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Memorials Of A Tour In Scotland, 1803 III. Thoughts Suggested The Day Following, On The Banks Of Nith, Near The Poet's Residence
Too frail to keep the lofty vowThat must have followed when his browWas wreathed, "The Vision" tells us howWith holly spray,He faltered, drifted to and fro,And passed away.Well might such thoughts, dear Sister, throngOur minds when, lingering all too long,Over the grave of Burns we hungIn social griefIndulged as if it were a wrongTo seek relief.But, leaving each unquiet themeWhere gentlest judgments may misdeem,And prompt to welcome every gleamOf good and fair,Let us beside this limpid StreamBreathe hopeful air.Enough of sorrow, wreck, and blight;Think rather of those moments brightWhen to the consciousness of rightHis course was true,When Wisdom prospered in his sightAnd virtue grew.<...
William Wordsworth
The Two Men
There were two youths of equal age,Wit, station, strength, and parentage;They studied at the selfsame schools,And shaped their thoughts by common rules.One pondered on the life of man,His hopes, his ending, and beganTo rate the Market's sordid warAs something scarce worth living for."I'll brace to higher aims," said he,"I'll further Truth and Purity;Thereby to mend the mortal lotAnd sweeten sorrow. Thrive I not,"Winning their hearts, my kind will giveEnough that I may lowly live,And house my Love in some dim dell,For pleasing them and theirs so well."Idly attired, with features wan,In secret swift he laboured on:Such press of power had brought much goldApplied to things of meaner mould.Somet...
Thomas Hardy
We Thank Thee, Lord
We thank Thee, Lord,That of Thy tender grace,In our distressThou hast not left us wholly comfortless.We thank Thee, Lord,That of Thy wondrous might,Into our nightThou hast sent down the glory of the Light.We thank Thee, Lord,That all Thy wondrous ways,Through all our days,Are Wisdom, Right, and Ceaseless Tenderness.
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
Transition
A little while to walk with thee, dear child;To lean on thee my weak and weary head;Then evening comes: the winter sky is wild,The leafless trees are black, the leaves long dead.A little while to hold thee and to stand,By harvest-fields of bending golden corn;Then the predestined silence, and thine hand,Lost in the night, long and weary and forlorn.A little while to love thee, scarcely timeTo love thee well enough; then time to part,To fare through wintry fields alone and climbThe frozen hills, not knowing where thou art.Short summer-time and then, my heart's desire,The winter and the darkness: one by oneThe roses fall, the pale roses expireBeneath the slow decadence of the sun.
Ernest Christopher Dowson
A Choice
They please me not--these solemn songsThat hint of sermons covered up.'Tis true the world should heed its wrongs,But in a poem let me sup,Not simples brewed to cure or easeHumanity's confessed disease,But the spirit-wine of a singing line,Or a dew-drop in a honey cup!
Paul Laurence Dunbar
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXXV.
Gli angeli eletti e l' anime beate.HE DIRECTS ALL HIS THOUGHTS TO HEAVEN, WHERE LAURA AWAITS AND BECKONS HIM. The chosen angels, and the spirits blest,Celestial tenants, on that glorious dayMy Lady join'd them, throng'd in bright arrayAround her, with amaze and awe imprest."What splendour, what new beauty stands confestUnto our sight?"--among themselves they say;"No soul, in this vile age, from sinful clayTo our high realms has risen so fair a guest."Delighted to have changed her mortal state,She ranks amid the purest of her kind;And ever and anon she looks behind,To mark my progress and my coming wait;Now my whole thought, my wish to heaven I cast;'Tis Laura's voice I hear, and hence she bids me haste.NOTT.
Francesco Petrarca
The White Island: Or Place Of The Blest
In this world, the Isle of Dreams,While we sit by sorrow's streams,Tears and terrors are our themes,Reciting:But when once from hence we fly,More and more approaching nighUnto young eternity,UnitingIn that whiter Island, whereThings are evermore sincere:Candour here, and lustre there,Delighting:There no monstrous fancies shallOut of hell an horror call,To create, or cause at allAffrighting.There, in calm and cooling sleep,We our eyes shall never steep,But eternal watch shall keep,AttendingPleasures such as shall pursueMe immortalized, and you;And fresh joys, as never tooHave ending.
Robert Herrick
Nightfall
IEve goes slowlyDancing lightlyClad with shadow up the hills;Birds their singingCease at last, and silenceFalling like fine rain the valley fills.Not a bat's cryStirs the stillnessPerfect as broad water sleeping,Not a moth's wingsFlit in the gathering darkness,Not a mouselike moonray ev'n comes creeping.Then a light shinesFrom the casement,Wreathed with jasmine boughs and stars,Palely goldenAs the late eve's primrose,Glimmers through green leafy prison bars.IIOnly joy nowCome in silence,Come before your look's forgot;Come and hearkenWhile the lonely shadowBroadens on the hill and then is not.Now the hour is,Here the plac...
John Frederick Freeman
How In All Wonder Columbus Got Over
How in all wonder Columbus got over,That is a marvel to me, I protest,Cabot, and Raleigh too, that well-read rover,Frobisher, Dampier, Drake and the rest.Bad enough all the same,For them that after came,But, in great Heavens name,How he should ever thinkThat on the other brinkOf this huge waste terra firma should be,Is a pure wonder, I must say, to me.How a man ever should hope to get thither,Ee'n if he knew of there being another side;But to suppose he should come any whither,Sailing right on into chaos untried,Across the whole ocean,In spite of the motion,To stick to the notionThat in some nook or bendOf a sea without endHe should find North and South Amerikee,Was a pure madness as it seems to me.
