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Is It Not Sweet To Think, Hereafter. (Air.--Haydn.)
Is it not sweet to think, hereafter, When the Spirit leaves this sphere.Love, with deathless wing, shall waft her To those she long hath mourned for here?Hearts from which 'twas death to sever. Eyes this world can ne'er restore,There, as warm, as bright as ever, Shall meet us and be lost no more.When wearily we wander, asking Of earth and heaven, where are they,Beneath whose smile we once lay basking, Blest and thinking bliss would stay?Hope still lifts her radiant finger Pointing to the eternal Home,Upon whose portal yet they linger, Looking back for us to come.Alas, alas--doth Hope deceive us? Shall friendship--love--shall all those tiesThat bind a moment, and then leave us,...
Thomas Moore
To Age
Welcome, old friend! These many yearsHave we lived door by door;The fates have laid aside their shearsPerhaps for some few more.I was indocile at an ageWhen better boys were taught,But thou at length hast made me sage,If I am sage in aught.Little I know from other men,Too little they know from me,But thou hast pointed well the penThat writes these lines to thee.Thanks for expelling Fear and Hope,One vile, the other vain;One's scourge, the other's telescope,I shall not see again.Rather what lies before my feetMy notice shall engage,He who hath braved Youth's dizzy heatDreads not the frost of Age.
Walter Savage Landor
To - .
DAKRTSI DIOISO POTMON 'APOTMON.Oh! there are spirits of the air,And genii of the evening breeze,And gentle ghosts, with eyes as fairAs star-beams among twilight trees: -Such lovely ministers to meetOft hast thou turned from men thy lonely feet.With mountain winds, and babbling springs,And moonlight seas, that are the voiceOf these inexplicable things,Thou didst hold commune, and rejoiceWhen they did answer thee; but theyCast, like a worthless boon, thy love away.And thou hast sought in starry eyesBeams that were never meant for thine,Another's wealth: - tame sacrificeTo a fond faith! still dost thou pine?Still dost thou hope that greeting hands,Voice, looks, or lips, may answer thy demands?Ah! wherefore...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Blue Bell
The blue bell is the sweetest flowerThat waves in summer air;Its blossoms have the mightiest powerTo soothe my spirit's care.There is a spell in purple heathToo wildly, sadly dear;The violet has a fragrant breathBut fragrance will not cheer.The trees are bare, the sun is cold;And seldom, seldom seen;The heavens have lost their zone of goldThe earth its robe of green;And ice upon the glancing streamHas cast its sombre shadeAnd distant hills and valleys seemIn frozen mist arrayedThe blue bell cannot charm me nowThe heath has lost its bloom,The violets in the glen belowThey yield no sweet perfume.But though I mourn the heather-bell'Tis better far, away;I know how fast my tears...
Emily Bronte
Sonnet: Oh! How I Love, On A Fair Summer's Eve
Oh! how I love, on a fair summer's eve,When streams of light pour down the golden west,And on the balmy zephyrs tranquil restThe silver clouds, far, far away to leaveAll meaner thoughts, and take a sweet reprieveFrom little cares; to find, with easy quest,A fragrant wild, with Nature's beauty drest,And there into delight my soul deceive.There warm my breast with patriotic lore,Musing on Milton's fate, on Sydney's bier,Till their stern forms before my mind arise:Perhaps on wing of Poesy upsoar,Full often dropping a delicious tear,When some melodious sorrow spells mine eyes.
John Keats
Sonnet.
There was a beautiful spirit in her air, As of a fay at revel. Hidden springs,Too delicate for knowledge, should be there, Moving her gently like invisible wings;And then her lip out-blushing the red fruit That bursts with ripeness in the Autumn time,And the arch eye you would not swear was mute, And the clear cheek, as of a purer clime,And the low tone, soft as a pleasant flute Sent over water with the vesper chime;And then her forehead with its loose, dark curl, And the bewildering smile that made her mouth Like a torn rose-leaf moistened of the South -She has an angel's gifts - the radiant girl!
Nathaniel Parker Willis
To Mrs. Julia Ward Howe
Dear Lady of Tranquillity, Ah! lightly have the years Their music on thy heart-strings played, and all the smiles and tears That mark the joy of living, that sound the depths of pain For thee make one great harmony - a happy heart's refrain. (On her eighty-sixth birthday.)
Helen Leah Reed
The Woman I Met
A stranger, I threaded sunken-heartedA lamp-lit crowd;And anon there passed me a soul departed,Who mutely bowed.In my far-off youthful years I had met her,Full-pulsed; but now, no more life's debtor,Onward she slidIn a shroud that furs half-hid."Why do you trouble me, dead woman,Trouble me;You whom I knew when warm and human?How it beThat you quitted earth and are yet upon itIs, to any who ponder on it,Past being read!""Still, it is so," she said."These were my haunts in my olden sprightlyHours of breath;Here I went tempting frail youth nightlyTo their death;But you deemed me chaste me, a tinselled sinner!How thought you one with pureness in herCould pace this streetEyeing some man to greet?...
Thomas Hardy
The Mendicants.
We are as mendicants who waitAlong the roadside in the sun.Tatters of yesterday and shredsOf morrow clothe us every one.And some are dotards, who believeAnd glory in the days of old;While some are dreamers, harping stillUpon an unknown age of gold.Hopeless or witless! Not one heeds,As lavish Time comes down the wayAnd tosses in the suppliant hatOne great new-minted gold To-day.Ungrateful heart and grudging thanks,His beggar's wisdom only seesHousing and bread and beer enough;He knows no other things than these.O foolish ones, put by your care!Where wants are many, joys are few;And at the wilding springs of peace,God keeps an open house for you.But that some Fortunatus' giftIs lyi...
Bliss Carman
To Mignon.
Over vale and torrent farRolls along the sun's bright car.Ah! he wakens in his courseMine, as thy deep-seated smartIn the heart.Ev'ry morning with new force.Scarce avails night aught to me;E'en the visions that I seeCome but in a mournful guise;And I feel this silent smartIn my heartWith creative pow'r arise.During many a beauteous yearI have seen ships 'neath me steer,As they seek the shelt'ring bay;But, alas, each lasting smartIn my heartFloats not with the stream away.I must wear a gala dress,Long stored up within my press,For to-day to feasts is given;None know with what bitter smartIs my heartFearfully and madly riven.Sec...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
To A Lady Who Presented The Author With The Velvet Band Which Bound Her Tresses.
1.This Band, which bound thy yellow hairIs mine, sweet girl! thy pledge of love;It claims my warmest, dearest care,Like relics left of saints above.2.Oh! I will wear it next my heart;'Twill bind my soul in bonds to thee:From me again 'twill ne'er depart,But mingle in the grave with me.3.The dew I gather from thy lipIs not so dear to me as this;That I but for a moment sip,And banquet on a transient bliss:4.This will recall each youthful scene,E'en when our lives are on the wane;The leaves of Love will still be greenWhen Memory bids them bud again.
George Gordon Byron
Ode to Simplicity
O thou, by Nature taughtTo breathe her genuine thoughtIn numbers warmly pure, and sweetly strong;Who first on mountains wild,In Fancy, loveliest child,Thy babe, or Pleasure's, nurs'd the pow'rs of song!Thou, who with hermit heart,Disdain'st the wealth of art,And gauds, and pageant weeds, and trailing pall,But com'st a decent maid,In Attic robe array'd,O chaste, unboastful nymph, to thee I call!By all the honey'd storeOn Hybla's thymy shore;By all her blooms, and mingled murmurs dear;By her whose lovelorn woeIn ev'ning musings slowSooth'd sweetly sad Electra's poet's ear:By old Cephisus deep,Who spread his wavy sweepIn warbled wand'rings round thy green retreat;On whose enamell'd side,When ho...
William Collins
Passageways
Greet the days - greet the moon, gather the stars.. . Man is not at one with himself - collars the infidel ways of his race under pressure domes of widening silence. I scan the horizon barely cognizant of the metallic bits that pierce the night's crown - no jewelled orb stabs this queen's spectre. I am running and lost. . . ever slow to breech this reasoning. Honeysuckle mist with armfuls of orange lilies with scent stronger than the carriage needed in their gathering. Place the constellations upon their heads, the colour so transcends. And then there are the bludgeoned stars fallen into the eyes of my farmhouse scene. The sphin...
Paul Cameron Brown
Prelude - Prefixed To The Volume Entitled "Poems Chiefly Of Early And Late Years
In desultory walk through orchard grounds,Or some deep chestnut grove, oft have I pausedThe while a Thrush, urged rather than restrainedBy gusts of vernal storm, attuned his songTo his own genial instincts; and was heard(Though not without some plaintive tones between)To utter, above showers of blossom sweptFrom tossing boughs, the promise of a calm,Which the unsheltered traveler might receiveWith thankful spirit. The descant, and the windThat seemed to play with it in love or scorn,Encouraged and endeared the strain of wordsThat haply flowed from me, by fits of silenceImpelled to livelier pace. But now, my Book!Charged with those lays, and others of like mood,Or loftier pitch if higher rose the theme,Go, single yet aspiring to be joinedW...
William Wordsworth
The Welcome To Sack.
So soft streams meet, so springs with gladder smilesMeet after long divorcement by the isles;When love, the child of likeness, urgeth onTheir crystal natures to a union:So meet stolen kisses, when the moony nightsCall forth fierce lovers to their wish'd delights;So kings and queens meet, when desire convincesAll thoughts but such as aim at getting princes,As I meet thee. Soul of my life and fame!Eternal lamp of love! whose radiant flameOut-glares the heaven's Osiris,[H] and thy gleamsOut-shine the splendour of his mid-day beams.Welcome, O welcome, my illustrious spouse;Welcome as are the ends unto my vows;Aye! far more welcome than the happy soilThe sea-scourged merchant, after all his toil,Salutes with tears of joy, when fires betra...
Robert Herrick
Sonnet: - VI.
Through every sense a sweet balm permeates,As music strikes new tones from every nerve.The soul of Feeling enters at the gatesOf Intellect, and Fancy comes to serveWith fitting homage the propitious guest.Nature, erewhile so lonely and oppressed,Stands like a stately Presence, and looks downAs from a throne of power. I have grownFull twenty summers backwards, and my youthIs surging in upon me till my hopesAre as fresh-tinted as the checkered leavesThat the sun shines through. All the future opesIts endless corridors, where time unweavesThe threads of Error from the golden warp of Truth.
Charles Sangster
I Love Thee, Sweet Mary.
I love thee, sweet Mary, but love thee in fear;Were I but the morning breeze, healthful and airy,As thou goest a-walking I'd breathe in thine ear,And whisper and sigh, how I love thee, my Mary!I wish but to touch thee, but wish it in vain;Wert thou but a streamlet, a-winding so clearly,And I little globules of soft dropping rain,How fond would I press thy white bosom, my Mary!I would steal a kiss, but I dare not presume;Wert thou but a rose in thy garden, sweet fairy,And I a bold bee for to rifle its bloom,A whole Summer's day would I kiss thee, my Mary!I long to be with thee, but cannot tell how;Wert thou but the elder that grows by thy dairy,And I the blest woodbine to twine on the bough,I'd embrace thee and cling to thee ever, my...
John Clare
Dionysia
The day is dead; and in the westThe slender crescent of the moonDiana's crystal-kindled crestSinks hillward in a silvery swoon.What is the murmur in the dell?The stealthy whisper and the drip?A Dryad with her leaf-light trip?A Naiad o'er her fountain well?Who with white fingers for her comb,Sleeks her blue hair, and from its curlsShowers slim minnows and pale pearls,And hollow music of the foam.What is it in the vistaed waysThat leans and springs, and stoops and sways?The naked limbs of one who flees?An Oread who hesitates.Before the Satyr form that waits,Crouching to leap, that there she sees?Or under boughs, reclining cool,A Hamadryad, like a pool.Of moonlight, palely beautiful?Or Limnad, with her lilied face,
Madison Julius Cawein