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The Sewing-Girl.
I asked to see the dead man's face,As I gave the servant my well-filled basket;And she deigned to lead me, a wondrous grace,Where he lay asleep in his rosewood casket.I was only the sewing-girl, and he the heir to this princely palace.Flowers, white flowers, everywhere,In odorous cross, and anchor, and chalice.The smallest leaf might touch his hair;But I - my God! I must stand apart,With my hands pressed silently on my heart,I must not touch the least brown curl;For I was only the sewing-girl.If his stately mother knew what I know,As she weeping stood by his side this morning,Would she clasp me in motherly love and woe -Or drive me out in the cold with scorning?If she knew that I loved him better than life,Better than death; since f...
Marietta Holley
The Battle Autumn Of 1862.
Under the orchard boughs, That drop red leaves like coals into the grass. The golden arrows of the sunset fall; And on the vine-hung wallGreat purple clusters in delicious drowse,Beakers of chrysolite and amethyst,Yet by the sun unkissed, Lean down to all the wooing lips that pass,Brimful of red, red wineSweet as brown peasants glean along the castled RhineAll sights and sounds are of the Autumn weather; The urchin rock'ng in the trees Shakes silver laughter with the apples down,-- And wading to the knees Among the stubble and the husks so brown,The oxen keeping every patient step together,Bring in the creaking wain,High-piled with yellow maize and sheaves of rustling grain.While i...
Kate Seymour Maclean
A Glimpse Of Heaven
As the caged eagle neared the mountain range,O'er which he oft had soared on pinions strong,He clapped his wings, moved by some impulse strange,And then fell dead his prison floor along.So Moses stood on Pisgah's heights alone,With sight undimmed, and unabated strength;He gazed with rapture on the vision shown,Of the fair land in all its breadth and length;He saw the vale of Eschol clad with vine,Mount Libbanus adorned with lordly trees,Gilead and Achor, with their lowing kine,And verdant Sharon swept by the sea breeze;He saw the spot where Jacob's ladder stood,The oaks at Mamre where their father prayed,Saw Bashan with its pastures and its wood,And the rude cave where Abram Sarah laid.Saw the whole land--its hills and v...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Femina Contra Mundum
The sun was black with judgment, and the moonBlood: but betweenI saw a man stand, saying, 'To me at leastThe grass is green.'There was no star that I forgot to fearWith love and wonder.The birds have loved me'; but no answer came--Only the thunder.Once more the man stood, saying, 'A cottage door,Wherethrough I gazedThat instant as I turned--yea, I am vile;Yet my eyes blazed.'For I had weighed the mountains in a balance,And the skies in a scale,I come to sell the stars--old lamps for new--Old stars for sale.'Then a calm voice fell all the thunder through,A tone less rough:'Thou hast begun to love one of my worksAlmost enough.'
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
False
False! Good God, I am dreaming! No, no, it never can be -You who are so true in seeming, You, false to your vows and me?My wife and my fair boy's mother The star of my life - my queen -To yield herself to another Like some light Magdalene!Proofs! what are proofs - I defy them! They never can shake my trust;If you look in my face and deny them I will trample them into the dust.For whenever I read of the glory Of the realms of Paradise,I sought for the truth of the story And found it in your sweet eyes.Why, you are the shy young creature I wooed in her maiden grace;There was purity in each feature, And my heaven I found in your face.And, "not only married but mated," I ...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Sibyl.
A Sketch.So stood the Sibyl: stream'd her hoary hairWild as the blast, and with a comet's glareGlow'd her red eye-balls 'midst the sunken gloomOf their wild orbs, like death-fires in a tomb.Slow, like the rising storm, in fitful moans,Broke from her breast the deep prophetic tones.Anon, with whirlwind rash, the Spirit came;Then in dire splendour, like imprison'd flameFlashing through rifted domes or towns amazed,Her voice in thunder burst; her arm she raised;Outstretch'd her hands, as with a Fury's force,To grasp, and launch the slow descending curse:Still as she spoke, her stature seem'd to grow;Still she denounced unmitigable woe:Pain, want, and madness, pestilence, and death,Rode forth triumphant at her blasting breath:Thei...
Thomas Gent
Chords.
Then up the orient heights to the zenith that balanced a crescent, -Up and far up and over, - a warm erubescence liquescentRioted roses and rubies; eruptions of opaline gems,Flung and wide sown, blushed crushed, and crumbled from diademsWealth of the kings of the Sylphs; whence, old alchemist, Earth -Dewed down - by chemistry occult fashions petrified waters of worth. -Then out of the stain and rash furor, the passionate pulver of stone,The trembling suffusion that dazzled and awfully shone,Chamelion-convulsion of color, hilarious ranges of glare -Like a god who for vengeance ires, nodding battle from every hair,Fares forth with majesty girdled and clangs with hot heroes for life,Till the brazen gates boom bursten hells and the walls roar bristling strife, -Athwart wi...
Madison Julius Cawein
A Faded Letter.
I.O what memories sweet entwineAround each word and faded line!Yellow and dim with the touch of years,And soiled with the marks of tears--A sacred treasure of the heartWhich death alone can from him part--A letter--cherished as no other--And ending with the name of--Mother!II.Writ it was to a wayward boy,When life to him seemed full of joy--Pleading with him so to liveThat he her heart no grief would give--That after years might ne'er be fraughtWith sorrow that himself had wrought:--"May guardian angels 'round you hover,"She wrote--and signed the name of--Mother!III.The paper has the taint of must--The hand that traced the lines is dust,And silvery hair is on the head...
George W. Doneghy
His Farewell To Sack.
