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Beatrice Cenci.
O beautiful woman, too well we knowThe terrible weight of thy woman's woe,So great that the world, in its careless way,Remembered thy beauty for more than a day.In the name of the truth from thy brow is tornThe crown of redemption thou long hast worn,And into the valley of sin thou art hurledTo be trampled anew by the feet of the world.The beautiful picture is thine no moreThat hangs in the palace on Italy's shore;The tear-stained eyes where the shadow lies,Like a darksome cloud in the summer skies,Will tell thy story to men no more,For all untrue is the tale of yore;And the far-famed picture that hangs on the wallIs a painter's fancy--that is all.Italia's shore is a land of lightWhere the sunlight of day drowns the shadows of...
Fannie Isabelle Sherrick
Her Right Name
As Nancy at her toilette sat,Admiring this, and blaming that,Tell me, she said, but tell me true,The nymph who could your heart subdue.What sort of charms does she possess?Absolve me, fair one, I'll confessWith pleasure, I replied: Her hair,In ringlets rather dark than fair,Does down her ivory bosom roll,And hiding half adorns the whole,In her high forehead's fair half roundLove sits, in open triumph crown'd;He, in the dimple of her chin,In private state, by friends is seen.Her eyes are neither black nor grey,Nor fierce nor feeble is their ray;Their dubious lustre seems to showSomething that speaks nor yes nor no.Her lips no living bard, I weet,May say how red, how round, how sweet:Old Homer only could inditeTheir ...
Matthew Prior
My Sweetest Lesbia
An imitation of CatallusMy sweetest Lesbia, let us live and love,And though the sager sort our deeds reprove,Let us not weigh them. Heaven's great lamps do diveInto their west, and straight again revive,But soon as once set is our little light,Then must we sleep one ever-during night.If all would lead their lives in love like me,Then bloody swords and armor should not be;No drum nor trumpet peaceful sleeps should move,Unless alarm came from the camp of love.But fools do live, and waste their little light,And seek with pain their ever-during night.When timely death my life and fortune ends,Let not my hearse be vexed with mourning friends,But let all lovers, rich in triumph, comeAnd with sweet pastimes grace my happy tomb;...
Thomas Campion
The Drops Of Nectar.
When Minerva, to give pleasureTo Prometheus, her well-loved one,Brought a brimming bowl of nectarFrom the glorious realms of heavenAs a blessing for his creatures,And to pour into their bosomsImpulses for arts ennobling,She with rapid footstep hasten'd,Fearing Jupiter might see her,And the golden goblet trembled,And there fell a few drops from itOn the verdant plain beneath her.Then the busy bees flew thitherStraightway, eagerly to drink them,And the butterfly came quicklyThat he, too, might find a drop there;Even the misshapen spiderThither crawl'd and suck'd with vigour.To a happy end they tasted,They, and other gentle insects!For with mortals now divide theyArtÄthat noblest gift of all.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Sweet Fern
The subtle power in perfume foundNor priest nor sibyl vainly learned;On Grecian shrine or Aztec moundNo censer idly burned.That power the old-time worships knew,The Corybantes frenzied dance,The Pythian priestess swooning throughThe wonderland of trance.And Nature holds, in wood and field,Her thousand sunlit censers still;To spells of flower and shrub we yieldAgainst or with our will.I climbed a hill path strange and newWith slow feet, pausing at each turn;A sudden waft of west wind blewThe breath of the sweet fern.That fragrance from my vision sweptThe alien landscape; in its stead,Up fairer hills of youth I stepped,As light of heart as tread.I saw my boyhoods lakelet shineOnce more...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Farewell: To C. E. G.
My fairest child, I have no song to give you; No lark could pipe in skies so dull and gray;Yet, if you will, one quiet hint I'll leave you, For every day.I'll tell you how to sing a clearer carol Than lark who hails the dawn or breezy downTo earn yourself a purer poet's laurel Than Shakespeare's crown.Be good, sweet maid, and let who can be clever; Do lovely things, not dream them, all day long;And so make Life, and Death, and that For Ever, One grand sweet song.February 1, 1856.
Charles Kingsley
The Dove
Out of the sunshine and out of the heat,Out of the dust of the grimy street,A song fluttered down in the form of a dove,And it bore me a message, the one word--Love!Ah, I was toiling, and oh, I was sad:I had forgotten the way to be glad.Now, smiles for my sadness and for my toil, restSince the dove fluttered down to its home in my breast!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Echoes.
Late-born and woman-souled I dare not hope,The freshness of the elder lays, the mightOf manly, modern passion shall alightUpon my Muse's lips, nor may I cope(Who veiled and screened by womanhood must grope)With the world's strong-armed warriors and reciteThe dangers, wounds, and triumphs of the fight;Twanging the full-stringed lyre through all its scope.But if thou ever in some lake-floored caveO'erbrowed by hard rocks, a wild voice wooed and heard,Answering at once from heaven and earth and wave,Lending elf-music to thy harshest word,Misprize thou not these echoes that belongTo one in love with solitude and song.
Emma Lazarus
Princes And Favourites.
Princes and fav'rites are most dear, while theyBy giving and receiving hold the play;But the relation then of both grows poor,When these can ask, and kings can give no more.
