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1852Where, oh where are the visions of morning,Fresh as the dews of our prime?Gone, like tenants that quit without warning,Down the back entry of time.Where, oh where are life's lilies and roses,Nursed in the golden dawn's smile?Dead as the bulrushes round little Moses,On the old banks of the Nile.Where are the Marys, and Anns, and Elizas,Loving and lovely of yore?Look in the columns of old Advertisers, -Married and dead by the score.Where the gray colts and the ten-year-old fillies,Saturday's triumph and joy?Gone, like our friend ( - Greek - ) Achilles,Homer's ferocious old boy.Die-away dreams of ecstatic emotion,Hopes like young eagles at play,Vows of unheard-of and endless devotion,How ye...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Sonnet LXXXVII.
Perseguendomi Amor al luogo usato.HE IS BEWILDERED AT THE UNEXPECTED ARRIVAL OF LAURA. As Love his arts in haunts familiar tried,Watchful as one expecting war is found,Who all foresees and guards the passes round,I in the armour of old thoughts relied:Turning, I saw a shadow at my sideCast by the sun, whose outline on the groundI knew for hers, who--be my judgment sound--Deserves in bliss immortal to abide.I whisper'd to my heart, Nay, wherefore fear?But scarcely did the thought arise withinThan the bright rays in which I burn were here.As thunders with the lightning-flash begin,So was I struck at once both blind and mute,By her dear dazzling eyes and sweet salute.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Grant's Dirge
IAh, who shall sound the hero's funeral march?And what shall be the music of his dirge?No single voice may chant the Nation's grief,No formal strain can give its woe relief.The pent-up anguish of the loyal wife,The sobs of those who, nearest in this life,Still hold him closely in the life beyond; -These first, with threnody of memories fond.But look! Forth press a myriad mourners thronging,With hearts that throb in sorrow's exaltation,Moved by a strange, impassioned, hopeless longingTo serve him with their love's last ministration.Make way! Make way, from wave-bound verge to vergeOf all our land, that this great multitudeWith lamentation proud albeit subdued,Deep murmuring like the ocean's mighty surge,May pass beneath the heavens' ...
George Parsons Lathrop
Happiness
I have found happiness who looked not for it.There was a green fresh hedge,And willows by the river side,And whistling sedge.The heaviness I felt was all around.No joy sang in the wind.Only dull slow life everywhere,And in my mind.Then from the sedge a bird cried; and all changed.Heaviness turned to mirth:The willows the stream's cheek caressed,The sun the earth.What was it in the bird's song worked such change?The grass was wonderful.I did not dream such beauty wasIn things so dull.What was it in the bird's song gave the waterThat living, sentient look?Lent the rare brightness to the hedge?That sweetness shookDown on the green path by the running water?Or the small daisies litWi...
John Frederick Freeman
Thoughts
Of Public Opinion;Of a calm and cool fiat, sooner or later, (How impassive! How certain and final!)Of the President with pale face, asking secretly to himself, What will the people say at last?Of the frivolous JudgeOf the corrupt Congressman, Governor, MayorOf such as these, standing helpless and exposed;Of the mumbling and screaming priest(soon, soon deserted;)Of the lessening, year by year, of venerableness, and of the dicta of officers, statutes, pulpits, schools;Of the rising forever taller and stronger and broader, of the intuitions of men and women, and of self-esteem, and of personality;Of the New WorldOf the Democracies, resplendent, en-masse;Of the conformity of politics, armies, navies, to them and to me,Of the shining sun by themOf the inherent light, greater than the r...
Walt Whitman
James Garber
Do you remember, passer-by, the path I wore across the lot where now stands the opera house Hasting with swift feet to work through many years? Take its meaning to heart: You too may walk, after the hills at Miller's Ford Seem no longer far away; Long after you see them near at hand, Beyond four miles of meadow; And after woman's love is silent Saying no more: "l will save you." And after the faces of friends and kindred Become as faded photographs, pitifully silent, Sad for the look which means: "We cannot help you." And after you no longer reproach mankind With being in league against your soul's uplifted hands - Themselves compelled at midnight and at noon To watch with steadfast e...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Iron Horse.
