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Love's Lesson.
One lesson let us bear in mind - Be very gentle with our own, Be to their faults a little blind, Nor wound them by a look or tone. Put self behind! turn tender eyes; Keep back the words that hurt and sting; We learn, when sorrow makes us wise, Forbearance is the grandest thing. Be patient lest some day we turn Our eyes on loved one fast asleep, And whisper, as we lean and yearn, "How often I have made you weep! "Some loved you not and words let fall That must have piercèd your gentle breast, But I, who loved you best of all, Hurt you far more than all the rest." One lesson let us keep in mind - To hold our dear ones close and fast, Since loyal hearts a...
Jean Blewett
To His Saviour. The New-Year's Gift.
That little pretty bleeding partOf foreskin send to me:And I'll return a bleeding heartFor New-Year's gift to Thee.Rich is the gem that Thou did'st send,Mine's faulty too and small;But yet this gift Thou wilt commendBecause I send Thee all.
Robert Herrick
To A Lady That Desired I Would Love Her
Now you have freely given me leave to love,What will you do?Shall I your mirth, or passion move,When I begin to woo;Will you torment, or scorn, or love me too?Each petty beauty can disdain, and ISpite of your hateWithout your leave can see, and die;Dispense a nobler fate!Tis easy to destroy, you may create.Then give me leave to love, and love me tooNot with designTo raise, as Loves cursed rebels do,When puling poets whine,Fame to their beauty, from their blubbered eyne.Grief is a puddle, and reflects not clearYour beautys rays;Joys are pure streams, your eyes appearSullen in sadder lays;In cheerful numbers they shine bright with praise,Which shall not mention to express you fair,Wounds, f...
Thomas Carew
She Dearly Loved The Flowers
I saw her first when she was old,Her form devoid of grace;Her locks that once were yellow goldWere white, and on her faceWere furrows deep, which told of pain,And toil, and worldly fret,Which all, alas, had been in vain,But nature claimed the debt.Her eyes were gray and lacked in glow,Her voice some thought was gruff,And when excited was not slowTo use a sharp rebuff;For she in speech was free from art;Men feared her verbal stroke,And yet they said, "She has a heart;She never wears a cloak."Her creed, perhaps, was heterodox,If creed she ever had.She knew far more of pans and crocks,But this was not her fad;Her light, I fear, did not shine outIn pious talk and airs,In fact I entertain a doubt...
Joseph Horatio Chant
Sonnet XXI.
Amor piangeva, ed io con lui talvolta.HE CONGRATULATES BOCCACCIO ON HIS RETURN TO THE RIGHT PATH. Love grieved, and I with him at times, to seeBy what strange practices and cunning art,You still continued from his fetters free,From whom my feet were never far apart.Since to the right way brought by God's decree,Lifting my hands to heaven with pious heart,I thank Him for his love and grace, for HeThe soul-prayer of the just will never thwart:And if, returning to the amorous strife,Its fair desire to teach us to deny,Hollows and hillocks in thy path abound,'Tis but to prove to us with thorns how rifeThe narrow way, the ascent how hard and high,Where with true virtue man at last is crown'd.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Behind The Arras
As in some dim baronial hall restrained,A prisoner sits, engirt by secret doorsAnd waving tapestries that argue forthStrange passages into the outer air;So in this dimmer room which we call life,Thus sits the soul and marks with eye intentThat mystic curtain o'er the portal death;Still deeming that behind the arras liesThe lambent way that leads to lasting light.Poor fooled and foolish soul! Know now that deathIs but a blind, false door that nowhere leads,And gives no hope of exit final, free.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Yasmini
At night, when Passion's ebbing tide Left bare the Sands of Truth,Yasmini, resting by my side, Spoke softly of her youth."And one" she said "was tall and slim, Two crimson rose leaves made his mouth,And I was fain to follow him Down to his village in the South."He was to build a hut hard by The stream where palms were growing,We were to live, and love, and lie, And watch the water flowing."Ah, dear, delusive, distant shore, By dreams of futile fancy gilt!The riverside we never saw, The palm leaf hut was never built!"One had a Tope of Mangoe trees, Where early morning, noon and late,The Persian wheels, with patient ease, Brought up their liquid, silver freight."A...
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
In The Firelight.
My dear wife sits beside the fire With folded hands and dreaming eyes,Watching the restless flames aspire, And rapt in thralling memories.I mark the fitful firelight fling Its warm caresses on her brow, And kiss her hands' unmelting snow,And glisten on her wedding-ring.The proud free head that crowns so well The neck superb, whose outlines glideInto the bosom's perfect swell Soft-billowed by its peaceful tide,The cheek's faint flush, the lip's red glow, The gracious charm her beauty wears, Fill my fond eyes with tender tearsAs in the days of long ago.Days long ago, when in her eyes The only heaven I cared for lay,When from our thoughtless Paradise All care and toil dwelt far away;
John Hay
Superiority To Fate.
Superiority to fateIs difficult to learn.'T is not conferred by any,But possible to earnA pittance at a time,Until, to her surprise,The soul with strict economySubsists till Paradise.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Arcturus
Arcturus brings the spring backAs surely now as whenHe rose on eastern islandsFor Grecian girls and men;The twilight is as clear a blue,The star as shaken and as bright,And the same thought he gave to themHe gives to me to-night.
