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To Dora Dorian
Child of two strong nations, heirBorn of high-souled hope that smiled,Seeing for each brought forth a fairChild,By thy gracious brows, and wildGolden-clouded heaven of hair,By thine eyes elate and mild,Hope would fain take heart to swearMen should yet be reconciled,Seeing the sign she bids thee bear,Child.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
To The Moon.
O lovely moon, how well do I recall The time, - 'tis just a year - when up this hill I came, in my distress, to gaze at thee: And thou suspended wast o'er yonder grove, As now thou art, which thou with light dost fill. But stained with mist, and tremulous, appeared Thy countenance to me, because my eyes Were filled with tears, that could not be suppressed; For, oh, my life was wretched, wearisome, And is so still, unchanged, belovèd moon! And yet this recollection pleases me, This computation of my sorrow's age. How pleasant is it, in the days of youth, When hope a long career before it hath, And memories are few, upon the past To dwell, though sad, and though the sadness last!
Giacomo Leopardi
Beyond the Moon
[Written to the Most Beautiful Woman in the World] My Sweetheart is the TRUTH BEYOND THE MOON, And never have I been in love with Woman, Always aspiring to be set in tune With one who is invisible, inhuman. O laughing girl, cold TRUTH has stepped between, Spoiling the fevers of your virgin face: Making your shining eyes but lead and clay, Mocking your brilliant brain and lady's grace. TRUTH haunted me the day I wooed and lost, The day I wooed and won, or wooed in play: Tho' you were Juliet or Rosalind, Thus shall it be, forever and a day. I doubt my vows, tho' sworn on my own blood, Tho' I draw toward you weeping, soul to soul, I have a lonely goal beyond the moon; Ay...
Vachel Lindsay
Long Years Have Past.
Long years have past, old friend, since we First met in life's young day;And friends long loved by thee and me, Since then have dropt away;--But enough remain to cheer us on, And sweeten, when thus we're met,The glass we fill to the many gone, And the few who're left us yet.Our locks, old friend, now thinly grow, And some hang white and chill;While some, like flowers mid Autumn's snow, Retain youth's color still.And so, in our hearts, tho' one by one, Youth's sunny hopes have set,Thank heaven, not all their light is gone,-- We've some to cheer us yet.Then here's to thee, old friend, and long May thou and I thus meet,To brighten still with wine and song This short life, ere it fleet.And...
Thomas Moore
Found.
ONCE through the forestAlone I went;To seek for nothingMy thoughts were bent.I saw i' the shadowA flower stand thereAs stars it glisten'd,As eyes 'twas fair.I sought to pluck it,It gently said:"Shall I be gather'dOnly to fade?"With all its rootsI dug it with care,And took it homeTo my garden fair.In silent cornerSoon it was set;There grows it ever,There blooms it yet.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Sonnet CXIV.
O d' ardente virtute ornata e calda.HE CELEBRATES LAURA'S BEAUTY AND VIRTUE. O mind, by ardent virtue graced and warm'd.To whom my pen so oft pours forth my heart;Mansion of noble probity, who artA tower of strength 'gainst all assault full arm'd.O rose effulgent, in whose foldings, charm'd,We view with fresh carnation snow take part!O pleasure whence my wing'd ideas startTo that bless'd vision which no eye, unharm'd,Created, may approach--thy name, if rhymeCould bear to Bactra and to Thule's coast,Nile, Tanaïs, and Calpe should resound,And dread Olympus.--But a narrower boundConfines my flight: and thee, our native climeBetween the Alps and Apennine must boast.CAPEL LOFFT. With glowing vir...
Francesco Petrarca
When Love Went.
What whispered Love the day he fled?Ah! this was what Love whispered;"You sought to hold me with a chain;I fly to prove such holding vain."You bound me burdens, and I boreThe burdens hard, the burdens sore;I bore them all unmurmuring,For Love can bear a harder thing."You taxed me often, teased me, wept;I only smiled, and still I keptThrough storm and sun and night and day,My joyous, viewless, faithful way."But, dear, once dearest, you and IThis day have parted company.Love must be free to give, defer,Himself alone his almoner."As free I freely poured my all,Enslaved I spurn, renounce my thrall,Its wages and its bitter bread."Thus whispered Love the day he fled!
Susan Coolidge
Sonnet LXXIX.
Quella fenestra, ove l' un sol si vede.RECOLLECTIONS OF LOVE. That window where my sun is often seenRefulgent, and the world's at morning's hours;And that, where Boreas blows, when winter lowers,And the short days reveal a clouded scene;That bench of stone where, with a pensive mien,My Laura sits, forgetting beauty's powers;Haunts where her shadow strikes the walls or flowers,And her feet press the paths or herbage green:The place where Love assail'd me with success;And spring, the fatal time that, first observed,Revives the keen remembrance every year;With looks and words, that o'er me have preservedA power no length of time can render less,Call to my eyes the sadly-soothing tear.PENN. Tha...
