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The Harp Of Hoel. Part II.
High on the hill, with moss o'ergrown, A hermit chapel stood; It spoke the tale of seasons gone, And half-revealed its ivied stone. Amid the beechen wood. Here often, when the mountain trees A leafy murmur made, Now still, now swaying to the breeze, (Sounds that the musing fancy please), The widowed mourner strayed. And many a morn she climbed the steep, From whence she might behold, Where, 'neath the clouds, in shining sweep, And mingling with the mighty deep, The sea-broad Severn rolled. Her little boy beside her played, With sea-shells in his hand; And sometimes, 'mid the bents delayed, And sometimes running onward, said, Oh, where is Holy Land!<...
William Lisle Bowles
Divine Visitation
The heavens lay hold on us: the starry raysFondle with flickering fingers brow and eyes:A new enchantment lights the ancient skies.What is it looks between us gaze on gaze?Does the wild spirit of the endless daysChase through my heart some lure that ever flies?Only I know the vast within me criesFinding in thee the ending of all ways.Ah, but they vanish; the immortal trainFrom thee, from me, depart, yet take from theeMemorial grace: laden with adorationForth from this heart they flow that all in vainWould stay the proud eternal powers that fleeAfter the chase in burning exultation.
George William Russell
A Counsel
O strong Republic of the nobler yearsWhose white feet shine beside time's fairer floodThat shall flow on the clearer for our bloodNow shed, and the less brackish for our tears;When time and truth have put out hopes and fearsWith certitude, and love has burst the bud,If these whose powers then down the wind shall scudStill live to feel thee smite their eyes and ears,When thy foot's tread hath crushed their crowns and creeds,Care thou not then to crush the beast that bleeds,The snake whose belly cleaveth to the sod,Nor set thine heel on men as on their deeds;But let the worm Napoleon crawl untrod,Nor grant Mastai the gallows of his God.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Gain And Gettings.
When others gain much by the present cast,The cobblers' getting time is at the last.
Robert Herrick
Lament
How she would have lovedA party to-day! -Bright-hatted and gloved,With table and trayAnd chairs on the lawnHer smiles would have shoneWith welcomings . . . ButShe is shut, she is shut From friendship's spell In the jailing shell Of her tiny cell.Or she would have reignedAt a dinner to-nightWith ardours unfeigned,And a generous delight;All in her abodeShe'd have freely bestowedOn her guests . . . But alas,She is shut under grass Where no cups flow, Powerless to know That it might be so.And she would have soughtWith a child's eager glanceThe shy snowdrops broughtBy the new year's advance,And peered in the rimeOf Candlemas-timeFor crocuses . . . c...
Thomas Hardy
A Deposition From Love
I was foretold, your rebell sex,Nor love, nor pitty knew;And with what scorn you use to vexPoor hearts that humbly sue;Yet I believd, to crown our pain,Could we the fortress win,The happy Lover sure should gainA Paradise within:I thought Loves plagues, like Dragons sate,Only to fright us at the gate.But I did enter, and enjoyWhat happy Lovers prove;For I could kiss, and sport, and toy,And taste those sweets of love;Which had they but a lasting state,Or if in Celias brestThe force of love might not abate,Jove were too mean a guest.But now her breach of faith, farre moreAfflicts, than did her scorn before.Hard fate! to have been once possest,As victor, of a heartAtchievd with labour, and unrest,<...
Thomas Carew
Doom And She
IThere dwells a mighty pair -Slow, statuesque, intense -Amid the vague Immense:None can their chronicle declare,Nor why they be, nor whence.IIMother of all things made,Matchless in artistry,Unlit with sight is she. -And though her ever well-obeyedVacant of feeling he.IIIThe Matron mildly asks -A throb in every word -"Our clay-made creatures, lord,How fare they in their mortal tasksUpon Earth's bounded bord?IV"The fate of those I bear,Dear lord, pray turn and view,And notify me true;Shapings that eyelessly I dareMaybe I would undo.V"Sometimes from lairs of lifeMethinks I catch a groan,Or multitudinous moan,As though I had...
Insight
On the river of life, as I float along, I see with the spirit's sightThat many a nauseous weed of wrong Has root in a seed of right.For evil is good that has gone astray, And sorrow is only blindness,And the world is always under the sway Of a changeless law of kindness.The commonest error a truth can make Is shouting its sweet voice hoarse,And sin is only the soul's mistake In misdirecting its force.And love, the fairest of all fair things That ever to man descended,Grows rank with nettles and poisonous things Unless it is watched and tended.There could not be anything better than this Old world in the way it began;And though some matters have gone amiss From the great original plan,<...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Sonnet XXV.
Quanto più m' avvicino al giorno estremo.HE CONSOLES HIMSELF THAT HIS LIFE IS ADVANCING TO ITS CLOSE. Near and more near as life's last period draws,Which oft is hurried on by human woe,I see the passing hours more swiftly flow,And all my hopes in disappointment close.And to my heart I say, amidst its throes,"Not long shall we discourse of love below;For this my earthly load, like new-fall'n snowFast melting, soon shall leave us to repose.With it will sink in dust each towering hope,Cherish'd so long within my faithful breast;No more shall we resent, fear, smile, complain:Then shall we clearly trace why some are blest,Through deepest misery raised to Fortune's top,And why so many sighs so oft are heaved in vain."
