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In Shadow.
I dreaded that first robin so,But he is mastered now,And I 'm accustomed to him grown, --He hurts a little, though.I thought if I could only liveTill that first shout got by,Not all pianos in the woodsHad power to mangle me.I dared not meet the daffodils,For fear their yellow gownWould pierce me with a fashionSo foreign to my own.I wished the grass would hurry,So when 't was time to see,He 'd be too tall, the tallest oneCould stretch to look at me.I could not bear the bees should come,I wished they 'd stay awayIn those dim countries where they go:What word had they for me?They 're here, though; not a creature failed,No blossom stayed awayIn gentle deference to me,The Queen ...
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
To His Honoured Friend, Sir John Mince.
For civil, clean, and circumcised wit,And for the comely carriage of it,Thou art the man, the only man best known,Mark'd for the true wit of a million:From whom we'll reckon. Wit came in but sinceThe calculation of thy birth, brave Mince.
Robert Herrick
Bessy Bell.
When life looks drear and lonely, love, And pleasant fancies flee,Then will the Muses only, love, Bestow a thought on me!Mine is a harp which Pleasure, love, To waken strives in vain;To Joy's entrancing measure, love, It ne'er can thrill again!-- Why mock me, Bessy Bell?Oh, do not ask me ever, love, For rapture-woven rhymes;For vain is each endeavor, love, To sound Mirth's play-bell chimes!Yet still believe me, dearest love, Though sad my song may be,This heart still dotes sincerest, love, And grateful turns to thee-- My once fond Bessy Bell!Those eyes still rest upon me, love! I feel their magic spell!With that same look you won me, love, Fair, gentle...
George Pope Morris
Ode: Intimations Of Immortality From Recollections Of Early Childhood
The child is father of the man;And I could wish my days to beBound each to each by natural piety.(Wordsworth, My Heart Leaps Up)There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream,The earth, and every common sight,To me did seemApparelled in celestial light,The glory and the freshness of a dream.It is not now as it hath been of yore;Turn wheresoeer I may,By night or day.The things which I have seen I now can see no more.The Rainbow comes and goes,And lovely is the Rose,The Moon doth with delightLook round her when the heavens are bare,Waters on a starry nightAre beautiful and fair;The sunshine is a glorious birth;But yet I know, whereer I go,That there hath past away a glory from the earth.N...
William Wordsworth
Overlooking The River Stour
The swallows flew in the curves of an eightAbove the river-gleamIn the wet June's last beam:Like little crossbows animateThe swallows flew in the curves of an eightAbove the river-gleam.Planing up shavings of crystal sprayA moor-hen darted outFrom the bank thereabout,And through the stream-shine ripped his way;Planing up shavings of crystal sprayA moor-hen darted out.Closed were the kingcups; and the meadDripped in monotonous green,Though the day's morning sheenHad shown it golden and honeybee'd;Closed were the kingcups; and the meadDripped in monotonous green.And never I turned my head, alack,While these things met my gazeThrough the pane's drop-drenched glaze,To see the more behind my back . . ....
Thomas Hardy
To J. Rankine.
I am a keeper of the law In some sma' points, altho' not a'; Some people tell me gin I fa' Ae way or ither. The breaking of ae point, though sma', Breaks a' thegither I hae been in for't once or twice, And winna say o'er far for thrice, Yet never met with that surprise That broke my rest, But now a rumour's like to rise, A whaup's i' the nest.
Robert Burns
A Character
With a half-glance upon the skyAt night he said, The wanderingsOf this most intricate UniverseTeach me the nothingness of things.Yet could not all creation pierceBeyond the bottom of his eye.He spake of beauty: that the dullSaw no divinity in grass,Life in dead stones, or spirit in air;Then looking as twere in a glass,He smoothd his chin and sleekd his hair,And said the earth was beautiful.He spake of virtue: not the godsMore purely, when they wish to charmPallas and Juno sitting by:And with a sweeping of the arm,And a lack-lustre dead-blue eye,Devolved his rounded periods.Most delicately hour by hourHe canvassd human mysteries,And trod on silk, as if the windsBlew his own praises in his eye...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Home
How brightly glistening in the sunThe woodland ivy plays!While yonder beeches from their barksReflect his silver rays.That sun surveys a lovely sceneFrom softly smiling skies;And wildly through unnumbered treesThe wind of winter sighs:Now loud, it thunders o'er my head,And now in distance dies.But give me back my barren hillsWhere colder breezes rise;Where scarce the scattered, stunted treesCan yield an answering swell,But where a wilderness of heathReturns the sound as well.For yonder garden, fair and wide,With groves of evergreen,Long winding walks, and borders trim,And velvet lawns between;Restore to me that little spot,With grey walls compassed round,Where knotted grass negle...
Anne Bronte
The Law Of The Yukon
This is the law of the Yukon, and ever she makes it plain:"Send not your foolish and feeble; send me your strong and your sane.Strong for the red rage of battle; sane, for I harry them sore;Send me men girt for the combat, men who are grit to the core;Swift as the panther in triumph, fierce as the bear in defeat,Sired of a bulldog parent, steeled in the furnace heat.Send me the best of your breeding, lend me your chosen ones;Them will I take to my bosom, them will I call my sons;Them will I gild with my treasure, them will I glut with my meat;But the others - the misfits, the failures - I trample under my feet.Dissolute, damned, and despairful, crippled and palsied and slain,Ye would send me the spawn of your gutters - Go! take back your spawn again."Wild and wi...
Robert William Service
To Earl And Georgia:
The little Man, and tiny Maid,Who love the Fairies in the glade,Who see them in the tangled grassThe Gnomes and Brownies, as they pass,Who hear the Sprites from Elf-land callGo, frolic with these Brownies small,And join these merry sporting Elves,But ever be your own sweet selves.
Elizabeth Anderson
Art.
Yes, let Art go, if it must be That with it men must starve -If Music, Painting, Poetry Spring from the wasted hearth.Pluck out the flower, however fair, Whose beauty cannot bloom,(However sweet it be, or rare) Save from a noisome tomb.These social manners, charm and ease, Are hideous to who knowsThe degradation, the disease From which their beauty flows.So, Poet, must thy singing be; O Painter, so thy scene;Musician, so thy melody, While misery is queen.Nay, brothers, sing us battle-songs With clear and ringing rhyme;Nay, show the world its hateful wrongs, And bring the better time!
Francis William Lauderdale Adams
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet XXX
Whether the Turkish new moone minded beTo fill her hornes this yeere on Christian coast;How Poles right king means without leaue of hostTo warm with ill-made fire cold Muscouy;If French can yet three parts in one agree:What now the Dutch in their full diets boast;How Holland hearts, now so good townes be lost,Trust in the shade of pleasant Orange-tree;How Vlster likes of that same golden bitWherewith my father once made it half tame;If in the Scotch Court be no weltring yet;These questions busy wits to me do frame:I, cumbred with good manners, answer doe,But know not how; for still I thinke of you.
Philip Sidney
The Glimpse
She sped through the doorAnd, following in haste,And stirred to the core,I entered hot-faced;But I could not find her,No sign was behind her."Where is she?" I said:- "Who?" they asked that sat there;"Not a soul's come in sight."- "A maid with red hair."- "Ah." They paled. "She is dead.People see her at night,But you are the firstOn whom she has burstIn the keen common light."It was ages ago,When I was quite strong:I have waited since, - O,I have waited so long!- Yea, I set me to ownThe house, where now loneI dwell in void roomsBooming hollow as tombs!But I never come near her,Though nightly I hear her.And my cheek has grown thinAnd my hair has grown grayWith this waiting th...
Anticipation.
Let us peer forward through the dusk of years And force the silent future to reveal Her store of garnered joys; we may not kneelFor ever, and entreat our bliss with tears. Somewhere on this drear earth the sunshine lies, Somewhere the air breathes Heaven-blown harmonies.Some day when you and I have fully learned Our waiting-lesson, wondering, hand in hand We shall gaze out upon an unknown land,Our thoughts and our desires forever turned From our old griefs, as swallows, home warding, Sweep ever southward with unwearied wing.We shall fare forth, comrades for evermore. Though the ill-omened bird Time loves to bear Has brushed this cheek and left an impress thereI shall be fierce and dauntless as of yore, ...
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
The Lost Master
"And when I come to die," he said, "Ye shall not lay me out in state, Nor leave your laurels at my head, Nor cause your men of speech orate; No monument your gift shall be, No column in the Hall of Fame; But just this line ye grave for me: 'He played the game.'" So when his glorious task was done, It was not of his fame we thought; It was not of his battles won, But of the pride with which he fought; But of his zest, his ringing laugh, His trenchant scorn of praise or blame: And so we graved his epitaph, "He played the game." And so we, too, in humbler ways Went forth to fight the fight anew, And heeding neither blame nor praise, We held the course he set...
Sweet Innisfallen.
Sweet Innisfallen, fare thee well, May calm and sunshine long be thine!How fair thou art let others tell,-- To feel how fair shall long be mine.Sweet Innisfallen, long shall dwell In memory's dream that sunny smile,Which o'er thee on that evening fell, When first I saw thy fairy isle.'Twas light, indeed, too blest for one, Who had to turn to paths of care--Through crowded haunts again to run, And leave thee bright and silent there;No more unto thy shores to come, But, on the world's rude ocean tost,Dream of thee sometimes, as a home Of sunshine he had seen and lost.Far better in thy weeping hours To part from thee, as I do now,When mist is o'er thy blooming bowers, L...
Thomas Moore
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet XC
Stella, thinke not that I by verse seeke fame,Who seeke, who hope, who loue, who liue but thee;Thine eyes my pride, thy lips mine history:If thou praise not, all other praise is shame.Nor so ambitious am I, as to frameA nest for my young praise in lawrell tree:In truth, I sweare I wish not there should beGrau'd in my epitaph a Poets name.Ne, if I would, could I iust title make,That any laud thereof to me should growe,Without my plumes from others wings I take:For nothing from my wit or will doth flow,Since all my words thy beauty doth endite,And Loue doth hold my hand, and makes me write.
Bright Life
"Come now," I said, "put off these webs of death,Distract this leaden yearning of thine eyesFrom lichened banks of peace, sad mysteriesOf dust fallen-in where passed the flitting breath:Turn thy sick thoughts from him that slumberethIn mouldered linen to the living skies,The sun's bright-clouded principalities,The salt deliciousness the sea-breeze hath!"Lay thy warm hand on earth's cold clods and thinkWhat exquisite greenness sprouts from these to graceThe moving fields of summer; on the brinkOf archèd waves the sea-horizon trace,Whence wheels night's galaxy; and in silence sinkThe pride in rapture of life's dwelling-place!"
Walter De La Mare