Senorita
An agate-black, your roguish eyesClaim no proud lineage of the skies,No starry blue; but of good earthThe reckless witchery and mirth.Looped in your raven hair's repose,A hot aroma, one red roseDies; envious of that loveliness,By being near which its is less.Twin sea shells, hung with pearls, your ears,Whose slender rosiness appearsPart of the pearls; whose pallid fireBinds the attention these inspire.One slim hand crumples up the laceAbout your bosom's swelling grace;A ruby at your samite throatLends the required color note.The moon bears through the violet nightA pearly urn of chaliced light;And from your dark-railed balconyYou stoop and wave your fan at me.O'er orange orchards and the ros...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Silver Wedding 1
The silver Wedding! on some pensive earFrom towers remote as sound the silvery bells,To-day from one far unforgotten yearA silvery faint memorial music swells.And silver-pale the dim memorial lightOf musing age on youthful joys is shed,The golden joys of fancys dawning bright,The golden bliss of, Wood, and won, and wed.Ah, golden then, but silver now! In sooth,The years that pale the cheek, that dim the eyes,And silver oer the golden hairs of youth,Less prized can make its only priceless prize.Not so; the voice this silver name that gaveTo this, the ripe and unenfeebled date,For steps together tottering to the grave,Hath bid the perfect golden title wait.Rather, if silver this, if that be gold,From good to bette...
Arthur Hugh Clough
Spirit Of Dreams
IWhere hast thou folded thy pinions,Spirit of Dreams?Hidden elusive garmentsWoven of gleams?In what divine dominions,Brighter than day,Far from the world's dark torments,Dost thou stay, dost thou stay?--When shall my yearnings reach theeAgain?Not in vain let my soul beseech thee!Not in vain! not in vain!III have longed for thee as a loverFor her, the one;As a brother for a sisterLong dead and gone.I have called thee over and overNames sweet to hear;With words than music trister,And thrice as dear.How long must my sad heart woo thee,Yet fail?How long must my soul pursue thee,Nor avail, nor avail?IIIAll night hath thy lovi...
Demeter And Persephone
Faint as a climate-changing bird that fliesAll night across the darkness, and at dawnFalls on the threshold of her native land,And can no more, thou camest, O my child,Led upward by the God of ghosts and dreams,Who laid thee at Eleusis, dazed and dumb,With passing thro' at once from state to state,Until I brought thee hither, that the day,When here thy hands let fall the gather'd flower,Might break thro' clouded memories once againOn thy lost self. A sudden nightingaleSaw thee, and flash'd into a frolic of songAnd welcome; and a gleam as of the moon,When first she peers along the tremulous deep,Fled wavering o'er thy face, and chased awayThat shadow of a likeness to the kingOf shadows, thy dark mate. Persephone!Queen of the dead no more -...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Reward Of Song
Why do we make our music? Oh, blind dark strings reply:Because we dwell in a strange land And remember a lost sky.We ask no leaf of the laurel, We know what fame is worth;But our songs break out of our winter As the flowers break out on the earth.And we dream of the unknown comrade, In the days when we lie dead,Who shall open our book in the sunlight, And read, as ourselves have read,On a lonely hill, by a firwood, With whispering seas below,And murmur a song we made him Ages and ages ago.If making his may-time sweeter With dews of our own dead may,One pulse of our own dead heart-strings Awake in his heart that day,We would pray for no richer guerdon, No praise fr...
Alfred Noyes
Ode To Memory
I.Thou who stealest fire,From the fountains of the past,To glorify the present, O, haste,Visit my low desire!Strengthen me, enlighten me!I faint in this obscurity,Thou dewy dawn of memory.II.Come not as thou camest of late,Flinging the gloom of yesternightOn the white day, but robed in softend lightOf orient state.Whilome thou camest with the morning mist,Even as a maid, whose stately browThe dew-impearled winds of dawn have kissd,When she, as thou,Stays on her floating locks the lovely freightOf overflowing blooms, and earliest shootsOf orient green, giving safe pledge of fruits,Which in wintertide shall starThe black earth with brilliance rare.III.Whilome th...
Need.
Who begs to die for fear of human need,Wisheth his body, not his soul, good speed.
Robert Herrick
Shall Love, as the Bridal Wreath, Whither and Die?
Shall love as the bridal wreath, wither and die? Or remain ever constant and sure,As the years of the future pass rapidly by,And the waves of adversity's tempest roll high, Ever changeless and fervent endure?Mistake not the fancy, that lasts but a day, For the love which eternally thrives;That sentiment false, is as prone to decayAs the wreath is to fade and to wither away; And like it, it never revives.
Alfred Castner King
Not Love, Not War, Nor The Tumultuous Swell
Not Love, not War, nor the tumultuous swell,Of civil conflict, nor the wrecks of change,Nor Duty struggling with afflictions strangeNot these 'alone' inspire the tuneful shell;But where untroubled peace and concord dwell,There also is the Muse not loth to range,Watching the twilight smoke of cot or grange,Skyward ascending from a woody dell.Meek aspirations please her, lone endeavour,And sage content, and placid melancholy;She loves to gaze upon a crystal riverDiaphanous because it travels slowly;Soft is the music that would charm for ever;The flower of sweetest smell is shy and lowly.
William Wordsworth
The Song
I heard an old, familiar air Strummed idly by a careless hand,Yet in the melody were rare, Sweet echoings from childhood land.The well-remembered mother touch, The wise denials and consents,The trivial sorrows that were much, Small pleasures that were large events;The fancies, dreams, strange wonderings, The daily problems unexplained,Momentous as the cares of kings That on unhappy thrones have reigned,Came back with each unstudied tone; And came that song remembered best,Which, with a sweetness all its own, Once lulled the play-worn child to rest.And there, secure as Tarik's height, He slumbered, shielded from alarms,Safe from the mystery of night, Close folded in the moth...
Arthur Macy