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Louis Blanc - Three Sonnets To His Memory
I.The stainless soul that smiled through glorious eyes;The bright grave brow whereon dark fortunes blastMight blow, but might not bend it, nor oercast,Save for one fierce fleet hour of shame, the skiesThrilled with warm dreams of worthier days to riseAnd end the whole worlds winter; here at last,If death be death, have passed into the past;If death be life, live, though their semblance dies.Hope and high faith inviolate of distrustShone strong as life inviolate of the graveThrough each bright word and lineament serene.Most loving righteousness and love most justCrowned, as day crowns the dawn-enkindled wave,With visible aureole thine unfaltering mien.II.Strong time and fire-swift change, with lightnings cladAnd shod with thunders...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Gone
S. M. A.Gone! and there's not a gleam of you,Faces that float into far away;Gone! and we can only dream of youEach as you fade like a star away.Fade as a star in the sky from us,Vainly we look for your light again;Hear ye the sound of a sigh from us?"Come!" and our hearts will be bright again.Come! and gaze on our face once more,Bring us the smiles of the olden days;Come! and shine in your place once more,And change the dark into golden days.Gone! gone! gone! Joy is fled for us;Gone into the night of the nevermore,And darkness rests where you shed for usA light we will miss ~forevermore~.Faces! ye come in the night to us;Shadows! ye float in the sky of sleep;Shadows! ye bring nothing bright to us;...
Abram Joseph Ryan
Council Of Horses.
A steed with mutiny inspired The stud which grazed the mead, and fired A colt, whose eyes then blazing fire, Stood forth and thus expressed his ire: "How abject is the equine race, Condemned to slavery's disgrace! Consider, friends, the deep reproach - Harnessed to drag the gilded coach, To drag the plough, to trot the road, To groan beneath the pack-horse load! Whom do we serve? - a two-legged man, Of feeble frame, of visage wan. What! must our noble jaws submit To champ and foam their galling bit? He back and spur me? Let him first Control the lion - tiger's thirst: I here avow that I disdain His might, th...
John Gay
Thanksgiving To God, For His House
Lord, thou hast given me a cell,Wherein to dwell;A little house, whose humble roofIs weather proof;Under the spars of which I lieBoth soft and dry;Where thou, my chamber for to ward,Hast set a guardOf harmless thoughts, to watch and keepMe, while I sleep.Low is my porch, as is my fate;Both void of state;And yet the threshold of my doorIs worn by th' poor,Who thither come, and freely getGood words, or meat.Like as my parlour, so my hallAnd kitchen's small;A little buttery, and thereinA little bin,Which keeps my little loaf of breadUnchipt, unflead;Some brittle sticks of thorn or briarMake me a fire,Close by whose living coal I sit,And glow like it.Lord, I confess too, when I dine,...
Robert Herrick
Norembega
The winding way the serpent takesThe mystic water took,From where, to count its beaded lakes,The forest sped its brook.A narrow space 'twixt shore and shore,For sun or stars to fall,While evermore, behind, before,Closed in the forest wall.The dim wood hiding underneathWan flowers without a name;Life tangled with decay and death,League after league the same.Unbroken over swamp and hillThe rounding shadow lay,Save where the river cut at willA pathway to the day.Beside that track of air and light,Weak as a child unweaned,At shut of day a Christian knightUpon his henchman leaned.The embers of the sunset's firesAlong the clouds burned down;"I see," he said, "the domes and spires...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Faun
When I was but a little boyWho hunted in the woodTo scare or mangle or destroyA freakish elemental joyThat tasted life and found it goodI hardly heard the awful banThat mutters round the free,But followed where the waters ran,And wondered when the pipe of PanShook silence with its minstrelsy.Where sun-spray glittered on my limbsI danced, and laughed, and trilledMy happy incoherent hymns,Sped only by the whirling whimsWith which my eager heart was filled.The wind was glad and so was I;My soul lay open wide,Reflecting all the starry sky;The swallows called to me to fly;I dreamed of how the fishes glide.But while my errant feet were setOn mosses cool and sweet,The great grey phantoms broo...
John Le Gay Brereton
The Resurrection Possible And Probable.
