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Thunder At Night.
Restless and hot two children lay Plagued with uneasy dreams,Each wandered lonely through false day A twilight torn with screams.True to the bed-time story, Ben Pursued his wounded bear,Ann dreamed of chattering monkey men, Of snakes twined in her hair...Now high aloft above the town The thick clouds gather and break,A flash, a roar, and rain drives down: Aghast the young things wake.Trembling for what their terror was, Surprised by instant doom,With lightning in the looking glass, Thunder that rocks the room.The monkeys' paws patter again, Snakes hiss and flash their eyes:The bear roars out in hideous pain: Ann prays: her brother cries.They cannot guess, cou...
Robert von Ranke Graves
The Victory.
Hark--how the church-bells thundering harmony Stuns the glad ear! tidings of joy have come, Good tidings of great joy! two gallant ships Met on the element,--they met, they fought A desperate fight!--good tidings of great joy! Old England triumphed! yet another day Of glory for the ruler of the waves! For those who fell, 'twas in their country's cause, They have their passing paragraphs of praise And are forgotten. There was one who died In that day's glory, whose obscurer name No proud historian's page will chronicle. Peace to his honest soul! I read his name, 'Twas in the list of slaughter, and blest God The sound was not familiar to mine ear. But it was told me after that this man ...
Robert Southey
On Mr Howard's Account Of Lazarettos
Mortal! who, armed with holy fortitude,The path of good right onward hast pursued;May HE, to whose eternal throne on highThe sufferers of the earth with anguish cry,Be thy protector! On that dreary roadThat leads thee patient to the last abodeOf wretchedness, in peril and in pain,May HE thy steps direct, thy heart sustain!'Mid scenes, where pestilence in darkness flies;In caverns, where deserted misery lies;So safe beneath His shadow thou may'st go,To cheer the dismal wastes of human woe.O CHARITY! our helpless nature's pride,Thou friend to him who knows no friend beside,Is there in morning's breath, or the sweet galeThat steals o'er the tired pilgrim of the vale,Cheering with fragrance fresh his weary frame,Aught like the incense of thy ...
William Lisle Bowles
Written in Cananore
IWho was it held that Love was soothing or sweet?Mine is a painful fire, at its whitest heat.Who said that Beauty was ever a gentle joy?Thine is a sword that flashes but to destroy.Though mine eyes rose up from thy Beauty's banquet, calm and refreshed,My lips, that were granted naught, can find no rest.My soul was linked with thine, through speech and silent hours,As the sound of two soft flutes combined, or the scent of sister flowers.But the body, that wretched slave of the Sultan, Mind,Who follows his master ever, but far behind,Nothing was granted him, and every rebellious cellRises up with angry protest, "It is not well!Night is falling; thou hast departed; I am alone;And the Last Sweetness of Love thou hast n...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
Tristitiae
[Greek text which cannot be reproduced]O well for him who lives at easeWith garnered gold in wide domain,Nor heeds the splashing of the rain,The crashing down of forest trees.O well for him who ne'er hath knownThe travail of the hungry years,A father grey with grief and tears,A mother weeping all alone.But well for him whose foot hath trodThe weary road of toil and strife,Yet from the sorrows of his life.Builds ladders to be nearer God.
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
A Word for the Nation
I.A word across the waterAgainst our ears is borne,Of threatenings and of slaughter,Of rage and spite and scorn:We have not, alack, an ally to befriend us,And the season is ripe to extirpate and end us:Let the German touch hands with the Gaul,And the fortress of England must fall;And the sea shall be swept of her seamen,And the waters they ruled be their graves,And Dutchmen and Frenchmen be free men,And Englishmen slaves.II.Our time once more is over,Once more our end is near:A bull without a drover,The Briton reels to rear,And the van of the nations is held by his betters,And the seas of the world shall be loosed from his fetters,And his glory shall pass as a breath,And the life that is in him be death;
Algernon Charles Swinburne
A New Century
An age too great for thought of ours to scan,A wave upon the sleepless sea of timeThat sinks and sleeps for ever, ere the chimePass that salutes with blessing, not with ban,The dark year dead, the bright year born for man,Dies: all its days that watched man cower and climb,Frail as the foam, and as the sun sublime,Sleep sound as they that slept ere these began.Our mother earth, whose ages none may tell,Puts on no change: time bids not her wax paleOr kindle, quenched or quickened, when the knellSounds, and we cry across the veering galeFarewell, and midnight answers us, Farewell;Hail, and the heaven of morning answers, Hail.
Lines Written In A Storm At Sea.
That sky of clouds is not the skyTo light a lover to the pillow Of her he loves--The swell of yonder foaming billowResembles not the happy sigh That rapture moves.Yet do I feel more tranquil farAmid the gloomy wilds of ocean, In this dark hour,Than when, in passion's young emotion,I've stolen, beneath the evening star, To Julia's bower.Oh! there's a holy calm profoundIn awe like this, that ne'er was given To pleasure's thrill;'Tis as a solemn voice from heaven,And the soul, listening to the sound, Lies mute and still.'Tis true, it talks of danger nigh,Of slumbering with the dead tomorrow In the cold deep,Where pleasure's throb or tears of sorrow
Thomas Moore
Choice.
Of all the souls that stand createI have elected one.When sense from spirit files away,And subterfuge is done;When that which is and that which wasApart, intrinsic, stand,And this brief tragedy of fleshIs shifted like a sand;When figures show their royal frontAnd mists are carved away, --Behold the atom I preferredTo all the lists of clay!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
In Memoriam. - A. L. Gordon.
At rest! Hard by the margin of that seaWhose sounds are mingled with his noble verse,Now lies the shell that never more will houseThe fine, strong spirit of my gifted friend.Yea, he who flashed upon us suddenly,A shining soul with syllables of fire,Who sang the first great songs these lands can claimTo be their own; the one who did not seemTo know what royal place awaited himWithin the Temple of the Beautiful,Has passed away; and we who knew him, sitAghast in darkness, dumb with that great grief,Whose stature yet we cannot comprehend;While over yonder churchyard, hearsed with pines,The night-wind sings its immemorial hymn,And sobs above a newly-covered grave.The bard, the scholar, and the man who livedThat frank, that open-hearted life wh...
Henry Kendall
The Hosting Of The Sidhe
The host is riding from KnocknareaAnd over the grave of Clooth-na-bare;Caolte tossing his burning hairAnd Niamh calling Away, come away:Empty your heart of its mortal dream.The winds awaken, the leaves whirl round,Our cheeks are pale, our hair is unbound,Our breasts are heaving, our eyes are a-gleam,Our arms are waving, our lips are apart;And if any gaze on our rushing band,We come between him and the deed of his hand,We come between him and the hope of his heart.The host is rushing twixt night and day,And where is there hope or deed as fair?Caolte tossing his burning hair,And Niamh calling Away, come away.
William Butler Yeats