Laura, celebrated by a great though an inferior bard, - have alike paid the exceptional penalty of exceptional honor, and have come down to us resplendent with charms, but (at least, to my apprehension) scant of attractiveness.These heroines of world-wide fame were preceded by a bevy of unnamed ladies "donne innominate" sung by a school of less conspicuous poets; and in that land and that period which gave simultaneous birth to Catholics, to Albigenses, and to Troubadours, one can imagine many a lady as sharing her lover's poetic aptitude, while the barrier between them might be one held sacred by both, yet not such as to render mutual love incompatible with mutual honor.Had such a lady spoken for herself, the portrait left us might have appeared more ...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Think Not that the Heart is Devoid of Emotion.
Think not that the heart is devoid of emotion, Because of a countenance rugged and stern,The bosom may hide the most fervent devotion, As shadowy forests hide floweret and fern;As the pearls which are down in the depths of the ocean, The heart may have treasures which few can discern.Think not the heart barren, because no reflection Is flashed from the depths of its secret embrace;External appearance may baffle detection, And yet the heart beat with an ethical grace:The breast may be charged with the truest affection And never betray it by action or face.
Alfred Castner King
The First Canzone Of The Convito. From The Italian Of Dante.
1.Ye who intelligent the Third Heaven move,Hear the discourse which is within my heart,Which cannot be declared, it seems so new.The Heaven whose course follows your power and art,Oh, gentle creatures that ye are! me drew,And therefore may I dare to speak to you,Even of the life which now I live - and yetI pray that ye will hear me when I cry,And tell of mine own heart this novelty;How the lamenting Spirit moans in it,And how a voice there murmurs against herWho came on the refulgence of your sphere.2.A sweet Thought, which was once the life withinThis heavy heart, man a time and oftWent up before our Father's feet, and thereIt saw a glorious Lady throned aloft;And its sweet talk of her my soul did win,So that I said, 'T...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Rose
I took the love you gave, Ah, carelessly,Counting it only as a rose to wearA little moment on my heart no more,So many roses had I worn before,So lightly that I scarce believed them there.But, Lo! this rose between the dusk and dawnHath turned to very flame upon my breast,A flame that burns the day-long and the night,A flame of very anguish and delightThat not for any moment yields me rest.And I am troubled with a strange, new fear,How would it be if even to your doorI came to cry your pitying one day,And you should lightly laugh and lightly say,"That was a rose I gave you--nothing more."
Theodosia Garrison
Resignation.
Yes! even I was in Arcadia born, And, in mine infant ears,A vow of rapture was by Nature sworn;Yes! even I was in Arcadia born, And yet my short spring gave me only tears!Once blooms, and only once, life's youthful May; For me its bloom hath gone.The silent God O brethren, weep to-dayThe silent God hath quenched my torch's ray, And the vain dream hath flown.Upon thy darksome bridge, Eternity, I stand e'en now, dread thought!Take, then, these joy-credentials back from me!Unopened I return them now to thee, Of happiness, alas, know naught!Before Thy throne my mournful cries I vent, Thou Judge, concealed from view!To yonder star a joyous saying wentWith judgment's scales to rule us thou art sent,<...
Friedrich Schiller
She Was A Phantom Of Delight
She was a Phantom of delightWhen first she gleamed upon my sight;A lovely Apparition, sentTo be a moment's ornament;Her eyes as stars of Twilight fair;Like Twilight's, too, her dusky hair;But all things else about her drawnFrom May-time and the cheerful Dawn;A dancing Shape, an Image gay,To haunt, to startle, and way-lay.I saw her upon nearer view,A Spirit, yet a Woman too!Her household motions light and free,And steps of virgin-liberty;A countenance in which did meetSweet records, promises as sweet;A Creature not too bright or goodFor human nature's daily food;For transient sorrows, simple wiles,Praise, blame, love, kisses, tears, and smiles.And now I see with eye sereneThe very pulse of the machine;A Being ...
The Demon Snow-Shoes
(A Legend of Kiandra)The snow lies deep on hill and dale,In rocky gulch and grassy vale,The tiny, trickling, tumbling fallsAre frozen twixt their rocky wallsThat grey and brown look silent downUpon Kiandras shrouded town.The Eucumbene itself lies dead,Fast frozen in its narrow bed,And distant sounds ring out quite near,The crystal air is froze so clear,While to and fro the people goIn silent swiftness oer the snow.And, like a mighty gallows-frame,The derrick in the New Chum claimHangs over where, despite the cold,Strong miners seek the hidden gold,And stiff and blue, half-frozen through,The fickle dame of Fortune woo.Far out, along a snow capped range,There rose a sound which echoe...
Barcroft Boake
Hark! 'Tis The Breeze. (Air.--Rousseau.)
Hark! 'tis the breeze of twilight calling; Earth's weary children to repose;While, round the couch of Nature falling, Gently the night's soft curtains close.Soon o'er a world, in sleep reclining, Numberless stars, thro' yonder dark,Shall look, like eyes of Cherubs shining From out the veils that hid the Ark.Guard us, oh Thou, who never sleepest, Thou who in silence throned above,Throughout all time, unwearied, keepest Thy watch of Glory, Power, and Love.Grant that, beneath thine eye, securely, Our souls awhile from life withdrawnMay in their darkness stilly, purely, Like "sealed fountains," rest till dawn.
Thomas Moore
My Birthday
Beneath the moonlight and the snowLies dead my latest year;The winter winds are wailing lowIts dirges in my ear.I grieve not with the moaning windAs if a loss befell;Before me, even as behind,God is, and all is well!His light shines on me from above,His low voice speaks within,The patience of immortal loveOutwearying mortal sin.Not mindless of the growing yearsOf care and loss and pain,My eyes are wet with thankful tearsFor blessings which remain.If dim the gold of life has grown,I will not count it dross,Nor turn from treasures still my ownTo sigh for lack and loss.The years no charm from Nature take;As sweet her voices call,As beautiful her mornings break,As fair her even...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Passing Away
Life's Vesper-bells are ringingIn the temple of my heart,And yon sunset, sure, is singing"Nunc dimittis -- Now depart!"Ah! the eve is golden-clouded,But to-morrow's sun shall shineOn this weary body shrouded;But my soul doth not repine."Let me see the sun descending,I will see his light no more,For my life, this eve, is ending;And to-morrow on the shoreThat is fair, and white, and golden,I will meet my God; and yeWill forget not all the olden,Happy hours ye spent with me."I am glad that I am going;What a strange and sweet delightIs thro' all my being flowingWhen I know that, sure, to-nightI will pass from earth and meet HimWhom I loved thro' all the years,Who will crown me when I greet Him,A...
Abram Joseph Ryan
When Pierrot Passes
High above his happy headLittle leaves of Spring were spread;And adown the dewy lawnSoft as moss the young green grassWooed his footsteps, and the dawnPaused to watch him pass.Even so he seemed in truthDancing between Love and Youth;And his song as gay a thingStill before him seemed to goLight as any bird awing,Blithe as jonquils in the Spring,And we laughed and said, "Pierrot,'Tis Pierrot.""Oh," he sang, "Her hands are farSweeter than white roses are;When I hold them to my lips,Ere I dare a finer bliss,Petal-like her finger-tipsTremble 'neath my kiss.And the mocking of her eyesLures me like blue butterfliesFalling--lifting--of their grace,And her mouth--her mouth is wine."And we laughed as ...