For each one body that i' th' earth is sown,There's an uprising but of one for one;But for each grain that in the ground is thrown,Threescore or fourscore spring up thence for one:So that the wonder is not half so greatOf ours as is the rising of the wheat.
Sonnet CXXVII.
Amor ed io sì pien di maraviglia.HER EVERY ACTION IS DIVINE. As one who sees a thing incredible,In mutual marvel Love and I combine,Confessing, when she speaks or smiles divine,None but herself can be her parallel.Where the fine arches of that fair brow swellSo sparkle forth those twin true stars of mine,Than whom no safer brighter beacons shineHis course to guide who'd wisely love and well.What miracle is this, when, as a flower,She sits on the rich grass, or to her breast,Snow-white and soft, some fresh green shrub is press'dAnd oh! how sweet, in some fair April hour,To see her pass, alone, in pure thought there,Weaving fresh garlands in her own bright hair.MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
A Tried Friend, A True Friend
A friend for you and a friend for me,A friend to understand;To cheer the way and help the dayWith heart as well as hand:With heart as well as hand, my dear,And share the things we 've plannedA tried friend, a true friend,A friend to understand!A friend for you and a friend for me,A friend to hear our call,When, wrong or right, we wage the fightWith backs against the wall!With backs against the wall, my dear,When hope is like to fallA tried friend, a true friend,A friend to hear our call!A friend for you and a friend for me,To share with us that dayWhen our ship comes back and naught we lackOf all for which men pray!Of all for which men pray, my dear,That long has gone astrayA tried friend, a true friend,
Madison Julius Cawein
Another
As loving hind that (hartless) wants her deer,Scuds through the woods and fern with hark'ning ear,Perplext, in every bush and nook doth pry,Her dearest deer, might answer ear or eye;So doth my anxious soul, which now doth missA dearer dear (far dearer heart) than this.Still wait with doubts, and hopes, and failing eye,His voice to hear or person to descry.Or as the pensive dove doth all alone(On withered bough) most uncouthly bemoanThe absence of her love and loving mate,Whose loss hath made her so unfortunate,Ev'n thus do I, with many a deep sad groan,Bewail my turtle true, who now is gone,His presence and his safe return still woos,With thousand doleful sighs and mournful coos.Or as the loving mullet, that true fish,Her fellow lost, nor...
Anne Bradstreet
I Would I Were A Careless Child.
1I would I were a careless child,Still dwelling in my Highland cave,Or roaming through the dusky wild,Or bounding o'er the dark blue wave;The cumbrous pomp of Saxon [1] pride,Accords not with the freeborn soul,Which loves the mountain's craggy side,And seeks the rocks where billows roll.2.Fortune! take back these cultur'd lands,Take back this name of splendid sound!I hate the touch of servile hands,I hate the slaves that cringe around:Place me among the rocks I love,Which sound to Ocean's wildest roar;I ask but this - again to roveThrough scenes my youth hath known before.3.Few are my years, and yet I feelThe World was ne'er design'd for me:Ah! why do dark'ning s...
George Gordon Byron
An Ode To Fortune
O Lady Fortune! 't is to thee I call,Dwelling at Antium, thou hast power to crownThe veriest clod with riches and renown,And change a triumph to a funeralThe tillers of the soil and they that vex the seas,Confessing thee supreme, on bended kneesInvoke thee, all.Of Dacian tribes, of roving Scythian bands,Of cities, nations, lawless tyrants redWith guiltless blood, art thou the haunting dread;Within thy path no human valor stands,And, arbiter of empires, at thy frownThe sceptre, once supreme, slips surely downFrom kingly hands.Necessity precedes thee in thy way;Hope fawns on thee, and Honor, too, is seenDancing attendance with obsequious mien;But with what coward and abject dismayThe faithless crowd and treacherous wantons...