No song is mine of Arab steed - My courser is of nobler blood, And cleaner limb and fleeter speed, And greater strength and hardihood Than ever cantered wild and free Across the plains of Araby. Go search the level desert-land From Sana on to Samarcand - Wherever Persian prince has been Or Dervish, Sheik or Bedouin, And I defy you there to point Me out a steed the half so fine - From tip of ear to pastern-joint - As this old iron horse of mine. You do not know what beauty is - You do not know what gentleness His answer is to my caress! - Why, look upon this gait of his, - A touch upon his iron rein - He moves with such a stately gr...
James Whitcomb Riley
LAncien Régime; or The Good Old Rule
Who has a thing to bringFor a gift to our lord the king,Our king all kings above?A young girl brought him love;And he dowered her with shame,With a sort of infamous fame,And then with lonely yearsOf penance and bitter tears:Love is scarcely the thingTo bring as a gift for our king.Who has a thing to bringFor a gift to our lord the king?A statesman brought him plannedJustice for all the land;And he in recompense gotFierce struggle with brigue and plot,Then a fall from lofty placeInto exile and disgraceJustice is never the thingTo bring as a gift for our king.Who has a thing to bringFor a gift to our lord the king?A writer brought him truth;And first he imprisoned the youth;And then he b...
James Thomson
Unborn
O wistful eyes that haunt the gloom of sleep,Are you my own, remembered from the nightI sat before my glass in dumb affrightAnd saw my cowering soul afraid to weep?Perhaps you are his, foreshadowed, when I creepBehind him and confess the hopeless blightThat wilts the bloom of our supreme delightThe breath of horror from the unknown deep.Eyes that have never seen a mothers face,Have you no mercy that you stare and stare,Although I never felt the hope I slew?Wide eyes, but when I kneel to God for grace,Your steadfast pity deepens my despair;The darkness I desire is full of you.
John Le Gay Brereton
Cactus Seed
Radiant notespiercing my narrow-chested room,beating down through my ceiling -smeared with unshapenbelly-prints of dreamsdrifted out of old smokes -trillions of icilypeltering notesout of just one canary,all grown to songas a plant to its stalk,from too long craning at a sky-lightand a square of second-hand blue.Silvery-strident throat -so assiduously serenading my brain,flinching underthe glittering hail of your notes -were you not safe behind... rats know what thickness of... plastered wall...I might fathomyour golden deliriumwith throttle of finger and thumbshutting valve of bright song.IIBut if... away off... on a fork of grassed earthsocketing an inlet reach of blue water......
Lola Ridge
Paralysis
For moveless limbs no pity I crave,That never were swift! Still all I prize,Laughter and thought and friends, I have;No fool to heave luxurious sighsFor the woods and hills that I never knew.The more excellent way's yet mine! And youFlower-laden come to the clean white cell,And we talk as ever, am I not the same?With our hearts we love, immutable,You without pity, I without shame.We talk as of old; as of old you goOut under the sky, and laughing, I know,Flit through the streets, your heart all me;Till you gain the world beyond the town.Then, I fade from your heart, quietly;And your fleet steps quicken. The strong downSmiles you welcome there; the woods that love youClose lovely and conquering arms above you.O ever-...
Rupert Brooke
Christmas Treasures
I count my treasures o'er with care.--The little toy my darling knew,A little sock of faded hue,A little lock of golden hair.Long years ago this holy time,My little one--my all to me--Sat robed in white upon my kneeAnd heard the merry Christmas chime."Tell me, my little golden-head,If Santa Claus should come to-night,What shall he bring my baby bright,--What treasure for my boy?" I said.And then he named this little toy,While in his round and mournful eyesThere came a look of sweet surprise,That spake his quiet, trustful joy.And as he lisped his evening prayerHe asked the boon with childish grace;Then, toddling to the chimney-place,He hung this little stocking there.That night, while lengthe...
