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A March
Dreary East winds howling o'er us; Clay-lands knee-deep spread before us; Mire and ice and snow and sleet; Aching backs and frozen feet; Knees which reel as marches quicken, Ranks which thin as corpses thicken; While with carrion birds we eat, Calling puddle-water sweet,As we pledge the health of our general, who fares as rough as we:What can daunt us, what can turn us, led to death by such as he?Eversley, 1848.
Charles Kingsley
The Painted Cup.
The fresh savannas of the SangamonHere rise in gentle swells, and the long grassIs mixed with rustling hazels. Scarlet tuftsAre glowing in the green, like flakes of fire;The wanderers of the prairie know them well,And call that brilliant flower the Painted Cup.Now, if thou art a poet, tell me notThat these bright chalices were tinted thusTo hold the dew for fairies, when they meetOn moonlight evenings in the hazel bowers,And dance till they are thirsty. Call not up,Amid this fresh and virgin solitude,The faded fancies of an elder world;But leave these scarlet cups to spotted mothsOf June, and glistening flies, and humming-birds,To drink from, when on all these boundless lawnsThe morning sun looks hot. Or let the windO'erturn in spor...
William Cullen Bryant
Departure Of The Good Daemon
What can I do in poetry,Now the good spirit's gone from me?Why, nothing now but lonely sitAnd over-read what I have writ.
Robert Herrick
Twilight.
The sun is sinking where the western hills The vision bounds with rugged summits old,And with his latest beam he brightly gilds And crowns with amethyst and gold.The distant music of a tinkling bell Is floating o'er the meadow's gentle sweep--No discords mar the magic of the spell, And stealthily the twilight shadows creep.And gently falls upon the listening ear-- Like tones from voices of the long-ago--The cadence of the murmuring waters near-- With rhythmic ripplings soft and low.Now grow apace the shadows' slanting shapes And fade the rugged hills to misty gray,As dying day its calm departure takes And yields to coming night her sable sway.The vaulted dome above now glows afar With man...
George W. Doneghy
Night-Thoughts. (Translations From The Hebrew Poets Of Medaeval Spain.)
Will night already spread her wings and weaveHer dusky robe about the day's bright form,Boldly the sun's fair countenance displacing,And swathe it with her shadow in broad day?So a green wreath of mist enrings the moon,Till envious clouds do quite encompass her.No wind! and yet the slender stem is stirred,With faint, slight motion as from inward tremor.Mine eyes are full of grief - who sees me, asks,"Oh wherefore dost thou cling unto the ground?"My friends discourse with sweet and soothing words;They all are vain, they glide above my head.I fain would check my tears; would fain enlargeUnto infinity, my heart - in vain!Grief presses hard my breast, therefore my tearsHave scarcely dried, ere they again spring forth.For these are streams no ...
Emma Lazarus
To-Morrow
'T is late at night, and in the realm of sleep My little lambs are folded like the flocks; From room to room I hear the wakeful clocks Challenge the passing hour, like guards that keepTheir solitary watch on tower and steep; Far off I hear the crowing of the cocks, And through the opening door that time unlocks Feel the fresh breathing of To-morrow creep.To-morrow! the mysterious, unknown guest, Who cries to me: "Remember Barmecide, And tremble to be happy with the rest."And I make answer: "I am satisfied; I dare not ask; I know not what is best; God hath already said what shall betide."
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
In Mortem Meditare.
DYING THOUGHTS.As Life's receding sunset fades And night descends,I calmly watch the gathering shades,As darkness stealthily invades And daylight ends.Earth's span is drawing to its close, With every breath;My pain-racked brain no respite knows,Yet shrinks it, from the grim repose It feels in death.The curtain falls on Life's last scene, The end is neared;At last I face death's somber screen,The fleeting joys which intervene Have disappeared.And as a panoramic scroll The past unreels;The mocking past, beyond control,Though buried, as a parchment roll, Its tale reveals.I stand before the dread, unknown, Yet solemn fact;I see the seeds of foll...
Alfred Castner King
Old Fires
The fire burns lowWhere it has burned ages ago,Sinks and sighsAs it has done to a hundred eyesStaring, staringAt the last cold smokeless glow.Here men satLonely and watched the golden grateTurn at length black;Heard the cooling iron crack:Shadows, shadows,Watching the shadows come and go.And still the hissI hear, the soft fire's sob and kiss,And still it burnsAnd the bright gold to crimson turns,Sinking, sinking,And the fire shadows larger grow.O dark-cheeked fire,Wasting like spent heart's desire,You that were gold,And now crimson will soon be cold--Cold, cold,Like moon-shadows on new snow.Shadows all,They that watched your shadows fall.But now they comeR...
John Frederick Freeman
Benediction
When, by an edict of the powers supreme,The Poet in this bored world comes to be,His daunted mother, eager to blaspheme,Rages to God, who looks down piteously:'Rather than have this mockery to nurseWhy not a nest of snakes for me to bear!And may that night of fleeting lust be cursed,When I conceived my penance, unaware!Since from all women you chose me to shame,To be disgusting to my grieving spouse,And since I can't just drop into the flamesLike an old love-note, this misshapen mouse,1'1l turn your hate that overburdens meToward the damned agent of your spiteful doom,And I will twist this miserable treeSo its infected buds will never bloom!'She swallows thus her hatred's foaming spitAnd, never grasping the divine ...
