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At The Close Of A Course Of Lectures
As the voice of the watch to the mariner's dream,As the footstep of Spring on the ice-girdled stream,There comes a soft footstep, a whisper, to me, -The vision is over, - the rivulet free.We have trod from the threshold of turbulent March,Till the green scarf of April is hung on the larch,And down the bright hillside that welcomes the day,We hear the warm panting of beautiful May.We will part before Summer has opened her wing,And the bosom of June swells the bodice of Spring,While the hope of the season lies fresh in the bud,And the young life of Nature runs warm in our blood.It is but a word, and the chain is unbound,The bracelet of steel drops unclasped to the ground;No hand shall replace it, - it rests where it fell, - -It is but...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
An Angel In The House
How sweet it were, if without feeble fright,Or dying of the dreadful beauteous sight,An angel came to us, and we could bearTo see him issue from the silent airAt evening in our room, and bend on oursHis divine eyes, and bring us from his bowersNews of dear friends, and children who have neverBeen dead indeed,as we shall know forever.Alas! we think not what we daily seeAbout our hearths,angels that are to be,Or may be if they will, and we prepareTheir souls and ours to meet in happy air;A child, a friend, a wife whose soft heart singsIn unison with ours, breeding its future wings.
James Henry Leigh Hunt
The Unperfected.
A broken mirror in a trembling hand;Sad, trembling lips that utter broken thought:One of a wide and wandering, aimless band;One in the world who for the world hath naught.A heart that loves beyond the shallow word;A heart well loved beyond its flowerless worth:One who asks God to answer the prayer heard;One from the dust returning to the earth.Can miracle ne'er make the mirror wholeFor one who, seeing, could be nobly bold?Who could well die, to magnify the soul, -Whose strength of love will shake the graveyard's mould?
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop
The Days go by
The days go by, the days go by,Sadly and wearily to die:Each with its burden of small cares,Each with its sad gift of gray hairsFor those who sit, like me, and sigh,The days go by! The days go by!Ah, nevermore on shining plumes,Shedding a rain of rare perfumesThat men call memories, they are borneAs in lifes many-visioned morn,When Love sang in the myrtle-blooms,Ah, nevermore on shining plumes!Where is my life? Where is my life?The morning of my youth was rifeWith promise of a golden day.Where have my hopes gone? Where are they,The passion and the splendid strife?Where is my life? Where is my life?My thoughts take hue from this wild day,And, like the skies, are ashen gray;The sharp rain, falling constantly...
Victor James Daley
Eve's Flowers
Eve must have wept to leave her flowers,And plucked some roots to tellOf Eden's happy, sinless bowers,Where she in bliss did dwell.Roses and lilies, pansies gay,Violets with azure eyes,Her favorites must have been, for theySeem born in paradise.And when they drooped, did she not sighAnd kiss their petals fair,Thinking, "Alas, ye too must dieAnd in our sorrow share"?And then perhaps unto her soulThis answer sweet was given,"Like you we fade and perish here;For you we'll bloom in heaven."Roses and lilies are the typeOf him who from above,The lamb of God, gave up his life,A sacrifice of love.He was her hope in those sad hoursOf blight and sure decay;The sin that drove her from her f...
Nancy Campbell Glass
Victory
Though dead the flower,That, from her tower,Love flung you in some perfect hour:Though quenched the light,That, on the height,Faith built, a beacon in the fight:Though gone the star,That, seen afar,Hope lit to guide you through the war:Yet draw your sword,And shout your word,And plunge into the battling horde!Give Fate the lie!And, live or die,Yours, yours shall be the victory!
Madison Julius Cawein
Memorials Of A Tour On The Continent, 1820 - XXIV. - The Italian Itinerant And The Swiss Goatherd. - Part II
IWith nodding plumes, and lightly drestLike foresters in leaf-green vest,The Helvetian Mountaineers, on groundFor Tell's dread archery renowned,Before the target stood, to claimThe guerdon of the steadiest aim.Loud was the rifle-gun's reportA startling thunder quick and short!But, flying through the heights around,Echo prolonged a tell-tale soundOf hearts and hands alike "preparedThe treasures they enjoy to guard!"And, if there be a favoured hourWhen Heroes are allowed to quitThe tomb, and on the clouds to sitWith tutelary power,On their Descendants shedding graceThis was the hour, and that the place.IIBut Truth inspired the Bards of oldWhen of an iron age they told,Which to unequal laws gav...
William Wordsworth
Lines From A Letter To A Young Clerical Friend
A strength Thy service cannot tire,A faith which doubt can never dim,A heart of love, a lip of fire,O Freedom's God! be Thou to him!Speak through him words of power and fear,As through Thy prophet bards of old,And let a scornful people hearOnce more Thy Sinai-thunders rolled.For lying lips Thy blessing seek,And hands of blood are raised to Thee,And on Thy children, crushed and weak,The oppressor plants his kneeling knee.Let then, O God! Thy servant dareThy truth in all its power to tell,Unmask the priestly thieves, and tearThe Bible from the grasp of hell!From hollow rite and narrow spanOf law and sect by Thee released,Oh, teach him that the Christian manIs holier than the Jewish priest.Chase back the shadows, gray and o...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Sand Of The Desert In An Hour-Glass
A handful of red sand, from the hot clime Of Arab deserts brought,Within this glass becomes the spy of Time, The minister of Thought.How many weary centuries has it been About those deserts blown!How many strange vicissitudes has seen, How many histories known!Perhaps the camels of the Ishmaelite Trampled and passed it o'er,When into Egypt from the patriarch's sight His favorite son they bore.Perhaps the feet of Moses, burnt and bare, Crushed it beneath their tread;Or Pharaoh's flashing wheels into the air Scattered it as they sped;Or Mary, with the Christ of Nazareth Held close in her caress,Whose pilgrimage of hope and love and faith Illumed the wilderness;Or ...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Peacock
What's riches to himThat has made a great peacockWith the pride of his eye?The wind-beaten, stone-grey,And desolate Three-rockWould nourish his whim.Live he or dieAmid wet rocks and heather,His ghost will be gayAdding feather to featherFor the pride of his eye.
