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To My Mother
Gentlest of critics, does your memory hold (I know it does) a record of the days When I, a schoolboy, earned your generous praiseFor halting verse and stories crudely told?Over these childish scrawls the years have rolled, They might not know the world's unfriendly gaze; But still your smile shines down familiar ways,Touches my words and turns their dross to gold.More dear to-day than in that vanished time Comes your nigh praise to make me proud and strong.In my poor notes you hear Love's splendid chime, So unto you does this, my work belong.Take, then, a little gift of fragile rhyme: Your heart will change it to authentic song.
Alfred Joyce Kilmer
All Alone.
Alas! they have left me all aloneBy the receding tide;But oh! the countless multitudesUpon the other side!The loved, the lost, the cherished ones,Who dwelt with us awhile,To scatter sunbeams on our path,And make the desert smile.The other side! how fair it is!Its loveliness untold,Its "every several gate a pearl,"Its streets are paved with gold.Its sun shall never more go down,For there is no night there!And oh! what heavenly melodiesAre floating through the air!How sweet to join the ransomed onesOn the other side the flood,And sing a song of praise to HimWho washed us in His blood.Ten thousand times ten thousandAre hymning the new song!O Father, join Thy weary childTo that...
Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
Two.
One leaned on velvet cushions like a queen - To see him pass, the hero of an hour,Whom men called great. She bowed with languid mien, And smiled, and blushed, and knew her beauty's power.One trailed her tinseled garments through the street, And thrust aside the crowd, and found a placeSo near, the blooded courser's praning feet Cast sparks of fire upon her painted face.One took the hot-house blossoms from her breast, And tossed them down, as he went riding by.And blushed rose-red to see them fondly pressed To bearded lips, while eye spoke unto eye.One, bold and hardened with her sinful life, Yet shrank and shivered painfully, becauseHis cruel glance cut keener than a knife, The glance of him who made her what...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Conversation
You are a pink and lovely autumn sky!But sadness in me rises like the sea,And leaves in ebbing only bitter clayOn my sad lip, the smart of memory.Your hand slides up my fainting breast at will;But, love, it only finds a ravaged pitPillaged by woman's savage tooth and nail.My heart is lost; the beasts have eaten it.It is a palace sullied by the rout;They drink, they pull each others hair, they kill!A perfume swims around your naked throat! ...O Beauty, scourge of souls, you want it still!You with hot eyes that flash in fiery feasts,Burn up these meagre scraps spared by the beasts!
Charles Baudelaire
Sonnet
I touched the heart that loved me as a player Touches a lyre; content with my poor skill No touch save mine knew my beloved (and stillI thought at times: Is there no sweet lost airOld loves could wake in him, I cannot share?). Oh, he alone, alone could so fulfil My thoughts in sound to the measure of my will.He is gone, and silence takes me unaware.The songs I knew not he resumes, set freeFrom my constraining love, alas for me! His part in our tune goes with him; my partIs locked in me for ever; I stand as mute As one with full strong music in his heartWhose fingers stray upon a shattered lute.
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
A Shady Friend For Torrid Days
A shady friend for torrid daysIs easier to findThan one of higher temperatureFor frigid hour of mind.The vane a little to the eastScares muslin souls away;If broadcloth breasts are firmerThan those of organdy,Who is to blame? The weaver?Ah! the bewildering thread!The tapestries of paradiseSo notelessly are made!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
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
Last Days.
Aye! heartbreak of the tattered hills,And mourning of the raining sky!Heartbreak and mourning, since God wills, Are mine, and God knows why!The brutal wind that herds the stormIn hail-big clouds that freeze along,As this gray heart are doubly warm With thrice the joy of song.I held one dearer than each dayOf life God sets in limpid goldWhat thief hath stole that gem away To leave me poor and old!The heartbreak of the hills be mine,Of trampled twig and mired leaf,Of rain that sobs through thorn and pine An unavailing grief!The sorrow of the childless skies'Good-nights, long said, yet never said,As when I kissed my child's blue eyes And lips ice-dumb and dead.
Madison Julius Cawein
The Fairest Land.
'Twas a bleak dull moor that stretched beforeThe low stone porch of the cottage door,And standing there was youth and maid,He for long journeying seemed arrayed,And the sunset flamed in the burnished west,And a proud throb beat in the young man's breast,As he whispered, "Sweet, will you come to meIn that fairer land beyond the sea?""The wonderful western land; in dreamsI have seen its prairies green, and gleamsOf its shining waterfalls, valleys fair,And a voice in my dreams has called me thereWhere man is a man, and not a clod,And must bend the knee to none but God.A home will I make for thee and meIn that fairer land beyond the sea.""But the cruel seas where the fated shipsGo down to their doom" - But he kissed the lips -
Marietta Holley
May.
Oh the merry May has pleasant hours, And dreamily they glide,As if they floated like the leaves Upon a silver tide.The trees are full of crimson buds, And the woods are full of birds,And the waters flow to music Like a tune with pleasant words.The verdure of the meadow-land Is creeping to the hills,The sweet, blue-bosom'd violets Are blowing by the rills;The lilac has a load of balm For every wind that stirs,And the larch stands green and beautiful Amid the sombre firs.There's perfume upon every wind - Music in every tree -Dews for the moisture-loving flowers - Sweets for the sucking bee;The sick come forth for the healing South, The young are gathering flowers;And...