Charles Baudelaire
Calm
Have patience, O my sorrow, and be still.You asked for night: it falls: it is here.A shadowy atmosphere enshrouds the hill,to some men bringing peace, to others care.While the vile human multitudegoes to earn remorse, in servile pleasures play,under the lash of joy, the torturer, whois pitiless, Sadness, come, far away:Give me your hand. See, where the lost yearslean from the balcony in their outdated gear,where regret, smiling, surges from the watery deeps.Underneath some archway, the dying lightsleeps, and, like a long shroud trailing from the East,listen, dear one, listen to the soft onset of night.
Her Love-Birds
When I looked up at my love-birdsThat Sunday afternoon,There was in their tiny tuneA dying fetch like broken words,When I looked up at my love-birdsThat Sunday afternoon.When he, too, scanned the love-birdsOn entering there that day,'Twas as if he had nought to sayOf his long journey citywards,When he, too, scanned the love-birds,On entering there that day.And billed and billed the love-birds,As 'twere in fond despairAt the stress of silence whereHad once been tones in tenor thirds,And billed and billed the love-birdsAs 'twere in fond despair.O, his speech that chilled the love-birds,And smote like death on me,As I learnt what was to be,And knew my life was broke in sherds!O, his speech that...
Thomas Hardy
My Grave.
Shall they bury me in the deep,Where wind-forgetting waters sleep?Shall they dig a grave for me,Under the green-wood tree?Or on the wild heath,Where the wilder breathOf the storm doth blow?Oh, no! oh, no!Shall they bury me in the Palace Tombs,Or under the shade of Cathedral domes?Sweet 'twere to lie on Italy's shore;Yet not there--nor in Greece, though I love it more,In the wolf or the vulture my grave shall I find?Shall my ashes career on the world-seeing wind?Shall they fling my corpse in the battle mound,Where coffinless thousands lie under the ground?Just as they fall they are buried so--Oh, no! oh, no!No! on an Irish green hill-side,On an opening lawn--but not too wide;For I love the drip of the wetted t...
Thomas Osborne Davis
The Rover's Adieu
A weary lot is thine, fair maid,A weary lot is thine!To pull the thorn thy brow to braid,And press the rue for wine.A lightsome eye, a soldier's mien,A feather of the blue,A doublet of the Lincoln greenNo more of me ye knew,My Love!No more of me ye knew.'This morn is merry June, I trow,The rose is budding fain;But she shall bloom in winter snowEre we two meet again.'He turn'd his charger as he spakeUpon the river shore,He gave the bridle-reins a shake,Said 'Adieu for evermore,My Love!And adieu for evermore.'
Walter Scott
To-Days
Brief while they last,Long when they are gone;They catch from the pastA light to still live on.Brief! yet I weenA day may be an age,The poet's pen may screenHeart-stories on one page.Brief! but in them,From eve back to morn,Some find the gem,Many find the thorn.Brief! minutes passSoft as flakes of snow,Shadows o'er the grassCould not swifter go.Brief! but alongAll the after-yearsTo-day will be a songOf smiles or of tears.
Abram Joseph Ryan
Sonnet XXI.
Proud of our lyric Galaxy, I hear Of faded Genius with supreme disdain; As when we see the Miser bend insane O'er his full coffers, and in accents drearDeplore imagin'd want; - and thus appear To me those moody Censors, who complain, As [1]Shaftsbury plain'd in a now boasted reign, That "POESY had left our darken'd sphere."Whence may the present stupid dream be traced That now she shines not as in days foregone? Perchance neglected, often shine in wasteHer LIGHTS, from number into confluence run, More than when thinly in th' horizon placed Each Orb shone separate, and appear'd a Sun.1: Of the Poets, who were cotemporary with Lord Shaftsbury, Dryden, Cowley, Pope, Prior, Congreve, Gay, Addison, &c. in th...
Anna Seward
Crazy Jane And Jack The Journeyman
I know, although when looks meetI tremble to the bone,The more I leave the door unlatchedThe sooner love is gone,For love is but a skein unwoundBetween the dark and dawn.A lonely ghost the ghost isThat to God shall come;I - love's skein upon the ground,My body in the tomb -Shall leap into the light lostIn my mother's womb.But were I left to lie aloneIn an empty bed,The skein so bound us ghost to ghostWhen he turned his headpassing on the road that night,Mine must walk when dead.
William Butler Yeats
Home Songs
The little loves and sorrows are my song: The leafy lanes and birthsteads of my sires, Where memory broods by winter's evening fires O'er oft-told joys, and ghosts of ancient wrong; The little cares and carols that belong To home-hearts, and old rustic lutes and lyres, And spreading acres, where calm-eyed desires Wake with the dawn, unfevered, fair, and strong. If words of mine might lull the bairn to sleep, And tell the meaning in a mother's eyes; Might counsel love, and teach their eyes to weep Who, o'er their dead, question unanswering skies, More worth than legions in the dust of strife, Time, looking back at last, should count my ...
John Charles McNeill
One With The Ruined Sunset
One with the ruined sunset,The strange forsaken sands,What is it waits, and wanders,And signs with desparate hands?What is it calls in the twilight -Calls as its chance were vain?The cry of a gull sent seawardOr the voice of an ancient pain?The red ghost of the sunset,It walks them as its own,These dreary and desolate reaches . . .But O, that it walked alone!
William Ernest Henley