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Jane's Marriage
Jane went to Paradise:That was only fair.Good Sir Walter followed her,And armed her up the stair.Henry and Tobias,And Miguel of Spain,Stood with Shakespeare at the topTo welcome JaneThen the Three ArchangelsOffered out of handAnything in Heaven's giftThat she might command.Azrael's eyes upon her,Raphael's wings above,Michael's sword against her heart,Jane said: "Love."Instantly the under-Standing SeraphimLaid their fingers on their lipsAnd went to look for him.Stole across the Zodiac,Harnessed Charles's Wain,And whispered round the Nebulae"Who loved Jane?"In a private limboWhere none had thought to look,Sat a Hampshire gentlemanReading of a book.It was cal...
Rudyard
Gentle Lady, Do Not Sing
Gentle lady, do not singSad songs about the end of love;Lay aside sadness and singHow love that passes is enough.Sing about the long deep sleepOf lovers that are dead, and howIn the grave all love shall sleep:Love is aweary now.
James Joyce
My Lady
My Lady of all ladies! Queen by right Of tender beauty; full of gentle moods; With eyes that look divine beatitudes,Large eyes illumined with her spirit's light;Lips that are lovely both by sound and sight, Breathing such music as the dove, which broods Within the dark and silence of the woods,Croons to the mate that is her heart's delight.Where is a line, in cloud or wave or hill, To match the curve which rounds her soft-flushed cheek? A colour, in the sky of morn or of even,To match that flush? Ah, let me now be still! If of her spirit I should strive to speak, I should come short, as earth comes short of heaven.
Robert Fuller Murray
Sestina I.
A qualunque animale alberga in terra.NIGHT BRINGS HIM NO REST. HE IS THE PREY OF DESPAIR. To every animal that dwells on earth,Except to those which have in hate the sun,Their time of labour is while lasts the day;But when high heaven relumes its thousand stars,This seeks his hut, and that its native wood,Each finds repose, at least until the dawn.But I, when fresh and fair begins the dawnTo chase the lingering shades that cloak'd the earth,Wakening the animals in every wood,No truce to sorrow find while rolls the sun;And, when again I see the glistening stars,Still wander, weeping, wishing for the day.When sober evening chases the bright day,And this our darkness makes for others dawn,Pensive I look upon...
Francesco Petrarca
At Twenty-One
The rosy hills of her high breasts,Whereon, like misty morning, restsThe breathing lace; her auburn hair,Wherein, a star point sparkling there,One jewel burns; her eyes, that keepRecorded dreams of song and sleep;Her mouth, with whose comparisonThe richest rose were poor and wan;Her throat, her form - what masterpieceOf man can picture half of these!She comes! a classic from the handOf God! wherethrough I understandWhat Nature means and Art and Love,And all the lovely Myths thereof.
Madison Julius Cawein
Mobile Mystic Societies
The olden golden stories of the world, That stirred the past,And now are dim as dreams,The lays and legends which the bards unfurled In lines that last,All -- rhymed with glooms and gleams.Fragments and fancies writ on many a page By deathless pen,And names, and deeds that all along each age, Thrill hearts of men.And pictures erstwhile framed in sun or shade Of many climes,And life's great poems that can never fade Nor lose their chimes;And acts and facts that must forever ring Like temple bells,That sound or seem to sound where angels sing Vesper farewells;And scenes where smiles are strangely touching tears, 'Tis ever thus,Strange Mystics! in the meeting of the years Ye bring to us
Abram Joseph Ryan
The Forest Reverie
Tis said that whenThe hands of menTamed this primeval wood,And hoary trees with groans of woe,Like warriors by an unknown foe,Were in their strength subdued,The virgin EarthGave instant birthTo springs that neer did flowThat in the sunDid rivulets run,And all around rare flowers did blowThe wild rose palePerfumed the galeAnd the queenly lily adown the dale(Whom the sun and the dewAnd the winds did woo),With the gourd and the grape luxuriant grew.So when in tearsThe love of yearsIs wasted like the snow,And the fine fibrils of its lifeBy the rude wrong of instant strifeAre broken at a blowWithin the heartDo springs upstartOf which it doth now know,And strange, sweet dreams,...
Abijah Ide
To Anne On Her Birthday
Let mirth and joy a season reign And sorrow flee awaySadness were perfect sin it is My Anne's natal dayAnd now a birthday rhyme for her This sister of my ownAccept the song then for my sake Sister and only oneSo long we've lived together here Our hopes and fears the sameLike two of autumn's last grown leaves Last of our race and nameThe past we know its grief and joy Its pleasure and its painBut know not what may happen ere Your birthday comes againShall we be cradled in the deep Beneath the briny wave?Or shall the white deer lightly bound Over my forest grave?Or living yet divided far With lands and seas betweenAnd sorrow reigning in the hearts
Nora Pembroke
Astrophel and Stella - Sonnet XLII
O eyes, which do the spheres of beauty moue;Whose beames be ioyes, whose ioyes all vertues be,Who, while they make Loue conquer, conquer Loue;The schooles where Venus hath learnd chastitie:O eyes, where humble lookes most glorious proue,Onely lou'd Tyrans, iust in cruelty,Do not, O doe not, from poore me remoue:Keep still my zenith, euer shine on me;For though I neuer see them, but straightwayesMy life forgets to nourish languisht sprites,Yet still on me, O eyes, dart down your rayes!And if from majestie of sacred lightsOppressing mortal sense my death proceed,Wraceks triumphs be which Loue hie set doth breed.
Philip Sidney
Song-Flower And Poppy
I IN NEW YORK He plays the deuce with my writing time, For the penny my sixth-floor neighbor throws; He finds me proud of my pondered rhyme, And he leaves me--well, God knows It takes the shine from a tunester's line When a little mate of the deathless Nine Pipes up under your nose! For listen, there is his voice again, Wistful and clear and piercing sweet. Where did the boy find such a strain To make a dead heart beat? And how in the name of care can he bear To jet such a fountain into the air In this gray gulch of a street? Tuscan slopes or the Piedmontese? Umbria under the Apennine?
William Vaughn Moody
To ----
When the glad sun looks smiling from the sky, Upon each shadowy glen and woody height,And that you tread those well known paths where I Have stray'd with you, - do not forget me quite.When the warm hearth throws its bright glow around, On many a smiling cheek, and glance of light,And the gay laugh wakes with its joyous sound The soul of mirth, - do not forget me quite.You will not miss me; for with you remain Hearts fond and warm, and spirits young and bright,'Tis but one word - "farewell;" and all again Will seem the same, - yet don't forget me quite.
Frances Anne Kemble
In February
Now in the dark of February rains, Poor lovers of the sunshine, spring is born, The earthy fields are full of hidden corn,And March's violets bud along the lanes;Therefore with joy believe in what remains. And thou who dost not feel them, do not scorn Our early songs for winter overworn,And faith in God's handwriting on the plains."Hope" writes he, "Love" in the first violet, "Joy," even from Heaven, in songs and winds and trees; And having caught the happy words in theseWhile Nature labours with the letters yet, Spring cannot cheat us, though her hopes be broken, Nor leave us, for we know what God hath spoken.
George MacDonald
The Boundaries Of Humanity.
When the primevalAll-holy FatherSows with a tranquil handFrom clouds, as they roll,Bliss-spreading lightningsOver the earth,Then do I kiss the lastHem of his garment,While by a childlike aweFiil'd is my breast.For with immortalsNe'er may a mortalMeasure himself.If he soar upwardsAnd if he touchWith his forehead the stars,Nowhere will rest thenHis insecure feet,And with him sportTempest and cloud.Though with firm sinewyLimbs he may standOn the enduringWell-grounded earth,All he is everAble to do,Is to resembleThe oak or the vine.Wherein do godsDiffer from mortals?In that the formerSee endless billowsHeaving before them;Us doth ...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Babby Burds.
Aw wander'd aght one summer's morn,Across a meadow newly shorn;Th' sun wor shinin breet and clear,An fragrant scents rose up i'th' air,An all wor still.When, as my steps wor idly rovin,Aw coom upon a seet soa lovin!It fill'd mi heart wi' tender feelin,As daan aw sank beside it, kneelinO'th' edge o'th' hill.It wor a little skylark's nest,An two young babby burds, undrest,Wor gapin wi' ther beaks soa wide,Callin for mammy to provideTher mornin's meal;An high aboon ther little hooam,Th' saand o' daddy's warblin coom;Ringin soa sweetly o' mi ear,Like breathins throo a purer sphere,He sang soa weel.Ther mammy, a few yards away,Wor hoppin on a bit o' hay;Too feeard to coom, too bold to flee;An wat...
John Hartley
He That Believeth Shall Not Make Haste.
The aloes grow upon the sand,The aloes thirst with parching heat;Year after year they waiting stand,Lonely and calm, and front the beatOf desert winds; and still a sweetAnd subtle voice thrills all their veins:"Great patience wins; it still remains,After a century of pains,To you to bloom and be complete."I grow upon a thorny waste;Hot noontide lies on all the way,And with its scorching breath makes hasteEach freshening dawn to burn and slay,Yet patiently I bide and stay:Knowing the secret of my fate,The hour of bloom, dear Lord, I wait,Come when it will, or soon or late,A hundred years are but a day.
Susan Coolidge
Sonnet CXLVIII.
Amor fra l' orbe una leggiadra rete.HE COMPARES HIMSELF TO A BIRD CAUGHT IN A NET. Love 'mid the grass beneath a laurel green--The plant divine which long my flame has fed,Whose shade for me less bright than sad is seen--A cunning net of gold and pearls had spread:Its bait the seed he sows and reaps, I weenBitter and sweet, which I desire, yet dread:Gentle and soft his call, as ne'er has beenSince first on Adam's eyes the day was shed:And the bright light which disenthrones the sunWas flashing round, and in her hand, more fairThan snow or ivory, was the master rope.So fell I in the snare; their slave so wonHer speech angelical and winning air,Pleasure, and fond desire, and sanguine hope.MACGREGOR.
Lines For Music.
Oh, sunny Love!Crowned with fresh flowering May, Breath like the Indian clove,Eyes like the dawn of day; Oh, sunny Love! Oh, fatal Love!Thy robe wreath is nightshade all, With gloomy cypress wove,Thy kiss is bitter gall, Oh, fatal Love!
Ode
Bards of Passion and of Mirth,Ye have left your souls on earth!Have ye souls in heaven too,Double-lived in regions new?Yes, and those of heaven communeWith the spheres of sun and moon;With the noise of fountains wondrous,And the parle of voices thundrous;With the whisper of heavens treesAnd one another, in soft easeSeated on Elysian lawnsBrowsd by none but Dians fawns;Underneath large blue-bells tented,Where the daisies are rose-scented,And the rose herself has gotPerfume which on earth is not;Where the nightingale doth singNot a senseless, tranced thing,But divine melodious truth;Philosophic numbers smooth;Tales and golden historiesOf heaven and its mysteries.Thus ye live on high, and thenOn...
John Keats