Eugene Field
Memory
A pen, to register; a keyThat winds through secret wardsAre well assigned to MemoryBy allegoric Bards.As aptly, also, might be givenA Pencil to her hand;That, softening objects, sometimes evenOutstrips the heart's demand;That smooths foregone distress, the linesOf lingering care subdues,Long-vanished happiness refines,And clothes in brighter hues;Yet, like a tool of Fancy, worksThose Spectres to dilateThat startle Conscience, as she lurksWithin her lonely seat.Oh! that our lives, which flee so fast,In purity were such,That not an image of the pastShould fear that pencil's touch!Retirement then might hourly lookUpon a soothing scene,Age steal to his allotted nookContented an...
William Wordsworth
Love An' Labor.
Th' swallows are buildin ther nests, Jenny,Th' springtime has come with its flowers;Th' fields in ther greenest are drest, Jenny,An th' songsters mak music ith' bowers.Daisies an buttercups smile, Jenny,Laughingly th' brook flows along; -An awm havin a smook set oth' stile, Jenny,But this bacca's uncommonly strong.Aw wonder if thy heart like mine, Jenny,Finds its love-burden hard to be borne;Do thi een wi' breet tears ov joy shine, Jenny,As they glistened an shone yestermorn?Ther's noa treasure wi' thee can compare, Jenny,Aw'd net change thi for wealth or estate; -But aw'll goa nah some braikfast to share, Jenny,For aw can't live baght summat to ait.Like a nightingale if aw could sing, Jenny,Aw'd pearch near thy winder at neet...
John Hartley
The Deserted Bride.
Suggested by a scene in the play of the hunchback.Inscribed to James Sheridan Knowles."Love me!--No.--He never loved me!"Else he'd sooner die than stainOne so fond as he has proved meWith the hollow world's disdain.False one, go--my doom is spoken,And the spell that bound me broken.Wed him!--Never.--He has lost me!--Tears!--Well, let them flow!--His bride?No.--The struggle life may cost me!But he'll find that I have pride!Love is not an idle flower,Blooms and dies the self-same hour.Title, land, and broad dominion,With himself to me he gave;Stooped to earth his spirit's pinion,And became my willing slave!Knelt and prayed until he won me--Looks he coldly upon me?Ingrat...
George Pope Morris
To The Honourable Admiral Lord Radstock.
'Tis sweet to recollect life's past controls,And turn to days of sorrow when they're bye,And think of gentle friends and feeling soulsThat offered shelter when the storm was high,--It thrills one's heart:--As mariners have turn'd,When 'scap'd from shipwreck 'mid the billows' roar,To look on fragments that the tempest spurn'd,On which they clung, and struggled to the shore,So sweet it is to turn.--And, hour by hour,Reflection muses on the good and great,That lent a portion of their wealthy power,And sav'd a wormling from destruction's fate.Oft to the patron of her first essaysThe rural muse, O Radstock, turns her eye,Not with the fulsome noise of fawning praise,But soul's deep gushings in a silent sigh;As drooping blossoms, dwindling deep ...
John Clare
The Wandering Bard.
What life like that of the bard can be--The wandering bard, who roams as freeAs the mountain lark that o'er him sings,And, like that lark, a music bringsWithin him, where'er he comes or goes,--A fount that for ever flows!The world's to him like some playground,Where fairies dance their moonlight round;--If dimmed the turf where late they trod,The elves but seek some greener sod;So, when less bright his scene of glee,To another away flies he!Oh, what would have been young Beauty's doom,Without a bard to fix her bloom?They tell us, in the moon's bright round,Things lost in this dark world are found;So charms, on earth long past and gone,In the poet's lay live on.--Would ye have smiles that ne'er grow dim?You've only to giv...
Thomas Moore
Possibilities
Ay, lay him 'neath the Simla pine,A fortnight fully to be missed,Behold, we lose our fourth at whist,A chair is vacant where we dine.His place forgets him; other menHave bought his ponies, guns, and traps.His fortune is the Great PerhapsAnd that cool rest-house down the glen,Whence he shall hear, as spirits may,Our mundance revel on the height,Shall watch each flashing 'rickshaw-lightSweep on to dinner, dance, and play.Benmore shall woo him to the ballWith lighted rooms and braying band;And he shall hear and understand"Dream Faces" better than us all.For, think you, as the vapours fleeAcross Sanjaolie after rain,His soul may climb the hill againTo each of field of victory.Unseen, who women h...
Rudyard