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Fill The Goblet Again. A Song.
1.Fill the goblet again! for I never beforeFelt the glow which now gladdens my heart to its core;Let us drink! - who would not? - since, through life's varied round,In the goblet alone no deception is found.2.I have tried in its turn all that life can supply;I have bask'd in the beam of a dark rolling eye;I have lov'd! - who has not? - but what heart can declareThat Pleasure existed while Passion was there?3.In the days of my youth, when the heart's in its spring,And dreams that Affection can never take wing,I had friends! - who has not? - but what tongue will avow,That friends, rosy wine! are so faithful as thou?4.The heart of a mistress some boy may estrange,Friendship shifts w...
George Gordon Byron
To a Virtuous Young Lady
Lady! that in the prime of earliest youthWisely hast shunned the broad way and the green,And with those few art eminently seen,That labour up the Hill of Heavenly Truth,The better part with Mary and with RuthChosen thou hast, and they that overween,And at thy growing virtues fret their spleen,No anger find in thee, but pity and ruth.Thy care is fixed, and zealously attendsTo fill thy odorous Lamp with deeds of light.And Hope that reaps not shame; therefore be sure,Thou, when the Bridegroom with his feastful friendsPasses to bliss at the mid hour of night,Hast gained thy entrance, Virgin wise and pure.
John Milton
Yesterday And To-Morrow
Yesterday I held your hand,Reverently I pressed it,And its gentle yieldingnessFrom my soul I blessed it.But to-day I sit alone,Sad and sore repining;Must our gold forever knowFlames for the refining?Yesterday I walked with you,Could a day be sweeter?Life was all a lyric songSet to tricksy meter.Ah, to-day is like a dirge,--Place my arms around you,Let me feel the same dear joyAs when first I found you.Let me once retrace my steps,From these roads unpleasant,Let my heart and mind and soulAll ignore the present.Yesterday the iron searedAnd to-day means sorrow.Pause, my soul, arise, arise,Look where gleams the morrow.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Michael Robartes Asks Forgiveness Because Of His Many Moods
If this importunate heart trouble your peaceWith words lighter than air,Or hopes that in mere hoping flicker and cease;Crumple the rose in your hair;And cover your lips with odorous twilight and say,O Hearts of wind-blown flame!O Winds, elder than changing of night and day,That murmuring and longing came,From marble cities loud with tabors of oldIn dove-gray faery lands;From battle banners fold upon purple fold,Queens wrought with glimmering hands;That saw young Niamh hover with love-lorn faceAbove the wandering tide;And lingered in the hidden desolate place,Where the last Phoenix diedAnd wrapped the flames above his holy head;And still murmur and long:O Piteous Hearts, changing till change be deadIn a tumultuou...
William Butler Yeats
Musings
"Childhood and youth are vanity."Often o'er life's pathway strayingCome sweet strains of long ago,To the chords of memory playingMusic sweet and music low.When upon the gray rock musing'Neath the tree by childhood's home,In the wild bird's note so soothingTenderly these strains will come.Gazing on the deep fringed mountain,Distance robing it in blue,Quaffing the familiar fountain,Each repeats the story too.Wandering by the streamlet flowingWhere we played in hours of glee,Hear its murmurs coming, going,Tell of joys that used to be.Wandering in the leafy wildwoodSometimes in our leisure hours,In the sunny days of childhoodHow much fairer seemed its flowers!Watching from the ...
Nancy Campbell Glass
Jealousy. (Prose)
It wad be a poor shop, wad this world, if it worn't for love! But even love has its drawbacks. If it worn't for love ther'd be noa jaylussy - Shakspere calls jaylussy a green-eyed monster, an' it may be for owt aw know, an' aw dooan't think 'at them 'at entertain it have mich white i' theirs. If ther's owt aw think fooilish, it is for a husband an' wife to be jaylus o' one another; for it spoils all ther spooart, an' maks a lot for other fowk; an' aw'm allus a bit suspicious abaat 'em, for aw've fun it to be th' case 'at them 'at do reight thersens are allus th' last to believe owt wrang abaat others.Aw once knew a chap 'at wor jaylus, an' his wife had a sore time wi' him. If shoo spake to her next-door neighbor, it wor ommost as mich as her life war worth, an' shoo wor forced to give ovver gooin' to th' chapel, becos if shoo ...
