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The Caterpillar
Under this loop of honeysuckle,A creeping, coloured caterpillar,I gnaw the fresh green hawthorn spray,I nibble it leaf by leaf away.Down beneath grow dandelions,Daisies, old-man's-looking-glasses;Rooks flap croaking across the lane.I eat and swallow and eat again.Here come raindrops helter-skelter;I munch and nibble unregarding:Hawthorn leaves are juicy and firm.I'll mind my business: I'm a good worm.When I'm old, tired, melancholy,I'll build a leaf-green mausoleumClose by, here on this lovely spray,And die and dream the ages away.Some say worms win resurrection,With white wings beating flitter-flutter,But wings or a sound sleep, why should I care?Either way I'll miss my share.Under this loo...
Robert von Ranke Graves
Sonnet - Dramatis Personæ
Eyes, calm beside thee, (Lady, couldst thou know!)May turn away thick with fast-gathering tears:I glance not where all gaze: thrilling and lowTheir passionate praises reach thee my cheek wearsAlone no wonder when thou passest by;Thy tremulous lids bent and suffused replyTo the irrepressible homage which doth glowOn every lip but mine: if in thine earsTheir accents linger and thou dost recallMe as I stood, still, guarded, very pale,Beside each votarist whose lighted browWore worship like an aureole, Oer them allMy beauty, thou wilt murmur, did prevailSave that one only:Lady, couldst thou know!
Robert Browning
The Blossoms On The Trees.
Blossoms crimson, white, or blue, Purple, pink, and every hue, From sunny skies, to tintings drowned In dusky drops of dew, I praise you all, wherever found, And love you through and through; - But, Blossoms On The Trees, With your breath upon the breeze, There's nothing all the world around As half as sweet as you! Could the rhymer only wring All the sweetness to the lees Of all the kisses clustering In juicy Used-to-bes, To dip his rhymes therein and sing The blossoms on the trees, - "O Blossoms on the Trees," He would twitter, trill and coo, "However sweet, such songs as these Are not as sweet as you...
James Whitcomb Riley
The Fool Rings His Bells
Come, Death, I'd have a word with thee;And thou, poor Innocency;And Love - a lad with broken wing;And Pity, too:The Fool shall sing to you,As Fools will sing.Aye, music hath small sense.And a time's soon told,And Earth is old,And my poor wits are dense;Yet I have secrets, - dark, my dear,To breathe you all: Come near.And lest some hideous listener tells,I'll ring the bells.They're all at war!Yes, yes, their bodies go'Neath burning sun and icy starTo chaunted songs of woe,Dragging cold cannon through a mireOf rain and blood and spouting fire,The new moon glinting hard on eyesWide with insanities!Hush!... I use wordsI hardly know the meaning of;And the mute birdsAre glancing ...
Walter De La Mare
To The Cuckoo
O blithe New-comer! I have heard,I hear thee and rejoice.O Cuckoo! Shall I call thee Bird,Or but a wandering Voice?While I am lying on the grassThy twofold shout I hear,From hill to hill it seems to pass,At once far off, and near.Though babbling only to the Vale,Of Sunshine and of flowers,Thou bringest unto me a taleOf visionary hours.Thrice welcome, darling of the Spring!Even yet thou art to meNo bird, but an invisible thing,A voice, a mystery;The same whom in my school-boy daysI listened to; that CryWhich made me look a thousand waysIn bush, and tree, and sky.To seek thee did I often roveThrough woods and on the green;And thou wert still a hope, a love;Still longed for, n...
William Wordsworth
Tortoise Family Connections
On he goes, the little one, Bud of the universe, Pediment of life. Setting off somewhere, apparently. Whither away, brisk egg? His mother deposited him on the soil as if he were no more than droppings, And now he scuffles tinily past her as if she were an old rusty tin. A mere obstacle, He veers round the slow great mound of her. Tortoises always foresee obstacles. It is no use my saying to him in an emotional voice: "This is your Mother, she laid you when you were an egg." He does not even trouble to answer: "Woman, what have I to do with thee?" He wearily looks the other way, And she even more wearily looks anot...
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
The Passer-By
L. H. Recalls Her RomanceHe used to pass, well-trimmed and brushed,My window every day,And when I smiled on him he blushed,That youth, quite as a girl might; aye,In the shyest way.Thus often did he pass hereby,That youth of bounding gait,Until the one who blushed was I,And he became, as here I sate,My joy, my fate.And now he passes by no more,That youth I loved too true!I grieve should he, as here of yore,Pass elsewhere, seated in his view,Some maiden new!If such should be, alas for her!He'll make her feel him dear,Become her daily comforter,Then tire him of her beauteous gear,And disappear!
Thomas Hardy
Sandys Ghost ; A Proper Ballad On The New Ovid's Metamorphosis
Ye Lords and Commons, Men of Wit,And Pleasure about Town;Read this ere you translate one BitOf Books of high Renown.Beware of Latin Authors all!Nor think your Verses Sterling,Though with a Golden Pen you scrawl,And scribble in a Berlin:For not the Desk with silver Nails,Nor Bureau of Expense,Nor standish well japann'd avails,To writing of good Sense.Hear how a Ghost in dead of Night,With saucer Eyes of Fire,In woeful wise did sore affrightA Wit and courtly 'Squire.Rare Imp and Phoebus, hopeful YouthLike Puppy tame that usesTo fetch and carry, in his Mouth,The Works of all the Muses.Ah! why did he write Poetry,That hereto was so civil;And sell his soul for vanity,To Rhyming ...
