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A Trinity
Of three in One and One in threeMy narrow mind would doubting beTill Beauty, Grace and Kindness metAnd all at once were Juliet.
Hilaire Belloc
The Reef
My green aquarium of phantom fish,Goggling in on me through the misty panes;My rotting leaves and fields spongy with rains;My few clear quiet autumn days--I wishI could leave all, clearness and mistiness;Sodden or goldenly crystal, all too still.Yes, and I too rot with the leaves that fillThe hollows in the woods; I am grown lessThan human, listless, aimless as the greenIdiot fishes of my aquarium,Who loiter down their dim tunnels and comeAnd look at me and drift away, nought seenOr understood, but only glazedlyReflected. Upwards, upwards through the shadows,Through the lush sponginess of deep-sea meadowsWhere hare-lipped monsters batten, let me plyWinged fins, bursting this matrix dark to findJewels and movement, ...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
The Wind & The Sun
The Wind and the Sun had a bet,The wayfarers' cloak which should get:Blew the Wind--the cloak clung:Shone the Sun--the cloak flungShowed the Sun had the best of it yet.True Strength Is Not Bluster
Walter Crane
A Vow To Mars.
Store of courage to me grant,Now I'm turn'd a combatant;Help me, so that I my shield,Fighting, lose not in the field.That's the greatest shame of allThat in warfare can befall.Do but this, and there shall beOffer'd up a wolf to thee.
Robert Herrick
A Servant To Servants
I didn't make you know how glad I wasTo have you come and camp here on our land.I promised myself to get down some dayAnd see the way you lived, but I don't know!With a houseful of hungry men to feedI guess you'd find.... It seems to meI can't express my feelings any moreThan I can raise my voice or want to liftMy hand (oh, I can lift it when I have to).Did ever you feel so? I hope you never.It's got so I don't even know for sureWhether I am glad, sorry, or anything.There's nothing but a voice-like left insideThat seems to tell me how I ought to feel,And would feel if I wasn't all gone wrong.You take the lake. I look and look at it.I see it's a fair, pretty sheet of water.I stand and make myself repeat out loudThe advantages it has,...
Robert Lee Frost
Unknown Ideal
Whose is the voice that will not let me rest? I hear it speak.Where is the shore will gratify my quest, Show what I seek?Not yours, weak Muse, to mimic that far voice, With halting tongue;No peace, sweet land, to bid my heart rejoice Your groves among.Whose is the loveliness I know is by, Yet cannot place?Is it perfection of the sea or sky, Or human face?Not yours, my pencil, to delineate The splendid smile!Blind in the sun, we struggle on with Fate That glows the while.Whose are the feet that pass me, echoing On unknown ways?Whose are the lips that only part to sing Through all my days?Not yours, fond youth, to fill mine eager eyes ...
Dora Sigerson Shorter
The Tangled Skein.
Try we life long, we can neverStraighten out life's tangled skein,Why should we, in vain endeavor,Guess and guess and guess again?Life's a pudding full of plums;Care's a canker that benumbs.Wherefore waste our elocutionOn impossible solution?Life's a pleasant institution,Let us take it as it comes!Set aside the dull enigma,We shall guess it all too soon;Failure brings no kind of stigmaDance we to another tune!String the lyre and fill the cup,Lest on sorrow we should sup.Hop and skip to Fancy's fiddle,Hands across and down the middleLife's perhaps the only riddleThat we shrink from giving up!
William Schwenck Gilbert
The Dead Stowaway.
He lay on the beach, just out of the reach Of waves that had cast him by: With fingers grim they reached for him As often as they came nigh. The shore-face brown had a surly frown, And glanced at the dancing sea, As if to say, "Take back the clay You tossed this morning at me." Great fragments rude, by the shipwreck strewed, Had found by this wreck a place; He had grasped them tight, and hope-strewn fright Sat still on the bloated face. Battered and bruised, forever abused, He lay by the heartless sea, As if Heaven's aid had never been made For a villain such as he. The fetter's mark lay heavy and dark Around the pulseless wrists; The harde...
William McKendree Carleton
Nay, not To-night
Nay, not to-night; - the slow, sad rain is fallingSorrowful tears, beneath a grieving sky,Far off a famished jackal, faintly calling,Renders the dusk more lonely with its cry.The mighty river rushes, sobbing, seawards,The shadows shelter faint mysterious fears,I turn mine eyes for consolation theewards,And find thy lashes tremulous with tears.If some new soul, asearch for incarnation,Should, through our kisses, enter Life again,It would inherit all our desolation,All the soft sorrow of the slanting rain.When thou desirest Love's supreme surrender,Come while the morning revels in the light,Bulbuls around us, passionately tender,Singing among the roses red and white.Thus, if it be my sweet and sacred duty,Subservient...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Canzone XVII.
Di pensier in pensier, di monte in monte.DISTANCE AND SOLITUDE. From hill to hill I roam, from thought to thought,With Love my guide; the beaten path I fly,For there in vain the tranquil life is sought:If 'mid the waste well forth a lonely rill,Or deep embosom'd a low valley lie,In its calm shade my trembling heart's still;And there, if Love so will,I smile, or weep, or fondly hope, or fear.While on my varying brow, that speaks the soul,The wild emotions roll,Now dark, now bright, as shifting skies appear;That whosoe'er has proved the lover's stateWould say, He feels the flame, nor knows his future fate.On mountains high, in forests drear and wide,I find repose, and from the throng'd resortOf man turn fea...