Sara Teasdale
A Midsummer Holiday:- II. A Haven
East and north a waste of waters, south and westLonelier lands than dreams in sleep would feign to be,When the soul goes forth on travel, and is prestRound and compassed in with clouds that flash and fleeDells without a streamlet, downs without a tree,Cirques of hollow cliff that crumble, give their guestLittle hope, till hard at hand he pause, to seeWhere the small town smiles, a warm still sea-side nest.Many a lone long mile, by many a headlands crest,Down by many a garden dear to bird and bee,Up by many a sea-downs bare and breezy breast,Winds the sandy strait of road where flowers run free.Here along the deep steep lanes by field and leaKnights have carolled, pilgrims chanted, on their quest,Haply, ere a roof rose toward the bleak strands lee,...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Christ At The Bar
Christ stands at the bar of the world to-day,As He stood in the days of old.And still, as then, we do betrayOur Lord for greed of gold.When our every deed and word and thoughtShould our fealty proclaim,Full oft we bring His name to noughtAnd cover Him with shame.Not alone did Judas his Master sell,Nor Peter his Lord deny,Each one who doth His love repel,Or at His guidance doth rebel,Doth the Lord Christ crucify.Like the men of old, we vote His death,Lest His life should interfereWith the things we have, or the things we crave,Or the things we hold more dear.Christ stands at the bar of the world to-day,As He stood in the days of old.Let each man tax his soul and say,--"Shall I again my Lord betray<...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Restlessness
AT the open door of the room I stand and look at the night,Hold my hand to catch the raindrops, that slant into sight,Arriving grey from the darkness above suddenly into the light of the room.I will escape from the hollow room, the box of light,And be out in the bewildering darkness, which is always fecund, which mightMate my hungry soul with a germ of its womb.I will go out to the night, as a man goes down to the shoreTo draw his net through the surfs thin line, at the dawn beforeThe sun warms the sea, little, lonely and sad, sifting the sobbing tide.I will sift the surf that edges the night, with my net, the fourStrands of my eyes and my lips and my hands and my feet, sifting the storeOf flotsam until my soul is tired or satisfied.I will catch in my eyes...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
The Foolish Harebell
A harebell hung her wilful head:"I am tired, so tired! I wish I was dead."She hung her head in the mossy dell:"If all were over, then all were well!"The Wind he heard, and was pitiful,And waved her about to make her cool."Wind, you are rough!" said the dainty Bell;"Leave me alone--I am not well."The Wind, at the word of the drooping dame,Sighed to himself and ceased in shame."I am hot, so hot!" she moaned and said;"I am withering up; I wish I was dead!"Then the Sun he pitied her woeful case,And drew a thick veil over his face."Cloud go away, and don't be rude,"She said; "I do not see why you should!"The Cloud withdrew. Then the Harebell cried,"I am faint, so faint!--and no water beside!"
George MacDonald
We Must Get Home
We must get home! How could we stray like this? -So far from home, we know not where it is, -Only in some fair, apple-blossomy placeOf children's faces - and the mother's face -We dimly dream it, till the vision clearsEven in the eyes of fancy, glad with tears.We must get home - for we have been awaySo long, it seems forever and a day!And O so very homesick we have grown,The laughter of the world is like a moanIn our tired hearing, and its song as vain, -We must get home - we must get home again!We must get home! With heart and soul we yearnTo find the long-lost pathway, and return!...The child's shout lifted from the questing bandOf old folk, faring weary, hand in hand,But faces brightening, as if clouds at lastWere showering...
James Whitcomb Riley
Tristram of Lyonesse - IV - The Maiden Marriage
Spring watched her last moon burn and fade with MayWhile the days deepened toward a bridal day.And on her snowbright hand the ring was setWhile in the maidens ear the songs word yetHovered, that hailed as loves own queen by nameIseult: and in her heart the word was flame;A pulse of light, a breath of tender fire,Too dear for doubt, too driftless for desire.Between her fathers hand and brothers ledFrom hall to shrine, from shrine to marriage-bed,She saw not how by hap at home-comingFell from her new lords hand a royal ring,Whereon he looked, and felt the pulse astartSpeak passion in his faith-forsaken heart.For this was given him of the hand whereinThat hearts pledge lay for ever: so the sinThat should be done if truly he should take
Plaudits
Loki, the Norwegian god of mischief, sends out a lithesome blonde with a slinkiness that ravishes the libido. She presses her dream-like form against the windowpane. The night is soft about the city's lights. Water cascades in the distance, while small, black crickets' shovel sounds around pricked ears. The diminished man ignores this, instead busying himself with drawing lions on a vast sheet of blank paper. There is no word for happiness in the Malawi tongue and this disturbs him. What far reaching implications for the people of Africa.He stands and downs a drink to ease his parched mouth. A moisture ring blurs one of his lions, and, again, he will lose the battle against the king of beasts tonight.
Paul Cameron Brown
The Glowworm
How long had I sat there and had not beheldThe gleam of the glow-worm till something compelled!...The heaven was starless, the forest was deep,And the vistas of darkness stretched silent in sleep.And late 'mid the trees had I lingered untilNo thing was awake but the lone whippoorwill.And haunted of thoughts for an hour I satOn a lichen-gray rock where the moss was a mat.And thinking of one whom my heart had held dear,Like terrible waters, a gathering fear.Came stealing upon me with all the distressOf loss and of yearning and powerlessness:Till the hopes and the doubts and the sleepless unrestThat, swallow-like, built in the home of my breast,Now hither, now thither, now heavenward flew,Wild-winged as the wind...
Madison Julius Cawein