Farewell thou thing, time past so known, so dearTo me as blood to life and spirit; near,Nay, thou more near than kindred, friend, man, wife,Male to the female, soul to body; lifeTo quick action, or the warm soft sideOf the resigning, yet resisting bride.The kiss of virgins, first fruits of the bed,Soft speech, smooth touch, the lips, the maidenhead:These and a thousand sweets could never beSo near or dear as thou wast once to me.O thou, the drink of gods and angels! wineThat scatter'st spirit and lust, whose purest shineMore radiant than the summer's sunbeams shows;Each way illustrious, brave, and like to thoseComets we see by night, whose shagg'd portentsForetell the coming of some dire events,Or some full flame which with a pride aspires,
Robert Herrick
Sufferance.
In the hope of ease to come,Let's endure one martyrdom.
The Child-Mother.
Heavily lay the warm sunlightUpon the green blades shining bright, An outspread grassy sea:She through the burnished yellow flowersWent walking in the golden hours That slept upon the lea.The bee went past her with a hum;The merry gnats did go and come In complicated dance;Like a blue angel, to and fro,The splendid dragon-fly did go, Shot like a seeking glance.She never followed them, but stillWent forward with a quiet will, That got, but did not miss;With gentle step she passed along,And once a low, half-murmured song Uttered her share of bliss.It was a little maiden-child;You see, not frolicsome and wild, As such a child should be;For though she was just nine, no more,...
George MacDonald
Merope
Far in the ways of the hyaline wastes in the face of the splendidSix of the sisters the star-dowered sisters ineffably bright,Merope sitteth, the shadow-like wife of a monarch unfriendedOf Ades of Orcus, the fierce, the implacable god of the night.Merope fugitive Merope! lost to thyself and thy lover,Cast, like a dream, out of thought, with the moons which have passed into sleep,What shall avail thee? Alcyones tears, or the sight to discoverOf Sisyphus pallid for thee by the blue, bitter lights of the deepPallid, but patient for sorrow? Oh, thou of the fire and the water,Half with the flame of the sunset, and kin to the streams of the sea,Hast thou the songs of old times for desire of thy dark-featured daughter,Sweet with the lips of thy yearning, O Aethra! with tokens of ...
Henry Kendall
Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part II. - XLII - Gunpowder Plot
Fear hath a hundred eyes that all agreeTo plague her beating heart; and there is one(Nor idlest that!) which holds communionWith things that were not, yet were 'meant' to be.Aghast within its gloomy cavityThat eye (which sees as if fulfilled and doneCrimes that might stop the motion of the sun)Beholds the horrible catastropheOf an assembled Senate unredeemedFrom subterraneous Treason's darkling power:Merciless act of sorrow infinite!Worse than the product of that dismal night,When gushing, copious as a thunder-shower,The blood of Huguenots through Paris streamed.
William Wordsworth
To His Book.
If hap it must, that I must see thee lieAbsyrtus-like, all torn confusedly:With solemn tears, and with much grief of heart,I'll recollect thee, weeping, part by part;And having wash'd thee, close thee in a chestWith spice; that done, I'll leave thee to thy rest.
Confused Dreams.
O strange, dim other-world revealed to us,Beginning there where ends reality,Lying 'twixt life and death, and populousWith souls from either sphere! now enter weThy twisted paths. Barred is the silver gate,But the wild-carven doors of ivorySpring noiselessly apart: between them straightFlies forth a cloud of nameless shadowy things,With harpies, imps, and monsters, small and great,Blurring the thick air with darkening wings.All humors of the blood and brain take shape,And fright us with our own imaginings.A trouble weighs upon us: no escapeFrom this unnatural region can there be.Fixed eyes stare on us, wide mouths grin and gape,Familiar faces out of reach we see.Fain would we scream...
Emma Lazarus
Sonnet XXII.
My soul is a stiff pageant, man by man,Of some Egyptian art than Egypt older,Found in some tomb whose rite no guess can scan,Where all things else to coloured dust did moulder.Whate'er its sense may mean, its age is twinTo that of priesthoods whose feet stood near God,When knowledge was so great that 'twas a sinAnd man's mere soul too man for its abode.But when I ask what means that pageant IAnd would look at it suddenly, I loseThe sense I had of seeing it, nor can tryAgain to look, nor hath my memory a use That seems recalling, save that it recalls An emptiness of having seen those walls.
Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa
From The Conflict Of Convictions
The Ancient of Days forever is young,Forever the scheme of Nature thrives;I know a wind in purpose strong--It spins against the way it drives.What if the gulfs their slimed foundations bare?So deep must the stones be hurledWhereon the throes of ages rearThe final empire and the happier world.Power unanointed may come--Dominion (unsought by the free)And the Iron Dome,Stronger for stress and strain,Fling her huge shadow athwart the main;But the Founders' dream shall flee.Age after age has been,(From man's changeless heart their way they win);And death be busy with all who strive--Death, with silent negative.Yea and Nay--Each hath his say;But God He keeps the middle way.None ...
Herman Melville
Translations. - A Song Concerning The Two Martyrs Of Christ, Burnt At Brussels By The Sophists Of Loubaine, Which Took Place In The Year 1523. (Luther's Song-Book.)
A new song here shall be begun--The Lord God help our singing!--Of what our God himself hath done,Praise, honour to him bringing:At Brussels in the Netherlands,By two young boys, He graciousDisplays the wonders of his hands,Giving them gifts right precious,And richly them adorning.The first right fitly John was named,So rich he in God's favour;His brother, Henry--one unblamed,Whose salt had lost no savour.From this world they are gone away,The diadem they've gained!Honest, like God's good children, theyFor his word life disdained,And have become his martyrs.The ancient foe on them laid hold,With terrors did enwrap them;To lie against God's word them told,With cunning would entrap them:From Louvain...