Francesco Petrarca
The Norman Boy
High on a broad unfertile tract of forest-skirted Down,Nor kept by Nature for herself, nor made by man his own,From home and company remote and every playful joy,Served, tending a few sheep and goats, a ragged Norman Boy.Him never saw I, nor the spot; but from an English Dame,Stranger to me and yet my friend, a simple notice came,With suit that I would speak in verse of that sequestered childWhom, one bleak winter's day, she met upon the dreary Wild.His flock, along the woodland's edge with relics sprinkled o'erOf last night's snow, beneath a sky threatening the fall of more,Where tufts of herbage tempted each, were busy at their feed,And the poor Boy was busier still, with work of anxious heed.There 'was' he, where of branches rent and withered and ...
William Wordsworth
From Egmont.
ACT I.Clara winds a skein, and sings with Brackenburg.THE drum gives the signal!Loud rings the shrill fife!My love leads his troops onFull arm'd for the strife,While his hand grasps his lanceAs they proudly advance.My bosom pants wildly!My blood hotly flows!Oh had I a doublet,A helmet, and hose!Through the gate with bold footstepI after him hied,Each province, each countryExplored by his side.The coward foe trembledThen rattled our shot:What bliss e'er resembledA soldier's glad lot!ACT III.CLARA sings.GladnessAnd sadnessAnd pensiveness blendingYearningAnd burningIn torment ne'er ending...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Dreams
What dreams we have and how they flyLike rosy clouds across the sky;Of wealth, of fame, of sure success,Of love that comes to cheer and bless;And how they wither, how they fade,The waning wealth, the jilting jade--The fame that for a moment gleams,Then flies forever,--dreams, ah--dreams!O burning doubt and long regret,O tears with which our eyes are wet,Heart-throbs, heart-aches, the glut of pain,The somber cloud, the bitter rain,You were not of those dreams--ah! well,Your full fruition who can tell?Wealth, fame, and love, ah! love that beamsUpon our souls, all dreams--ah! dreams.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Lines, on Startling a Rabbit.
Whew! - Tha'rt in a famous hurry!Awm nooan baan to try to catch thi!Aw've noa dogs wi' me to worryThee poor thing, - aw like to watch thi.Tha'rt a runner! aw dar back thi,Why, tha ommost seems to fly!Did ta think aw meant to tak thi?Well, awm fond o' rabbit pie.Aw dooan't want th' world to misen, mun,Awm nooan like a dog i'th' manger;Yet still 'twor happen best to run,For tha'rt th' safest aght o' danger.An sometimes fowks' inclinationLeads 'em to do what they shouldn't; -But tha's saved me a temptation, -Aw've net harmed thi, 'coss aw couldn't.Aw wish all temptations fled me,As tha's fled throo me to-day;For they've oft to trouble led me,For which aw've had dear to pay.An a taicher wise aw've faand thi,
John Hartley
The Garden
Bountiful Givers,I look along the yearsAnd see the flowers you threw...AnemonesAnd sprigs of graySparse heather of the rocks,Or a wild violetOr daisy of a daisied field...But each your best.I might have worn them on my breastTo wilt in the long day...I might have stemmed them in a narrow vaseAnd watched each petal sallowing...I might have held them so - mechanically -Till the wind winnowed all the leavesAnd left upon my handsA little smear of dust.InsteadI hid them in the soft warm loamOf a dim shadowed place...DeepIn a still cool grotto,Lit only by the memories of starsAnd the wide and luminous eyesOf dead poetsThat love me and that I love...Deep... deep...Where none...
Lola Ridge
Mountain Pictures
I. Franconia from the PemigewassetOnce more, O Mountains of the North, unveilYour brows, and lay your cloudy mantles byAnd once more, ere the eyes that seek ye fail,Uplift against the blue walls of the skyYour mighty shapes, and let the sunshine weaveIts golden net-work in your belting woods,Smile down in rainbows from your falling floods,And on your kingly brows at morn and eveSet crowns of fire! So shall my soul receiveHaply the secret of your calm and strength,Your unforgotten beauty interfuseMy common life, your glorious shapes and huesAnd sun-dropped splendors at my bidding come,Loom vast through dreams, and stretch in billowy lengthFrom the sea-level of my lowland home!They rise before me! Last nights thunder-gustRoared...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Dream Of Life.
When I was young long, long agoI dreamed myself among the flowers;And fancy drew the picture so,They seemed like Fairies in their bowers.The rose was still a rose, you knowBut yet a maid. What could I do?You surely would not have me go,When rosy maidens seem to woo?My heart was gay, and 'mid the throngI sported for an hour or two;We danced the flowery paths along,And did as youthful lovers do.But sports must cease, and so I dreamedTo part with these, my fairy flowersBut oh, how very hard it seemedTo say good-by 'mid such sweet bowers!And one fair Maid of modest airGazed on me with her eye of blue;I saw the tear-drop gathering thereHow could I say to her, Adieu!I fondly gave my hand and heart...
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
The Floor
Here's to the floor,Our best friend of all,Who sticks to us closeIn the time of our fall.When benches are fickleAnd tables betrayAnd rugs are revolving,He meets us half-way.Our stay and support,When we can't stand alone,With the floor for a backer,We'll never be thrown.Here's to our friend,In life's every stage!Dry nurse of infancy,Wet nurse of age!A health to our floor!Supporter and stay;Though he often be full,May he never give way!
Oliver Herford