Eugene Field
Prologue
A prologue? Well, of course the ladies know, -I have my doubts. No matter, - here we go!What is a Prologue? Let our Tutor teach:Pro means beforehand; logos stands for speech.'T is like the harper's prelude on the strings,The prima donna's courtesy ere she sings;Prologues in metre are to other prosAs worsted stockings are to engine-hose."The world's a stage," - as Shakespeare said, one day;The stage a world - was what he meant to say.The outside world's a blunder, that is clear;The real world that Nature meant is here.Here every foundling finds its lost mamma;Each rogue, repentant, melts his stern papa;Misers relent, the spendthrift's debts are paid,The cheats are taken in the traps they laid;One after one the troubles all are pastTill the...
The Death Of The Poor
It is death that consoles and allows us to live.Alas! that life's end should be all of our hope;It goes to our heads like a powerful drink,And gives us the heart to walk into the dark;Through storm and through snow, through the frost at our feet,It's the pulsating beacon at limit of sight,The illustrious inn* that's described in the book,Where we'll sit ourselves down, and will eat and will sleep;It's an Angel who holds in his magical gripOur peace, and the gift of magnificent dreams,And who makes up the bed of the poor and the bare;It's the glory of gods, it's the mystical loft,It's the purse of the poor and their true native land,It's the porch looking out on mysterious skies!
Charles Baudelaire
The Successful Author.
When Fate presents us with the Bays,We prize the Praiser, not the Praise.We scarcely think our Fame eternalIf vouched for by the Farthing Journal;But when the Craftsman's self has spoken,We take it for a certain Token.This an Example best will show,Derived from DENNIS DIDEROT.A hackney Author, who'd essayedAll Hazards of the scribbling Trade;And failed to live by every Mode,From Persian Tale to Birthday Ode;Embarked at last, thro' pure Starvation,In Theologic Speculation.'Tis commonly affirmed his PenHad been most orthodox till then;But oft, as SOCRATES has said,The Stomach's stronger than the Head;And, for a sudden Change of Creed,There is no Jesuit like Need.Then, too, 'twas cheap; he took it all,By force o...
Henry Austin Dobson
A Friend's Wish. To C. W. S.
Give me your last Aloha,When I go out of sight,Over the dark rim of the seaInto the Polar night!And all the Northland give youSkoal for the voyage begun,When your bright summer sail goes downInto the zones of sun!
Bliss Carman
Youth And Calm
'Tis death! and peace, indeed, is here,And ease from shame, and rest from fear.There's nothing can dismarble nowThe smoothness of that limpid brow.But is a calm like this, in truth,The crowning end of life and youth,And when this boon rewards the dead,Are all debts paid, has all been said?And is the heart of youth so light,Its step so firm, its eye so bright,Because on its hot brow there blowsA wind of promise and reposeFrom the far grave, to which it goes;Because it hath the hope to come,One day, to harbour in the tomb?Ah no, the bliss youth dreams is oneFor daylight, for the cheerful sun,For feeling nerves and living breath,Youth dreams a bliss on this side death.It dreams a rest, if not more deep,More grateful than th...
Matthew Arnold
A Miracle Of Bethlehem
SCENE: A street of that village.Three men with ropes, accosted by a stranger.THE STRANGERI pray you, tell me where you goWith heads averted from the skies,And long ropes trailing in the snow,And resolution in your eyes.THE FIRST MANI am a lover sick of love,For scorn rewards my constancy;And now I hate the stars above,Because my dear will naught of me.THE SECOND MANI am a beggar man, and playSongs with a splendid swing in them,But I have seen no food to-day.They want no song in Bethlehem.THE THIRD MANI am an old man, Sir, and blind,A child of darkness since my birth.I cannot even call to mindThe beauty of the scheme of earth.Therefore I sought to understan...
James Elroy Flecker