John Hartley
The Realm Of Azure
O realm of azure! O realm of light and colour, of youth and happiness! I have beheld thee in dream. We were together, a few, in a beautiful little boat, gaily decked out. Like a swan's breast the white sail swelled below the streamers frolicking in the wind.I knew not who were with me; but in all my soul I felt that they were young, light-hearted, happy as I!But I looked not indeed on them. I beheld all round the boundless blue of the sea, dimpled with scales of gold, and overhead the same boundless sea of blue, and in it, triumphant and mirthful, it seemed, moved the sun.And among us, ever and anon, rose laughter, ringing and gleeful as the laughter of the gods!And on a sudden, from one man's lips or another's, would flow words, songs of divine beauty and inspiration, and power ... it seeme...
Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev
Brotherhood
When in the even ways of life The old world jogs along,Our little coloured flags we flaunt:Our little separate selves we vaunt: Each pipes his native song.And jealousy and greed and pride Join their ungodly hands,And this round lovely world divide Into opposing lands.But let some crucial hour of pain Sound from the tower of time,Then consciousness of brotherhoodWakes in each heart the latent good, And men become sublime.As swarming insects of the night, Fly when the sun bursts in,Self fades, before love's radiant light, And all the world is kin.God, what a place this earth would be If that uplifting thought,Born of some vast world accident,Into our daily lives were blent,
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
An Olde Lyric.
I.Oh, saw ye my own true love, I praye, My own true love so sweete?For the flowers have lightly toss'd awaye The prynte of her faery feete.Now, how can we telle if she passed us bye? Is she darke or fayre to see?Like sloes are her eyes, or blue as the skies? Is't braided her haire or free?II.Oh, never by outward looke or signe, My true love shall ye knowe;There be many as fayre, and many as fyne, And many as brighte to showe.But if ye coude looke with angel's eyes, Which into the soule can see,She then would be seene as the matchless Queene Of Love and of Puritie.
Horace Smith
Victor Rafolski On Art
You dull Goliaths clothed in coats of blue,Strained and half bursted by the swell of flesh,Topped by Gorilla heads. You Marmoset,Trained scoundrel, taught to question and ensnare,I hate you, hate your laws and hate your courts.Hands off, give me a chair, now let me be.I'll tell you more than you can think to ask me.I love this woman, but what is love to you?What is it to your laws or courts? I love her.She loves me, if you'd know. I entered her room -She stood before me naked, shrank a little,Cried out a little, calmed her sudden cryWhen she saw amiable passion in my eyes -She loves me, if you'd know. I saw in her eyesMore in those moments than whole hours of talkFrom witness stands exculpate could make clearMy innocence. But...
Edgar Lee Masters
The Child's Music Lesson.
Why weep ye in your innocent toil at all?Sweet little hands, why halt and tremble so?Full many a wrong note falls, but let it fall!Each note to me is like a golden glow;Each broken cadence like a morning call;Nay, clear and smooth I would not have you go,Soft little hands, upon the curtained threshold setOf this long life of labour, and unrestful fret.Soft sunlight flickers on the checkered green:Warm winds are stirring round my dreaming seat:Among the yellow pumpkin blooms, that leanTheir crumpled rims beneath the heavy heat,The stripèd bees in lazy labour gleanFrom bell to bell with golden-feathered feet;Yet even here the voices of hard life go by;Outside, the city strains with its eternal cry.Here, as I sit - the sunlight on my f...