William Butler Yeats
The Thank Offering.
My little child receives my gift, A simple piece of bread;But to her mouth she doth not lift The love in bread conveyed,Till on my lips, unerring, swift, The morsel first is laid.This is her grace before her food, This her libation poured;Uplift, like offering Aaron good Heaved up unto the Lord;More riches in the thanks than could A thousand gifts afford!My Father, every gift of thine, Teach me to lift to Thee;Not else know I the love divine, With which it comes to me;Not else the tenfold gift is mine Of taking thankfully.Yea, all my being I would lift, An offering of me;Then only truly mine the gift, When so received by Thee;Then shall I go, rejoicing, swift...
George MacDonald
Little Elfie.
I have an elfish maiden child; She is not two years old;Through windy locks her eyes gleam wild, With glances shy and bold.Like little imps, her tiny hands Dart out and push and take;Chide her--a trembling thing she stands, And like two leaves they shake.But to her mind a minute gone Is like a year ago;So when you lift your eyes anon, They're at it, to and fro.Sometimes, though not oppressed with thought, She has her sleepless fits;Then to my room in blanket brought, In round-backed chair she sits;Where, if by chance in graver mood, A hermit she appears,Seated in cave of ancient wood, Grown very still with years.Then suddenly the pope she is, A playful ...
Omar Out Of Date
BY A RENEGADE DISCIPLEWake! for Reveillée scatters into flightThe flagging Rearguard of a ruined Night,And hark! the meagre Champion of the RoostHas flung a matins to the Throne of Light.Here, while the first beam smites the sullen Sky,With silent feet Hajâm comes stealing nigh,Bearing the Brush, the Vessel, and the Blade,These sallow cheeks of mine to scarify.How often, oh, how often have I swornMyself myself to shave th' ensuing Morn!And then - and then comes Guest-night, and HajâmAppears unbidden, and is gladly borne.Come, fill the Cup! The nerve-restoring TiShall woo me with the Leaf of far Bohi;What matter that to some the Koko makesAppeal, to some the Cingalese Kofi?For in a minute Toil, that ever...
John Kendall (Dum-Dum)
Anniversaries
Once more the windless days are here,Quiet of autumn, when the yearHalts and looks backward and draws breathBefore it plunges into death.Silver of mist and gossamers,Through-shine of noonday's glassy gold,Pale blue of skies, where nothing stirsSave one blanched leaf, weary and old,That over and over slowly fallsFrom the mute elm-trees, hanging on airLike tattered flags along the wallsOf chapels deep in sunlit prayer.Once more ... Within its flawless glassTo-day reflects that other day,When, under the bracken, on the grass,We who were lovers happily layAnd hardly spoke, or framed a thoughtThat was not one with the calm hillsAnd crystal sky. Ourselves were nought,Our gusty passions, our burning willsDissolved in boundlessn...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
Eldorado
Gaily bedight,A gallant knight,In sunshine and in shadow,Had journeyed long,Singing a song,In search of Eldorado.But he grew old,This knight so bold,And o'er his heart a shadowFell as he foundNo spot of groundThat looked like Eldorado.And, as his strengthFailed him at length,He met a pilgrim shadow,"Shadow," said he,"Where can it be,This land of Eldorado?""Over the MountainsOf the Moon,Down the Valley of the Shadow,Ride, boldly ride,"The shade replied,"If you seek for Eldorado!"
Edgar Allan Poe
What shall I do
What shall I do for the land that bred me,Her homes and fields that folded and fed me? -Be under her banner and live for her honour:Under her banner I'll live for her honour.CHORUS. Under her banner live for her honour.Not the pleasure, the pay, the plunder,But country and flag, the flag I am under -There is the shilling that finds me willingTo follow a banner and fight for honour.CH. We follow her banner, we fight for her honour.Call me England's fame's fond lover,Her fame to keep, her fame to recover.Spend me or end me what God shall send me,But under her banner I live for her honour.CH. Under her banner we march for her honour.Where is the field I must play the man on?O welcome there their steel or cannon.Immortal bea...
Gerard Manley Hopkins
I Watch, And Long Have Watched, With Calm Regret
I watch, and long have watched, with calm regretYon slowly-sinking star, immortal Sire(So might he seem) of all the glittering quire!Blue ether still surrounds him, yet, and yet;But now the horizon's rocky parapetIs reached, where, forfeiting his bright attire,He burns, transmuted to a dusky fire,Then pays submissively the appointed debtTo the flying moments, and is seen no more.Angels and gods! We struggle with our fate,While health, power, glory, from their height decline,Depressed; and then extinguished; and our state,In this, how different, lost Star, from thine,That no to-morrow shall our beams restore!
Christmas, 1884
Though in my heart no Christmas glee, Though my song-bird be dumb, Jesus, it is enough for me That thou art come. What though the loved be scattered far, Few at the board appear, In thee, O Lord, they gathered are, And thou art here. And if our hearts be low with lack, They are not therefore numb; Not always will thy day come back-- Thyself will come!