Arthur Hugh Clough
A Reverie.
O, tomb of the pastWhere buried hopes lie,In my visions I seeThy phantoms pass by!A form, long departed, Before me appears;A sweet voice, long silent, Again greets my ears.Fond memory dwells On the things that have been;And my eyes calmly gaze On a long vanished scene;A scene such as memory Stores deep in the breast,Which only appears In a season of rest.Once more we wander, Her fair hand in mine;Once more her promise, "I'll ever be thine";Once more the parting, The shroud, and the pall,The sods' hollow thump As they coffinward fall.The reverie ends-- All the fancies have flown;And my sad, lonely heart, Now seems doubly alone;...
Alfred Castner King
Act V
[Midnight.]First, two white arms that held him very close,And ever closer as he drew him backReluctantly, the loose gold-colored hairA thousand delicate fibres reaching outStill to detain him; then some twenty stepsOf iron staircase winding round and down,And ending in a narrow gallery hungWith Gobelin tapestries--AndromedaRescued by Perseus, and the sleek DianaWith her nymphs bathing; at the farther endA door that gave upon a starlit groveOf citron and clipt palm-trees; then a pathAs bleached as moonlight, with the shadow of leavesStamped black upon it; next a vine-clad lengthOf solid masonry; and last of allA Gothic archway packed with night, and then--A sudden gleaming dagger through his heart.
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
To My Father.
I.Take of the first fruits, Father, of thy care, Wrapped in the fresh leaves of my gratitude Late waked for early gifts ill understood;Claiming in all my harvests rightful share,Whether with song that mounts the joyful air I praise my God; or, in yet deeper mood, Sit dumb because I know a speechless good,Needing no voice, but all the soul for prayer. Thou hast been faithful to my highest need;And I, thy debtor, ever, evermore,Shall never feel the grateful burden sore. Yet most I thank thee, not for any deed, But for the sense thy living self did breedThat fatherhood is at the great world's core.II.All childhood, reverence clothed thee, undefined, As for some being of another race; A...
George MacDonald
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.
Sumner
O Mother State! the winds of MarchBlew chill o'er Auburn's Field of God,Where, slow, beneath a leaden archOf sky, thy mourning children trod.And now, with all thy woods in leaf,Thy fields in flower, beside thy deadThou sittest, in thy robes of grief,A Rachel yet uncomforted!And once again the organ swells,Once more the flag is half-way hung,And yet again the mournful bellsIn all thy steeple-towers are rung.And I, obedient to thy will,Have come a simple wreath to lay,Superfluous, on a grave that stillIs sweet with all the flowers of May.I take, with awe, the task assigned;It may be that my friend might miss,In his new sphere of heart and mind,Some token from my band in this.By many a tender m...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Lock Of Hair.
It is in sooth a lovely tress, Still curled in many a ring,As glossy as the plumes that dress The raven's jetty wing.And the broad and soul-illumined brow, Above whose arch it grew,Was like the stainless mountain snow, In its purity of hue.I mind the time 'twas given to me, The night, the hour, the spot;And the eye that pleaded silently, "Forget the giver not."Oh! myriads of stars, on high, Were smiling sweetly fair,But none was lovely as the eye That shone beside me there!Above our heads an ancient oak Its strong, wide arms held out,And from its roots a fountain broke, With a tiny laughing shout;And the fairy people of the wild Were bending to their rest,As trusti...
George W. Sands
The Escape
We watched you building, stone by stone,The well-washed cells and well-washed gravesWe shall inhabit but not ownWhen Britons ever shall be slaves;The water's waiting in the trough,The tame oats sown are portioned free,There is Enough, and just Enough,And all is ready now but we.But you have not caught us yet, my lords,You have us still to get.A sorry army you'd have got,Its flags are rags that float and rot,Its drums are empty pan and pot,Its baggage is--an empty cot;But you have not caught us yet.A little; and we might have slippedWhen came your rumours and your salesAnd the foiled rich men, feeble-lipped,Said and unsaid their sorry tales;Great God! It needs a bolder browTo keep ten sheep insi...
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
Elegiac Stanzas Suggested By A Picture Of Peele Castle In A Storm, Painted By Sir George Beaumont
I was thy neighbour once, thou rugged Pile!Four summer weeks I dwelt in sight of thee:I saw thee every day; and all the whileThy Form was sleeping on a glassy sea.So pure the sky, so quiet was the air!So like, so very like, was day to day!Wheneer I looked, thy Image still was there;It trembled, but it never passed away.How perfect was the calm! it seemed no sleep;No mood, which season takes away, or brings:I could have fancied that the mighty DeepWas even the gentlest of all gentle things.Ah! then , if mine had been the Painters hand,To express what then I saw; and add the gleam,The light that never was, on sea or land,The consecration, and the Poets dream;I would have planted thee, thou hoary PileAmid a world h...
Then And Now
A little time agone, a few brief years,And there was peace within our beauteous borders;Peace, and a prosperous people, and no fearsOf war and its disorders.Pleasure was ruling goddess of our land; with her attendant MirthShe led a jubilant, joy-seeking band about the riant earth.Do you recall those laughing days, my Brothers,And those long nights that trespassed on the dawn?Those throngs of idle dancing maids and mothersWho lilted on and on -Card mad, wine flushed, bejewelled and half stripped,Yet women whose sweet mouth had never sippedFrom sin's black chalice - women good at heartWho, in the winding maze of pleasure's mart,Had lost the sun-kissed way to wholesome pleasures of an earlier day.Oh! You remember them! You filled their...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox