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In Memory of Major Robert Gregory
INow that we're almost settled in our houseI'll name the friends that cannot sup with usBeside a fire of turf in th' ancient tower,And having talked to some late hourClimb up the narrow winding stair to bed:Discoverers of forgotten truthOr mere companions of my youth,All, all are in my thoughts to-night being dead.IIAlways we'd have the new friend meet the oldAnd we are hurt if either friend seem cold,And there is salt to lengthen out the smartIn the affections of our heart,And quarrels are blown up upon that head;But not a friend that I would bringThis night can set us quarrelling,For all that come into my mind are dead.IIILionel Johnson comes the first to mind,That loved his learning bette...
William Butler Yeats
The Edge
I thought to die that night in the solitude where they would never find me...But there was time...And I lay quietly on the drawn knees of the mountain, staring into the abyss...I do not know how long...I could not count the hours, they ran so fastLike little bare-foot urchins - shaking my hands away...But I rememberSomewhere water trickled like a thin severed vein...And a wind came out of the grass,Touching me gently, tentatively, like a paw.As the night grewThe gray cloud that had covered the sky like sackclothFell in ashen folds about the hills,Like hooded virgins, pulling their cloaks about them...There must have been a spent moon,For the Tall One's veil held a shimmer of silver...That too I remember...And the tenderly rock...
Lola Ridge
Return
Absent from thee, I languish still;Then ask me not, When I return?The straying fool twill plainly killTo wish all day, all night to mourn.Dear, from thine arms then let me fly,That my fantastic mind may proveThe torments it deserves to try,That tears my fixd heart from my love.When, wearied with a world of woe,To thy safe bosom I retire,Where love, and peace, and truth does flow,May I contented there expire!Lest, once more wandering from that heaven,I fall on some base heart unblest;Faithless to thee, false, unforgiven,And lose my everlasting rest.
John Wilmot
The Nettles
This, then, is the grave of my son,Whose heart she won! And nettles growUpon his mound; and she lives just below.How he upbraided me, and left,And our lives were cleft, because I saidShe was hard, unfeeling, caring but to wed.Well, to see this sight I have fared these miles,And her firelight smiles from her window there,Whom he left his mother to cherish with tender care!It is enough. I'll turn and go;Yes, nettles grow where lone lies he,Who spurned me for seeing what he could not see.
Thomas Hardy
The Student's Tale - The Wayside Inn - Part Second
THE COBBLER OF HAGENAUI trust that somewhere and somehowYou all have heard of Hagenau,A quiet, quaint, and ancient townAmong the green Alsatian hills,A place of valleys, streams, and mills,Where Barbarossa's castle, brownWith rust of centuries, still looks downOn the broad, drowsy land below,--On shadowy forests filled with game,And the blue river winding slowThrough meadows, where the hedges growThat give this little town its name.It happened in the good old times,While yet the Master-singers filledThe noisy workshop and the guildWith various melodies and rhymes,That here in Hagenau there dweltA cobbler,--one who loved debate,And, arguing from a postulate,Would say what others only felt;A man of foreca...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Charge At Balaklava.
Nolan halted where the squadrons,Stood impatient of delay,Out he drew his brief dispatches,Which their leader quickly snatches,At a glance their meaning catches;They are ordered to the fray!All that morning they had waited--As their frowning faces showed,Horses stamping, riders fretting,And their teeth together setting;Not a single sword-blade wettingAs the battle ebbed and flowed.Now the fevered spell is broken,Every man feels twice as large,Every heart is fiercely leaping,As a lion roused from sleeping,For they know they will be sweepingIn a moment to the charge.Brightly gleam six hundred sabres,And the brazen trumpets ring;Steeds are gathered, spurs are driven,And the heavens widely riven...
James Barron Hope
The Helpless
Those poor, heartbroken wretches, doomedTo hear at night the clocks' hard tones;They have no beds to warm their limbs,But with those limbs must warm cold stones;Those poor weak men, whose coughs and ailingsForce them to tear at iron railings.Those helpless men that starve, my pity;Whose waking day is never done;Who, save for their own shadows, areDoomed night and day to walk alone:They know no bright face but the sun's,So cold and dark are human ones.
William Henry Davies
Sonnet (Suggested By Some Of The Proceedings Of The Society For Psychical Research)
Not with vain tears, when we're beyond the sun,We'll beat on the substantial doors, nor treadThose dusty high-roads of the aimless deadPlaintive for Earth; but rather turn and runDown some close-covered by-way of the air,Some low sweet alley between wind and wind,Stoop under faint gleams, thread the shadows, findSome whispering ghost-forgotten nook, and thereSpend in pure converse our eternal day;Think each in each, immediately wise;Learn all we lacked before; hear, know, and sayWhat this tumultuous body now denies;And feel, who have laid our groping hands away;And see, no longer blinded by our eyes.
Rupert Brooke
The Fugitive
His shatterd Empire thunders to the ground:A myriad hearts peal laughter as it falls,While red flags flutter on its ruined wallsAnd living joy darts all the world around.The imperial criminal, naked and uncrowned,Breathing a shuddering air of curses, crawls,Baffled and beaten, from his gorgeous halls,While Vengeance halloos lapdog, cur and hound.Behold the arrogant humbled, and rejoiceThe grasping hand holds naught but flying dust,And Envy meets the pitiless grin of Fate.Take warning of your own hearts inward voice,Bid your own soul be humble and distrustThe yelping promises of greed and hate.
John Le Gay Brereton
The Circuit Judge
Take note, passers-by, of the sharp erosions Eaten in my head-stone by the wind and rain - Almost as if an intangible Nemesis or hatred Were marking scores against me, But to destroy, and not preserve, my memory. I in life was the Circuit judge, a maker of notches, Deciding cases on the points the lawyers scored, Not on the right of the matter. O wind and rain, leave my head-stone alone For worse than the anger of the wronged, The curses of the poor, Was to lie speechless, yet with vision clear, Seeing that even Hod Putt, the murderer, Hanged by my sentence, Was innocent in soul compared with me.
Edgar Lee Masters
Recollections
I.Years upon years, as a course of clouds that thickenThronging the ways of the wind that shifts and veers,Pass, and the flames of remembered fires requickenYears upon years.Surely the thought in a man's heart hopes or fearsNow that forgetfulness needs must here have strickenAnguish, and sweetened the sealed-up springs of tears.Ah, but the strength of regrets that strain and sicken,Yearning for love that the veil of death endears,Slackens not wing for the wings of years that quickenYears upon years.II.Years upon years, and the flame of love's high altarTrembles and sinks, and the sense of listening earsHeeds not the sound that it heard of love's blithe psalterYears upon years.Only the sense of a heart t...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Onset
Always the same, when on a fated nightAt last the gathered snow lets down as whiteAs may be in dark woods, and with a songIt shall not make again all winter longOf hissing on the yet uncovered ground,I almost stumble looking up and round,As one who overtaken by the endGives up his errand, and lets death descendUpon him where he is, with nothing doneTo evil, no important triumph won,More than if life had never been begun.Yet all the precedent is on my side:I know that winter death has never triedThe earth but it has failed: the snow may heapIn long storms an undrifted four feet deepAs measured again maple, birch, and oak,It cannot check the peeper's silver croak;And I shall see the snow all go down hillIn water of a slender Apr...
Robert Lee Frost
The Conjunction Of Jupiter And Venus.
I would not always reason. The straight pathWearies us with its never-varying lines,And we grow melancholy. I would makeReason my guide, but she should sometimes sitPatiently by the way-side, while I tracedThe mazes of the pleasant wildernessAround me. She should be my counsellor,But not my tyrant. For the spirit needsImpulses from a deeper source than hers,And there are motions, in the mind of man,That she must look upon with awe. I bowReverently to her dictates, but not lessHold to the fair illusions of old time,Illusions that shed brightness over life,And glory over nature. Look, even now,Where two bright planets in the twilight meet,Upon the saffron heaven, the imperial starOf Jove, and she that from her radiant urnPours forth t...
William Cullen Bryant
Fragments.
I. I round the threshold wandering here, Vainly the tempest and the rain invoke, That they may keep my lady prisoner. And yet the wind was howling in the woods, The roving thunder bellowing in the clouds, Before the dawn had risen in the sky. O ye dear clouds! O heaven! O earth! O trees! My lady goes! Have mercy, if on earth Unhappy lovers ever mercy find! Awake, ye whirlwinds! storm-charged clouds, awake, O'erwhelm me with your floods, until the sun To other lands brings back the light of day! Heaven opens; the wind falls; the grass, the leaves Are motionless, around; the dazzling sun In my tear-laden eyes remorseless shines.II. The light of d...
Giacomo Leopardi
Cleared
Help for a patriot distressed, a spotless spirit hurt,Help for an honourable clan sore trampled in the dirt!From Queenstown Bay to Donegal, oh, listen to my song,The honourable gentlemen have suffered grievous wrong.Their noble names were mentioned, oh, the burning black disgrace!,By a brutal Saxon paper in an Irish shooting-case;They sat upon it for a year, then steeled their heart to brave it,And "coruscating innocence" the learned Judges gave it.Bear witness, Heaven, of that grim crime beneath the surgeon's knife,The "honourable gentlemen" deplored the loss of life!Bear witness of those chanting choirs that burke and shirk and snigger,No man laid hand upon the knife or finger to the trigger!Cleared in the face of all mankind beneath the winking sk...
Rudyard
Carmen Saeculare.
MDCCCLIII."Qucquid agunt homines, nostri est farrago libelli."Acris hyems jam venit: hyems genus omne perosaFoemineum, et senibus glacies non aequa rotundis:Apparent rari stantes in tramite glauco;Radit iter, cogitque nives, sua tela, juventus.Trux matrona ruit, multos dominata per annos,Digna indigna minans, glomeratque volumina crurum;Illa parte senex, amisso forte galero,Per plateas bacchatur; eum chorus omnis agrestumRidet anhelantem frustra, et jam jamque tenentemQuod petit; illud agunt venti prensumque resorbent.Post, ubi compositus tandem votique potitusSedit humi; flet crura tuens nive candida lenta,Et vestem laceram, et venturas conjugis iras:Itque domum tendens duplices ad sidera palmas,Corda miser, desiderio p...
Charles Stuart Calverley
Offerings (A Movement In Four Parts)
The night is folly without the moon,trees blank space against a frontal skywhere lattice work from a bled fish revealsskeletal markings will not administerthe red jack of hearts to a mistress sea.Most fickle, the ways of a cockroach(I don't recommend them) to offeringsof white linen, cold squares atopa stone diamonded floor.Palaver shacks drone in ghostly lightcommunicating some message about eel runsup the black river, the equivalent brushof tombstones against dark nightsoil.Tiny bars open as cubicles.proverbial flashes of the coming evening,haciendas to count every blessing.The road to such placessnarls a dusty pleasureand will heat thin bloodto boil in the daylight hours.IISwe...
Paul Cameron Brown
The Echo
(After Heine)Through the lonely mountain landThere rode a cavalier."Oh ride I to my darling's arms,Or to the grave so drear?"The Echo answered clear,"The grave so drear."So onward rode the cavalierAnd clouded was his brow."If now my hour be truly come,Ah well, it must be now!"The Echo answered low,"It must be now."
Arthur Conan Doyle