Robert Herrick
First Glance
A budding mouth and warm blue eyes;A laughing face; and laughing hair, -So ruddy was its riseFrom off that forehead fair;Frank fervor in whate'er she said,And a shy grace when she was still;A bright, elastic tread;Enthusiastic will;These wrought the magic of a maidAs sweet and sad as the sun in spring; -Joyous, yet half-afraidHer joyousness to sing.
George Parsons Lathrop
Of His Mistress.
(After Anthony Hamilton.)To G. S.She that I love is neither brown nor fair,And, in a word her worth to say,There is no maid that with her mayCompare.Yet of her charms the count is clear, I ween:There are five hundred things we see,And then five hundred too there be,Not seen.Her wit, her wisdom are direct from Heaven:But the sweet Graces from their storeA thousand finer touches moreHave given.Her cheek's warm dye what painter's brush could note?Beside her Flora would be wanAnd white as whiteness of the swanHer throat.Her supple waist, her arm from Venus came,Hebe her nose and lip confess,And, looking in her eyes, you guessHer name.
Henry Austin Dobson
Child Of Dawn
O gentle vision in the dawn:My spirit over faint cool water glides.Child of the day,To thee;And thou art drawnBy kindred impulse over silver tidesThe dreamy wayTo me.I need thy hands, O gentle wonder-child,For they are moulded unto all repose;Thy lips are frail,And thou art cooler than an April rose;White are thy words and mild:Child of the morning, hail!Breathe thus upon mine eyelids, that we twainMay build the day together out of dreams.Life, with thy breath upon my eyelids, seemsExquisite to the utmost bounds of pain.I cannot live, except as I may beCompelled for love of thee.O let us drift,Frail as the floating silver of a star,Or like the summer humming of a bee,Or stream-reflected sunl...
Harold Monro
Canzone I.
Nel dolce tempo della prima etade.HIS SUFFERINGS SINCE HE BECAME THE SLAVE OF LOVE. In the sweet season when my life was new,Which saw the birth, and still the being seesOf the fierce passion for my ill that grew,Fain would I sing--my sorrow to appease--How then I lived, in liberty, at ease,While o'er my heart held slighted Love no sway;And how, at length, by too high scorn, for aye,I sank his slave, and what befell me then,Whereby to all a warning I remain;Although my sharpest painBe elsewhere written, so that many a penIs tired already, and, in every vale,The echo of my heavy sighs is rife,Some credence forcing of my anguish'd life;And, as her wont, if here my memory fail,Be my long martyrdom its saving plea,...
Francesco Petrarca
Broken-Hearted.
"Cross my hands upon my breast,"Read her last behest."Turn my cheek upon the pillow,As resting from life's stormy billowWith sleep's fine zest!""Cross my hands upon my breast,"Read her last behest,"That the patient bones may lieIn form of thanks eternally,Grimly expressed!"We clasped her hands upon her breast:Oh mockery at misery's hest!We hid in flowers her body's grief, -Counting by many a rose and leafHer days unblessed!
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
Sonnet XXIV.
Quest' anima gentil che si diparte.ON LAURA DANGEROUSLY ILL. That graceful soul, in mercy call'd awayBefore her time to bid the world farewell,If welcomed as she ought in the realms of day,In heaven's most blessèd regions sure shall dwell.There between Mars and Venus if she stay,Her sight the brightness of the sun will quell,Because, her infinite beauty to survey,The spirits of the blest will round her swell.If she decide upon the fourth fair nestEach of the three to dwindle will begin,And she alone the fame of beauty win,Nor e'en in the fifth circle may she rest;Thence higher if she soar, I surely trustJove with all other stars in darkness will be thrust.MACGREGOR.
Too Late
Too late I bring my heart, too late 'tis yours;Too late to bring the true love that endures;Too long, unthrift, I gave it here and there,Spent it in idle love and idle song;Youth seemed so rich, with kisses all to spare -Too late! too long!Too late, O fairy woman; dreams and dustAre in your hair, your face is dimly thrustAmong the flowers; and Time, that all forgets,Even you forgets, and only I prolongThe face I love, with ache of vain regrets -Too late! too long!Too long I tarried, and too late I come,O eyes and lips so strangely sealed and dumb:My heart - what is it now, beloved, to you?My love - that doth your holy silence wrong?Ah! fairy face, star-crowned and chrismed with dew -Too late! too long!
Richard Le Gallienne
Fard
A love-sick heart dies when the heart is whole,For all the heart's health is to be sick with love.From the Hindustani of Miyan Jagnu (eighteenth century).
Edward Powys Mathers
The Land Of The Gone-Away-Souls
Oh! that is a beautiful land I wis,The land of the Gone-Away Souls.Yes, a lovelier region by far than this(Though this is a world most fair),The goodliest goal of all good goals,Else why do our friends stay there?I walk in a world that is sweet with friends,And earth I have ever held dear;Yes, love with duty and beauty blends,To render the earth plane bright.But faster and faster, year on yearMy comrades hurry from sight.They hurry away to the Over-There,And few of them say Farewell.Yes, they go away with a secret airAs if on a secret quest.And they come not back to the earth to tellWhy that land seems the best.Messages come from the mystic sphere,But few know the code of that land;Yes, many the message, but ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox