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Liberty.
Those ills that mortal men endureSo long, are capable of cure,As they of freedom may be sure;But, that denied, a grief, though small,Shakes the whole roof, or ruins all.
Robert Herrick
Gods in the Gutter
I dreamed I saw three demi-gods who in a cafe sat,And one was small and crapulous, and one was large and fat;And one was eaten up with vice and verminous at that.The first he spoke of secret sins, and gems and perfumes rare;And velvet cats and courtesans voluptuously fair:"Who is the Sybarite?" I asked. They answered: "Baudelaire."The second talked in tapestries, by fantasy beguiled;As frail as bubbles, hard as gems, his pageantries he piled;"This Lord of Language, who is he?" They whispered "Oscar Wilde."The third was staring at his glass from out abysmal pain;With tears his eyes were bitten in beneath his bulbous brain."Who is the sodden wretch?" I said. They told me: "Paul Verlaine."Oh, Wilde, Verlaine and Baudelaire, their lips were wet wit...
Robert William Service
To My Sister
It is the first mild day of March:Each minute sweeter than beforeThe redbreast sings from the tall larchThat stands beside our door.There is a blessing in the air,Which seems a sense of joy to yieldTo the bare trees, and mountains bare,And grass in the green field.My sister! ('tis a wish of mine)Now that our morning meal is done,Make haste, your morning task resign;Come forth and feel the sun.Edward will come with you; and, pray,Put on with speed your woodland dress;And bring no book: for this one dayWe'll give to idleness.No joyless forms shall regulateOur living calendar:We from to-day, my Friend, will dateThe opening of the year.Love, now a universal birth,From heart to heart is ste...
William Wordsworth
Song. "The Sultry Day It Wears Away"
The sultry day it wears away,And o'er the distant leasThe mist again, in purple stain,Falls moist on flower and trees:His home to find, the weary hindGlad leaves his carts and ploughs;While maidens fair, with bosoms bare,Go coolly to their cowsThe red round sun his work has done,And dropp'd into his bed;And sweetly shin'd, the oaks behind,His curtain fring'd with red:And step by step the night has crept,And day, as loth, retires;But clouds, more dark, night's entrance mark,Till day's last spark expires.Pride of the vales, the nightingalesNow charm the oaken grove;And loud and long, with amorous tongue,They try to please their love:And where the rose reviving blowsUpon the swelter'd bower,I'll take...
John Clare
To The Most Illustrious And Most Hopeful Prince. Charles, Prince Of Wales.
Well may my book come forth like public dayWhen such a light as you are leads the way,Who are my work's creator, and aloneThe flame of it, and the expansion.And look how all those heavenly lamps acquireLight from the sun, that inexhausted fire,So all my morn and evening stars from youHave their existence, and their influence too.Full is my book of glories; but all theseBy you become immortal substances.
An Account Of The Greatest English Poets
Long had our dull forefathers slept supine,Nor felt the raptures of the tuneful Nine;Till Chaucer first, the merry bard, arose,And many a story told in rhyme and prose.But age has rusted what the poet writ,Worn out his language, and obscur'd his wit;In vain he jests in his unpolish'd strain,And tries to make his readers laugh, in vain.Old Spenser next, warm'd with poetic rage,In ancient tales amus'd a barb'rous age;An age that yet uncultivate and rude,Where'er the poet's fancy led, pursu'dThrough pathless fields, and unfrequented floods,To dens of dragons and enchanted woods.But now the mystic tale, that pleas'd of yore,Can charm an understanding age no more;The long-spun allegories fulsome grow.While the dull moral lies too plain b...
Joseph Addison
A Girl's Autumn Reverie
We plucked a red rose, you and I, All in the summer weather;Sweet its perfume and rare its bloom, Enjoyed by us together.The rose is dead, the summer fled, And bleak winds are complaining;We dwell apart, but in each heart We find the thorn remaining.We sipped a sweet wine, you and I, All in the summer weather.The beaded draught we lightly quaffed, And filled the glass together.Together we watched its rosy glow, And saw its bubbles glitter;Apart, alone we only know The lees are very bitter.We walked in sunshine, you and I, All in the summer weather:The very night seemed noonday bright, When we two were together.I wonder why with our good-bye O'er hill and vale and meadow<...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To ---
Asleep within the deadest hour of nightAnd turning with the earth, I was awareHow suddenly the eastern curve was bright,As when the sun arises from his lair.But not the sun arose: it was thy hairShaken up heaven in tossing leagues of light.Since then I know that neither night nor dayMay I escape thee, O my heavenly hell!Awake, in dreams, thou springest to waylay;And should I dare to die, I know full wellWhose voice would mock me in the mourning bell,Whose face would greet me in hell's fiery way.
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols
Very True, The Linnets Sing
Very true, the linnets singSweetest in the leaves of spring:You have found in all these leavesThat which changes and deceives,And, to pine by sun or star,Left them, false ones as they are.But there be who walk besideAutumn's, till they all have died,And who lend a patient earTo low notes from branches sere.
Walter Savage Landor
Where She Told Her Love
I saw her crop a roseRight early in the day,And I went to kiss the placeWhere she broke the rose awayAnd I saw the patten ringsWhere she oer the stile had gone,And I love all other thingsHer bright eyes look upon.If she looks upon the hedge or up the leafing tree,The whitethorn or the brown oak are made dearer things to me.I have a pleasant hillWhich I sit upon for hours,Where she cropt some sprigs of thymeAnd other little flowers;And she muttered as she did itAs does beauty in a dream,And I loved her when she hid itOn her breast, so like to cream,Near the brown mole on her neck that to me a diamond shoneThen my eye was like to fire, and my heart was like to stone.There is a small green placeWhere cowsl...
Why, Minstrel, These Untuneful Murmurings
"Why, Minstrel, these untuneful murmuringsDull, flagging notes that with each other jar?""Think, gentle Lady, of a Harp so farFrom its own country, and forgive the strings."A simple answer! but even so forth springs,From the Castalian fountain of the heart,The Poetry of Life, and all 'that' ArtDivine of words quickening insensate things.From the submissive necks of guiltless menStretched on the block, the glittering axe recoils;Sun, moon, and stars, all struggle in the toilsOf mortal sympathy; what wonder thenThat the poor Harp distempered music yieldsTo its sad Lord, far from his native fields?
Tilly
He travels after a winter sun,Urging the cattle along a cold red road,Calling to them, a voice they know,He drives his beasts above Cabra.The voice tells them home is warm.They moo and make brute music with their hoofs.He drives them with a flowering branch before him,Smoke pluming their foreheads.Boor, bond of the herd,Tonight stretch full by the fire!I bleed by the black streamFor my torn bough!
James Joyce
The Suspicion Upon His Over-Much Familiarity With A Gentlewoman.
And must we part, because some sayLoud is our love, and loose our play,And more than well becomes the day?Alas for pity! and for usMost innocent, and injured thus!Had we kept close, or played within,Suspicion now had been the sin,And shame had followed long ere this,T' have plagued what now unpunished is.But we, as fearless of the sun,As faultless, will not wish undoneWhat now is done, since where no sinUnbolts the door, no shame comes in.Then, comely and most fragrant maid,Be you more wary than afraidOf these reports, because you seeThe fairest most suspected be.The common forms have no one eyeOr ear of burning jealousyTo follow them: but chiefly whereLove makes the cheek and chin a sphereTo dance and play ...
Raptures
Sing for the sun your lyric, lark,Of twice ten thousand notes;Sing for the moon, you nightingales,Whose light shall kiss your throats;Sing, sparrows, for the soft warm rain,To wet your feathers through;And when a rainbow's in the sky,Sing you, cuckoo - Cuckoo!Sing for your five blue eggs, fond thrush,By many a leaf concealed;You starlings, wrens, and blackbirds, singIn every wood and field:While I, who fail to give my loveLong raptures twice as fine,Will for her beauty breathe this one -A sigh, that's more divine.
William Henry Davies
Vanbrugh's House[1] Built From The Ruins Of Whitehall That Was Burnt, 1703
In times of old, when Time was young,And poets their own verses sung,A verse would draw a stone or beam,That now would overload a team;Lead 'em a dance of many a mile,Then rear 'em to a goodly pile.Each number had its diff'rent power;Heroic strains could build a tower;Sonnets and elegies to Chloris,Might raise a house about two stories;A lyric ode would slate; a catchWould tile; an epigram would thatch. Now Poets feel this art is lost,Both to their own and landlord's cost.Not one of all the tuneful throngCan hire a lodging for a song.For Jove consider'd well the case,That poets were a numerous race;And if they all had power to build,The earth would very soon be fill'd:Materials would be quickly spent,And houses ...
Jonathan Swift
To An Old Mate
Old Mate! In the gusty old weather,When our hopes and our troubles were new,In the years spent in wearing out leather,I found you unselfish and true,I have gathered these verses togetherFor the sake of our friendship and you.You may think for awhile, and with reason,Though still with a kindly regret,That I've left it full late in the seasonTo prove I remember you yet;But you'll never judge me by their treasonWho profit by friends, and forget.I remember, Old Man, I remember,The tracks that we followed are clear,The jovial last nights of December,The solemn first days of the year,Long tramps through the clearings and timber,Short partings on platform and pier.I can still feel the spirit that bore us,And often t...
Henry Lawson
The Reformers
Not in the camp his victory liesOr triumph in the market-place,Who is his Nation's sacrificeTo turn the judgement from his race.Happy is he who, bred and taughtBy sleek, sufficing Circumstance,Whose Gospel was the apparelled thought,Whose Gods were Luxury and Chance,Seese, on the threshold of his days,The old life shrivel like a scroll,And to unheralded dismaysSubmits his body and his soul;The fatted shows wherein he stoodForegoing, and the idiot pride,That he may prove with his own bloodAll that his easy sires denied,Ultimate issues, primal springs,Demands, abasements, penalties,The imperishable plinth of thingsSeen and unseen, that touch our peace.For, though ensnaring ritual dimHis ...
Rudyard
Upon One-Ey'd Broomsted. Epig.
Broomsted a lameness got by cold and beer:And to the bath went, to be cured there:His feet were helped, and left his crutch behind;But home returned, as he went forth, half blind.