Nathaniel Parker Willis
To My Good Friend W. T. H. Howe
Friend, for the sake of loves we hold in common,The love of books, of paintings, rhyme and fiction;And for the sake of that divine affliction,The love of art, passing the love of woman;By which all life's made nobler, superhuman,Lifting the soul above, and, without frictionOf Time, that puts failure in his prediction,Works to some end through hearts that dreams illumine:To you I pour this Cup of Dreams a striver,And dreamer too in this sad world, unwittingOf that you do, the help that still assureth,Lifts up the heart, struck down by that dark driver,Despair, who, on Life's pack-horse effort sitting,Rides down Ambition through whom Art endureth.
Sonnet CLXIV.
L' aura celeste che 'n quel verde Lauro.HER HAIR AND EYES. The heavenly airs from yon green laurel roll'd,Where Love to Phoebus whilom dealt his stroke,Where on my neck was placed so sweet a yoke,That freedom thence I hope not to behold,O'er me prevail, as o'er that Arab oldMedusa, when she changed him to an oak;Nor ever can the fairy knot be brokeWhose light outshines the sun, not merely gold;I mean of those bright locks the curlèd snareWhich folds and fastens with so sweet a graceMy soul, whose humbleness defends alone.Her mere shade freezes with a cold despairMy heart, and tinges with pale fear my face;And oh! her eyes have power to make me stone.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Her Hair
The beauty of her hair bewilders me -Pouring adown the brow, its cloven tideSwirling about the ears on either sideAnd storming round the neck tumultuously:Or like the lights of old antiquityThrough mullioned windows, in cathedrals wideSpilled moltenly o'er figures deifiedIn chastest marble, nude of drapery.And so I love it. Either unconfined;Or plaited in close braidings manifold;Or smoothly drawn; or indolently twinedIn careless knots whose coilings come unrolledAt any lightest kiss; or by the windWhipped out in flossy ravellings of gold.
James Whitcomb Riley
Accepted
You are no longer young,Nor are you very old.There are homes where those belong.You know you do not fitWhen you observe the coldStares of those who sitIn bath-chairs or the park(A stick, then, at their side)Or find yourself in the darkAnd see the lovers who,In love and in their stride,Don't even notice you.This is a time to beginYour life. It could be new.The sheer not fitting inWith the old who envy youAnd the young who want to win,Not knowing false from true,Means you have libertyDenied to their extremes.At last now you can beWhat the old cannot recallAnd the young long for in dreams,Yet still include them all.
Elizabeth Jennings
Valgovind's Song in the Spring
The Temple bells are ringing,The young green corn is springing, And the marriage month is drawing very near.I lie hidden in the grass,And I count the moments pass, For the month of marriages is drawing near.Soon, ah, soon, the women spreadThe appointed bridal bed With hibiscus buds and crimson marriage flowers,Where, when all the songs are done,And the dear dark night begun, I shall hold her in my happy arms for hours.She is young and very sweet,From the silver on her feet To the silver and the flowers in her hair,And her beauty makes me swoon,As the Moghra trees at noon Intoxicate the hot and quivering air.Ah, I would the hours were fleetAs her silver circled feet, I am...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
none
There lies a vale in Ida, lovelierThan all the valleys of Ionian hills.The swimming vapour slopes athwart the glen,Puts forth an arm, and creeps from pine to pine,And loiters, slowly drawn. On either handThe lawns and meadow-ledges midway downHang rich in flowers, and far below them roarsThe long brook falling thro the clovn ravineIn cataract after cataract to the sea.Behind the valley topmost GargarusStands up and takes the morning: but in frontThe gorges, opening wide apart, revealTroas and Ilions columnd citadel,The crown of Troas.Hither came at noonMournful none, wandering forlornOf Paris, once her playmate on the hills.Her cheek had lost the rose, and round her neckFloated her hair or seemd to float in rest.
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Gifts Of The Moon
The Moon, who is caprice itself, looked in at the window as you slept in your cradle, and said to herself:"I am well pleased with this child."And she softly descended her stairway of clouds and passed through the window-pane without noise.She bent over you with the supple tenderness of a mother and laid her colours upon your face. Therefrom your eyes have remained green and your cheeks extraordinarily pale. From contemplation of your visitor your eyes are so strangely wide; and she so tenderly wounded you upon the breast that you haveever kept a certain readiness to tears.In the amplitude of her joy, the Moon filled all your chamber as with a phosphorescent air, a luminous poison ; and all this living radiance thought and said: "You shall be for ever under the influence of my kiss. You shall love all that lov...
Premonition.
He said, "Good-night, my heart is light,To-morrow morn at dayWe two together in the dewShall forth and fare away."We shall go down, the halls of dawnTo find the doors of joy;We shall not part again, dear heart."And he laughed out like a boy.He turned and strode down the blue roadAgainst the western skyWhere the last line of sunset glowedAs sullen embers die.The night reached out her kraken armsTo clutch him as he passed,And for one sudden momentMy soul shrank back aghast.
Bliss Carman