Archibald Lampman
The Phantom Vessel
Now the last, long rays of sunsetTo the tree-tops are ascending,And the ash-gray evening shadowsWeave themselves around the earth.On the crest of yonder mountain,Now are seen from out the distanceSlowly fading crimson traces;Footprints of the dying day.Blood-stained banners, torn and tattered,Hanging in the western corner,Dip their parched and burning edgesIn the cooling ocean wave.Smoothly roll the crystal waveletsThrough the dusky veils of twilight,That are trembling down from heavenO'er the bosom of the sea.Soft a little wind is blowingO'er the gently rippling waters--What they whisper, what they murmur,Who is wise enough to say?Broad her snow-white sails outspreading'Gainst the qui...
Morris Rosenfeld
Sonnet.
O Cloud so golden, stealing o'er the sky,Like pensive thought across a virgin mind,Scarce sadder than the sunshine left behind;Would that o'er heaven with thee my soul could fly,Scanning Earth's beauty with a lover's eye,Tracing the waving waters and the woods,Their sleepy shades and silent solitudes,Where all the summer through I long to lie.O Cloud so golden stealing o'er the sky,Sail'd I within thy bosom o'er heaven's main,Methinks that, gazing downward on the glory,The liquid loveliness of sea and plain,Of mountain, isle, and leafy promontory,My soul would melt and fall again in rain.
Walter R. Cassels
The Headache.
My head doth ache,O Sappho! takeThy fillet,And bind the pain,Or bring some baneTo kill it.But less that partThan my poor heartNow is sick;One kiss from theeWill counsel beAnd physic.
Robert Herrick
Out Upon It
Out upon it, I have loved Three whole days together;And am like to love three more, If it prove fair weather.Time shall moult away his wings, Ere he shall discoverIn the whole wide world again Such a constant Lover.But the spite on't is, no praise Is due at all to me:Love with me had made no stays, Had it any been but she.Had it any been but she, And that very face,There had been at least ere this A dozen dozen in her place.
John Suckling
The Over-Heart
Above, below, in sky and sod,In leaf and spar, in star and man,Well might the wise Athenian scanThe geometric signs of God,The measured order of His plan.And India's mystics sang arightOf the One Life pervading all,One Being's tidal rise and fallIn soul and form, in sound and sight,Eternal outflow and recall.God is: and man in guilt and fearThe central fact of Nature owns;Kneels, trembling, by his altar-stones,And darkly dreams the ghastly smearOf blood appeases and atones.Guilt shapes the Terror: deep withinThe human heart the secret liesOf all the hideous deities;And, painted on a ground of sin,The fabled gods of torment rise!And what is He? The ripe grain nods,The sweet dews fall, the swe...
John Greenleaf Whittier
June Night In Washington.
The scent of honeysuckle,Drugging the twilightWith its sweet opiate of lovers' dreams!The last red glow of the setting sunOn the red brick wallOf the neighboring house,And the scramble of red roses over it!Slowly, slowlyThe night smokes up from the city to the stars,The faint foreshadowed stars;The smouldering nightBreathes upward like the breathOf a woman asleepWith dim breast rising and fallingAnd a smile of delicate dreams.Softly, softlyThe wind comes into the garden,Like a lover that fears lest he waken his love,And his hands drip with the scent of the rosesAnd his locks weep with the opiate odor of honeysuckle.Sighing, sighingAs a lover that yearns for the lips of his love,In a torment of bli...
Bliss Carman
Book IV. Ode I. To Venus.
Again? new tumults in my breast?Ah, spare me, Venus! let me, let me rest!I am not now, alas! the manAs in the gentle reign of my Queen Anne.Ah, sound no more thy soft alarms,Nor circle sober fifty with thy charms.Mother too fierce of dear desires!Turn, turn to willing hearts your wanton fires,To Number Five direct your doves,There spread round Murray all your blooming lovesNoble and young, who strikes the heartWith every sprightly, every decent part;Equal, the injured to defend,To charm the mistress, or to fix the friend.He, with a hundred arts refined,Shall stretch thy conquests over half the kind;To him each rival shall submit,Make but his riches equal to his wit.Then shall thy form the marble grace,(Thy Grecian form) and Ch...
Alexander Pope