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To The Pennsylvanians
Days undefiled by luxury or sloth,Firm self-denial, manners grave and staid,Rights equal, laws with cheerfulness obeyed,Words that require no sanction from an oath,And simple honesty a common growth,This high repute, with bounteous Nature's aid,Won confidence, now ruthlessly betrayedAt will, your power the measure of your troth!All who revere the memory of PennGrieve for the land on whose wild woods his nameWas fondly grafted with a virtuous aim,Renounced, abandoned by degenerate MenFor state-dishonour black as ever cameTo upper air from Mammon's loathsome den.
William Wordsworth
The Bell
It is the bell of death I hear,Which tells me my own time is near,When I must join those quiet soulsWhere nothing lives but worms and moles;And not come through the grass again,Like worms and moles, for breath or rain;Yet let none weep when my life's through,For I myself have wept for few.The only things that knew me wellWere children, dogs, and girls that fell;I bought poor children cakes and sweets,Dogs heard my voice and danced the streets;And, gentle to a fallen lass,I made her weep for what she was.Good men and women know not me.Nor love nor hate the mystery.
William Henry Davies
To The Reader Of 'University Notes'
Ah yes, we know what you're saying, As your eye glances over these Notes:'What asses are these that are braying With flat and unmusical throats?Who writes such unspeakable patter? Is it lunatics, idiots--or who?'And you think there is 'something the matter.' Well, we think so too.We have sat, full of sickness and sorrow, As the hours dragged heavily on,Till the midnight has merged into morrow, And the darkness is going or gone.We are Editors. Give us the credit Of meaning to do what we could;But, since there is nothing to edit, It isn't much good.Once we shared the delightful delusion That to edit was racy and rare,But we suffered a sad disillusion, And we found that our castles wer...
Robert Fuller Murray
No Song
These summer days when all the poets sing I have no voice for song.I see the birds of summer taking wing, And days so sweet and long,Each seemed a little heaven with no end,I know are gone for evermore, dear friend.Nay, by and by comes another Spring; And long, sweet, perfect days.And by and by I shall have voice to sing My old glad, happy lays.More blithesome songs, more days that have no end;More golden summers; but like thee no friend.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To Dr. Blacklock, In Answer To A Letter.
Ellisland, 21st Oct. 1789. Wow, but your letter made me vauntie! And are ye hale, and weel, and cantie? I kenn'd it still your wee bit jauntie Wad bring ye to: Lord send you ay as weel's I want ye, And then ye'll do. The ill-thief blaw the heron south! And never drink be near his drouth! He tauld mysel' by word o' mouth, He'd tak my letter: I lippen'd to the chief in trouth, And bade nae better. But aiblins honest Master Heron, Had at the time some dainty fair one, To ware his theologic care on, And holy study; And tir'd o' sauls to waste his lear on E'en tried the body. But what dy'e think, my trusty fier, ...
Robert Burns
The Shady Lane
Whence comest thou? shady lane, and why and how?Thou, where with idle heart, ten years ago,I wandered, and with childhoods paces slowSo long unthought of, and remembered now!Again in vision clear thy pathwayed sideI tread, and view thy orchard plots againWith yellow fruitage hung,and glimmering grainStanding or shocked through the thick hedge espied.This hot still noon of August brings the sight;This quelling silence as of eve or night,Wherein Earth (feeling as a mother mayAfter her travails latest bitterest throes)Looks up, so seemeth it, one half repose,One half in effort, straining, suffering still.
Arthur Hugh Clough
Phoebe Of The Scottish Glen
Agen I'll take my idle penAnd sing my bonny mountain maid--Sweet Phoebe of the Scottish glen,Nor of her censure feel afraid.I'll charm her ear with beauty's praise,And please her eye with songs agen--The ballads of our early days--To Phoebe of the Scottish glen.There never was a fairer thingAll Scotland's glens and mountains through.The siller gowans of the Spring,Besprent with pearls of mountain dew,The maiden blush upon the brere,Far distant from the haunts of men,Are nothing half so sweet or dearAs Phoebe of the Scottish glen.How handsome is her naked foot,Moist with the pearls of Summer dew:The siller daisy's nothing to 't,Nor hawthorn flowers so white to view,She's sweeter than the blooming brere,T...
John Clare
No Spring
Up from the South come the birds that were banished, Frightened away by the presence of frost.Back to the vale comes the verdure that vanished, Back to the forest the leaves that were lost.Over the hillside the carpet of splendour, Folded through Winter, Spring spreads down again;Along the horizon, the tints that were tender, Lost hues of Summer-time, burn bright as then.Only the mountains' high summits are hoary, To the ice-fettered river the sun gives a key.Once more the gleaming shore lists to the story Told by an amorous Summer-kissed sea.All things revive that in Winter time perished, The rose buds again in the light o' the sun,All that was beautiful, all that was cherished, Sweet things and dear things and all thin...
Farewell
I leave the world to-morrow,What news for Fairyland?Im tired of dust and sorrowAnd folk on every hand.A moon more calm and splendidMoves there through deeper skies,By maiden stars attendedShe peaces goddes-wise.And there no wrath oppresses,And there no teardrops start,There cool winds breathe caresses,That soothe the weary heart.The wealth the mad world followsTurns ashes in the handOf him who sees the hollowsAnd glades of Fairyland.And pine boughs sigh no sorrowWhere fairy rotas play,I leave the world to-morrowFor ever and a day.
Enid Derham
The Fur Coat (The Rocky Road To Dublin)
I walked out in my Coat of Pride, I looked about on every side, And said the mountains should not be Just where they were, and that the sea Was badly placed, and that the beech Should be an oak, and then from each I turned in dignity as if They were not there: I sniffed a sniff, And climbed upon my sunny shelf, And sneezed a while, and scratched myself.
James Stephens
Robert Fulton Tanner
If a man could bite the giant hand That catches and destroys him, As I was bitten by a rat While demonstrating my patent trap, In my hardware store that day. But a man can never avenge himself On the monstrous ogre Life. You enter the room that's being born; And then you must live work out your soul, Of the cross-current in life Which Bring honor to the dead, who lived in shame.
Edgar Lee Masters
Solid, Ironical, Rolling Orb
Solid, ironical, rolling orb!Master of all, and matter of fact! at last I accept your terms;Bringing to practical, vulgar tests, of all my ideal dreams,And of me, as lover and hero.
Walt Whitman
A Rose O' The Hills
The hills look down on wood and stream,On orchard-land and farm;And o'er the hills the azure-grayOf heaven bends the livelong dayWith thoughts of calm and storm.On wood and stream the hills look down,On farm and orchard-land;And o'er the hills she came to meThrough wildrose-brake and blackberry,The hill wind hand in hand.The hills look down on home and field,On wood and winding stream;And o'er the hills she came along,Upon her lips a woodland song,And in her eyes, a dream.On home and field the hills look down,On stream and vistaed wood;And breast-deep, with disordered hair,Fair in the wildrose tangle there,A sudden space she stood.O hills, that look on rock and road,On grove and harvest-fiel...
Madison Julius Cawein
Crazy Jane Talks With The Bishop
I met the Bishop on the roadAnd much said he and I.'Those breasts are flat and fallen now,Those veins must soon be dry;Live in a heavenly mansion,Not in some foul sty.''Fair and foul are near of kin,And fair needs foul,' I cried.'My friends are gone, but that's a truthNor grave nor bed denied,Learned in bodily lowlinessAnd in the heart's pride.'A woman can be proud and stiffWhen on love intent;But Love has pitched his mansion inThe place of excrement;For nothing can be sole or wholeThat has not been rent.'
William Butler Yeats
To An Ingrate
This is to-day, a golden summer's dayAnd yet--and yetMy vengeful soul will not forgetThe past, forever now forgot, you say.From that half height where I had sadly climbed,I stretched my hand,I lone in all that land,Down there, where, helpless, you were limed.Our fingers clasped, and dragging me a pace,You struggled up.It is a bitter Cup,That now for naught, you turn away your face.I shall remember this for aye and aye.Whate'er may come,Although my lips are dumb,My spirit holds you to that yesterday.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Old Spring-House.
With its rude walls of stone and its moss-covered roof--('Tis a picture inwoven with memory's woof)--It stands there to-day, as it stood in the yearsWhen we knew naught of sorrow--nor anguish--nor tears;And though far from it now, I can see it at will--The old spring-house at the foot of the hill!O flights of fond fancy that deeply inurnSweet scenes of our childhood, no more to return!Which carry us back in visions and dreamsAnd illumine life's pathway with memory's gleams--Till we see once again, though with tears the eyes fill,The old spring-house at the foot of the hill!There we children, bare-footed, would wander to play,And wade in the branch that flowed on its wayThrough the meadows and fields with current so fleet,And a gurgle and ...
George W. Doneghy
The Dustman
"Dustman, dustman!"Through the deserted square he cries,And babies put their rosy fistsInto their eyes.There's nothing out of No-man's-landSo drowsy since the world began,As "Dustman, dustman,Dustman."He goes his village round at duskFrom door to door, from day to day;And when the children hear his stepThey stop their play."Dustman, dustman!"Far up the street he is descried,And soberly the twilight gamesAre laid aside."Dustman, dustman!"There, Drowsyhead, the old refrain,"Dustman, dustman!"It goes again.Dustman, dustman,Hurry by and let me sleep.When most I wish for you to come,You always creep.Dustman, dustman,And when I want to play some more,You n...
Bliss Carman
Exit Anima
"Hospes comesque corporis,Quae nunc abitis in loca?"Cease, Wind, to blowAnd drive the peopled snow,And move the haunted arras to and fro,And moan of things I fear to knowYet would rend from thee, Wind, before I goOn the blind pilgrimage.Cease, Wind, to blow.Thy brother too,I leave no print of shoeIn all these vasty rooms I rummage through,No word at threshold, and no clueOf whence I come and whither I pursueThe search of treasures lostWhen time was new.Thou janitorOf the dim curtained door,Stir thy old bones along the dusty floorOf this unlighted corridor.Open! I have been this dark way before;Thy hollow face shall peerIn mine no more. . . . .Sky, the dear sky!Ah, ghostly h...