Alexander Pope
To The Torrent At The Devil's Bridge, North Wales, 1824
How art thou named? In search of what strange landFrom what huge height, descending? Can such forceOf waters issue from a British source,Or hath not Pindus fed thee, where the bandOf Patriots scoop their freedom out, with handDesperate as thine? Or come the incessant shocksFrom that young Stream, that smites the throbbing rocksOf Viamala? There I seem to stand,As in life's morn; permitted to behold,From the dread chasm, woods climbing above woods,In pomp that fades not; everlasting snows;And skies that ne'er relinquish their repose;Such power possess the family of floodsOver the minds of Poets, young or old!
Prologue To Tyrannic Love.
Self-love, which, never rightly understood, Makes poets still conclude their plays are good, And malice in all critics reigns so high, That for small errors, they whole plays decry; So that to see this fondness, and that spite, You'd think that none but madmen judge or write, Therefore our poet, as he thinks not fit To impose upon you what he writes for wit; So hopes, that, leaving you your censures free, You equal judges of the whole will be: They judge but half, who only faults will see. Poets, like lovers, should be bold and dare, They spoil their business with an over care; And he, who servilely creeps after sense, Is safe, but ne'er will reach an excellence. Hence 'tis, our poet, in his conjuring,...
John Dryden
In the Foam.
Life swelleth in a whitening wave,And dasheth thee and me apart.I sweep out seaward: - be thou brave.And reach the shore, Sweetheart.Beat back the backward-thrusting sea.Thy weak white arm his blows may thwart,Christ buffet the wild surge for theeTill thou'rt ashore, Sweetheart.Ah, now thy face grows dim apace,And seems of yon white foam a part.Canst hear me through the water-bass,Cry: "To the Shore, Sweetheart?"Now Christ thee soothe upon the Shore,My lissome-armed sea-Britomart.I sweep out seaward, never moreTo find the Shore, Sweetheart.Prattville, Alabama, December, 1867.
Sidney Lanier
Written In A Cemetery.
Stay yet awhile, oh flowers!--oh wandering grasses, And creeping ferns, and climbing, clinging vines;--Bend down and cover with lush odorous masses My darling's couch, where he in sleep reclines.Stay yet awhile;--let not the chill October Plant spires of glinting frost about his bed;Nor shower her faded leaves, so brown and sober, Among the tuberoses above his head.I would have all things fair, and sweet, and tender,-- The daisy's pearl, the cowslip's shield of snow,And fragrant hyacinths in purple splendour, About my darling's grassy couch to grow.Oh birds!--small pilgrims of the summer weather, Come hither, for my darling loved ye well;--Here floats the thistle down for you to gather, And bearded grasse...
Kate Seymour Maclean
Sunset Clouds.
Low clouds, the lightning veins and cleaves,Torn from the forest of the storm,Sweep westward like enormous leavesO'er field and farm.And in the west, on burning skies,Their wrath is quenched, their hate is hushed,And deep their drifted thunder liesWith splendor flushed.The black turns gray, the gray turns gold;And, seaed in deeps of radiant rose,Summits of fire, manifoldThey now repose.What dreams they bring! what thoughts reveal!That have their source in loveliness,Through which the doubts I often feelGrow less and less.Through which I see that other night,That cloud called Death, transformed of LoveTo flame, and pointing with its lightTo life above.
Madison Julius Cawein
Approach Of Summer
How shall I meet thee, Summer, wont to fillMy heart with gladness, when thy pleasant tideFirst came, and on the Coomb's romantic sideWas heard the distant cuckoo's hollow bill!Fresh flowers shall fringe the margin of the stream,As with the songs of joyance and of hopeThe hedge-rows shall ring loud, and on the slopeThe poplars sparkle in the passing beam;The shrubs and laurels that I loved to tend,Thinking their May-tide fragrance would delight,With many a peaceful charm, thee, my poor friend,Shall put forth their green shoots, and cheer the sight!But I shall mark their hues with sadder eyes,And weep the more for one who in the cold earth lies!
William Lisle Bowles
On Old Cape Ann
I.AnnisquamOld days, old ways, old homes beside the sea;Old gardens with old-fashioned flowers aflame,Poppy, petunia, and many a nameOf many a flower of fragrant pedigree.Old hills that glow with blue- and barberry,And rocks and pines that stand on guard, the same,Immutable, as when the Pilgrim came,And here laid firm foundations of the Free.The sunlight makes the dim dunes hills of snow,And every vessel's sail a twinkling wingGlancing the violet ocean far away:The world is full of color and of glow;A mighty canvas whereon God doth flingThe flawless picture of a perfect day.II."The Highlands, " AnnisquamHere, from the heights, among the rocks and pines,The sea and shore seem some tremendous page
Dusk
Dusk wraps the village in its dim caress;Each chimney's vapour, like a thin grey rod,Mounting aloft through miles of quietness, Pillars the skies of God.Far up they break or seem to break their line,Mingling their nebulous crests that bow and nodUnder the light of those fierce stars that shine Out of the calm of God.Only in clouds and dreams I felt those soulsIn the abyss, each fire hid in its clod,From which in clouds and dreams the spirit rolls Into the vast of God.
George William Russell
Tenebris Interlucentem
A linnet who had lost her waySang on a blackened bough in Hell,Till all the ghosts remembered wellThe trees, the wind, the golden day.At last they knew that they had diedWhen they heard music in that land,And someone there stole forth a handTo draw a brother to his side.
James Elroy Flecker
The Garden
Many things the garden shows,And pleased I strayFrom tree to treeWatching the white pear-bloom,Bee-infested quince or plum.I could walk days, years, awayTill the slow ripening, secular treeHad reached its fruiting-time,Nor think it long.Solar insect on the wingIn the garden murmuring,Soothing with thy summer hornSwains by winter pinched and worn.
Ralph Waldo Emerson