Francesco Petrarca
Cowper Green.
Now eve's hours hot noon succeed;And day's herald, wing'd with speed,Flush'd with summer's ruddy face,Hies to light some cooler place.Now industry her hand has dropt,And the din of labour's stopt:All is silent, free from care,The welcome boon of night to share.Pleas'd I wander from the town,Pester'd by the selfish clown,Whose talk, though spun the night about,Hogs, cows, and horses spin it out.Far from these, so low, so vain,Glad I wind me down the lane,Where a deeper gloom pervades'Tween the hedges' narrow shades;Where a mimic night-hour spreads,'Neath the ash-grove's meeting heads.Onward then I glad proceed,Where the insect and the weedCourt my eye, as I pursueSomething curious, worthy view:Chiefly, t...
John Clare
The Word Of God
Where the bud has never blown Who for scent is debtor?Where the spirit rests unknown Fatal is the letter.In thee, Jesus, Godhead-stored, All things we inherit,For thou art the very Word And the very Spirit!
George MacDonald
A Bruised Reed Shall He Not Break
I will accept thy will to do and be, Thy hatred and intolerance of sin, Thy will at least to love, that burns within And thirsteth after Me:So will I render fruitful, blessing still, The germs and small beginnings in thy heart, Because thy will cleaves to the better part. - Alas, I cannot will.Dost not thou will, poor soul? Yet I receive The inner unseen longings of the soul, I guide them turning towards Me; I control And charm hearts till they grieve:If thou desire, it yet shall come to pass, Though thou but wish indeed to choose My love; For I have power in earth and heaven above. - I cannot wish, alas!What, neither choose nor wish to choose? and yet I still must strive to win thee and ...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
The Compass, With Variations.[1]
"The Needles have sometimes been fatal to Mariners."Picture of Isle of Wight.I.One close of day - 'twas in the BayOf Naples, bay of glory!While light was hanging crowns of goldOn mountains high and hoary,A gallant bark got under weigh,And with her sails my story.II.For Leghorn she was bound direct,With wine and oil for cargo,Her crew of men some nine or ten,The captain's name was Jago;A good and gallant bark she was,La Donna (call'd) del Lago.III.Bronzed mariners were hers to view,With brown cheeks, clear or muddy,Dark shining eyes, and coal-black hair,Meet heads for painter's study;But midst their tan there stood one man,Whose cheek was fair and ru...
Thomas Hood
Tristram of Lyonesse - VII - The Wifes Vigil
But all that year in Brittany forlorn,More sick at heart with wrath than fear of scornAnd less in love with love than grief, and lessWith grief than pride of spirit and bitterness,Till all the sweet life of her blood was changedAnd all her soul from all her past estrangedAnd all her will with all itself at strifeAnd all her mind at war with all her life,Dwelt the white-handed Iseult, maid and wife,A mourner that for mourning robes had onAnger and doubt and hate of things foregone.For that sweet spirit of old which made her sweetWas parched with blasts of thought as flowers with heatAnd withered as with wind of evil will;Though slower than frosts or fires consume or killThat bleak black wind vexed all her spirit still.As ripples reddening in the...
The Refugee's Haven.
("Vous voilà dans la froide Angleterre.")[Bk. III. xlvii., Jersey, Sept. 19, 1854.]You may doubt I find comfort in EnglandBut, there, 'tis a refuge from dangers!Where a Cromwell dictated to Milton,Republicans ne'er can be strangers!
Victor-Marie Hugo
Old Mother Laidinwool
Old Mother Laidinwool had nigh twelve months been dead.She heard the hops was doing well, an' so popped up her headFor said she: "The lads I've picked with when I was young and fair,They're bound to be at hopping and I'm bound to meet 'em there!"Let me up and goBack to the work I know, Lord!Back to the work I know, Lord!For it is dark where I lie down, My Lord!An' it's dark where I lie down!Old Mother Laidinwool, she give her bones a shake,An' trotted down the churchyard-path as fast as she could make.She met the Parson walking, but she says to him, says she:"Oh, don't let no one trouble for a poor old ghost like me!"'Twas all a warm September an' the hops had flourished grand.She saw the folks get into 'em with stockin's on their hands,<...
Rudyard
Safety On The Shore
What though the sea be calm? Trust to the shore;Ships have been drown'd, where late they danced before.
A Trouble-making Girl
It's certainly late. I must earn something.But they're all going right by today with smug expressions on their faces.They don't want to give me a single good-luck penny.It's a miserable life.If I come home without moneyThe old lady will throw me out.There is hardly anyone on the street any more.I am dead tired and freezing.I was never so miserable in my life.I move around here like a piece of meat.Finally someone comes over:An extremely well-dressed man -But in this life one can't tell muchBy appearances.He's also quite older. (they have more money,Young ones tend to cheat you.)We are face-to-face.I raise my clothes above the knee.I can get away with that.That's the big draw..Like flies to the lightThe guys are ...
Alfred Lichtenstein