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To The World
A farewell for a Gentlewoman, vertuous and nobleFalse world, good-night, since thou hast broughtThat houre upon my morne of age,Hence-forth I quit thee from my thought,My part is ended on thy stage.Doe not once hope, that thou canst temptA spirit so resolv'd to treadUpon thy throat, and live exemptFrom all the nets that thou canst spread.I know thy formes are studied arts,Thy subtill wayes, be narrow straits;Thy curtesie but sudden starts,And what thou call'st thy gifts are baits.I know too, though thou strut, and paint,Yet art thou both shrunke up, and old;That onely fooles make thee a saint,And all thy good is to be sold.I know thou whole art but a shopOf toyes, and trifles, traps, and snares,To take the weake, or make...
Ben Jonson
Imagination.
With the old gods thou walkest, 'mid the leafAnd bloom of ancient morning and of light;Thou die'st with Christ, and with the nailed thiefThat dies upon his left hand and his right.Yea, thou descendest into hell, and thenTo the last heaven dost take thy road sublime;Thine hostelries the secret souls of men,Thy servants all the fleeting things of time!
Margaret Steele Anderson
Mementos.
Arranging long-locked drawers and shelvesOf cabinets, shut up for years,What a strange task we've set ourselves!How still the lonely room appears!How strange this mass of ancient treasures,Mementos of past pains and pleasures;These volumes, clasped with costly stone,With print all faded, gilding gone;These fans of leaves from Indian trees,These crimson shells, from Indian seas,These tiny portraits, set in rings,Once, doubtless, deemed such precious things;Keepsakes bestowed by Love on Faith,And worn till the receiver's death,Now stored with cameos, china, shells,In this old closet's dusty cells.I scarcely think, for ten long years,A hand has touched these relics old;And, coating each, slow-formed, appearsThe growth...
Charlotte Bronte
To Laura In Death. Canzone II.
Amor, se vuoi ch' i' torni al giogo antico.UNLESS LOVE CAN RESTORE HER TO LIFE, HE WILL NEVER AGAIN BE HIS SLAVE. If thou wouldst have me, Love, thy slave again,One other proof, miraculous and new,Must yet be wrought by you,Ere, conquer'd, I resume my ancient chain--Lift my dear love from earth which hides her now,For whose sad loss thus beggar'd I remain;Once more with warmth endowThat wise chaste heart where wont my life to dwell;And if as some divine, thy influence so,From highest heaven unto the depths of hell,Prevail in sooth--for what its scope below,'Mid us of common race,Methinks each gentle breast may answer well--Rob Death of his late triumph, and replaceThy conquering ensign in her lovely face!...
Francesco Petrarca
Finis
It seemed that from the west The live red flame of sunset, Eating the dead blue sky And cold insensate peaks, Was loosened slowly, and fell. Above it, a few red stars Burned down like low candle-flames Into the gaunt black sockets Of the chill insensible mountains. But in the ascendant skies (Cloudless, like some vast corpse Unfeatured, cerementless) Succeeded nor star nor planet. It may have been that black, Pulseless, dead stars arose And crossed as of old the heavens. But came no living orb, Nor comet seeming the ghost, Homeless, of an outcast world, Seeking its former place That is no more nor shall be In all the Cosmos again. Null, bla...
Clark Ashton Smith
By The Earth's Corpse
I"O Lord, why grievest Thou? -Since Life has ceased to beUpon this globe, now coldAs lunar land and sea,And humankind, and fowl, and furAre gone eternally,All is the same to Thee as ereThey knew mortality."II"O Time," replied the Lord,"Thou read'st me ill, I ween;Were all THE SAME, I should not grieveAt that late earthly scene,Now blestly past - though planned by meWith interest close and keen! -Nay, nay: things now are NOT the sameAs they have earlier been.III"Written indeliblyOn my eternal mindAre all the wrongs enduredBy Earth's poor patient kind,Which my too oft unconscious handLet enter undesigned.No god can cancel deeds foredone,Or thy old coils unwi...
Thomas Hardy
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XLVIII.
Tempo era omai da trovar pace o tregua.HE CONSOLES HIMSELF WITH THE BELIEF THAT SHE NOW AT LAST SYMPATHISES WITH HIM. 'Twas time at last from so long war to findSome peace or truce, and, haply, both were nigh,But Death their welcome feet has turn'd behind,Who levels all distinctions, low as high;And as a cloud dissolves before the wind,So she, who led me with her lustrous eye,Whom ever I pursue with faithful mind,Her fair life briefly ending, sought the sky.Had she but stay'd, as I grew changed and oldHer tone had changed, and no distrust had beenTo parley with me on my cherish'd ill:With what frank sighs and fond I then had toldMy lifelong toils, which now from heaven, I ween,She sees, and with me sympathises still....
Dirge. (Brisbane.) "A Little Soldier Of The Army Of The Night."
Bury him without a word! No appeal to death;Only the call of the bird And the blind spring's breath.Nature slays ten, yet the one Reaches but to a partOf what's to be done, to be sung. Keep we a proud heart!Let us not glose her waste With lies and dreams;Fawn on her wanton haste, Say it but seems.Comrades, with faces unstirred, Scorning grief's dole,Though with him, with him lies interred Our heart and soul,Bury him without a word! No appeal to death;Only the call of the bird And the blind spring's breath.
Francis William Lauderdale Adams
Pestilence.
High on a throne of noisome ooze and heat,'Mid rotting trees of bayou and lagoon,Ghastly she sits beneath the skeleton moon,A tawny horror coiling at her feetFever, whose eyes keep watching, serpent-like,Until her eyes shall bid him rise and strike.
Madison Julius Cawein
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LI.
I dì miei più leggier che nessun cervo.HIS PASSION FINDS ITS ONLY CONSOLATION IN CONTEMPLATING HER IN HEAVEN. My days more swiftly than the forest hindHave fled like shadows, and no pleasure seenSave for a moment, and few hours serene,Whose bitter-sweet I treasure in true mind.O wretched world, unstable, wayward! BlindWhose hopes in thee alone have centred been;In thee my heart was captived by her mienWho bore it with her when she earth rejoin'd:Her better spirit, now a deathless flower,And in the highest heaven that still shall be,Each day inflames me with its beauties more.Alone, though frailer, fonder every hour,I muse on her--Now what, and where is she,And what the lovely veil which here she wore?MACGREGOR....
Against Suspicion; Ode V
Oh fly! 'tis dire Suspicion's mien;And, meditating plagues unseen,The sorceress hither bends:Behold her torch in gall imbrued:Beholdher garment drops with bloodOf lovers and of friends.Fly far! Already in your eyesI see a pale suffusion rise;And soon through every vein,Soon will her secret venom spread,And all your heart and all your headImbibe the potent stain.Then many a demon will she raiseTo vex your sleep, to haunt your ways;While gleams of lost delightRaise the dark tempest of the brain,As lightning shines across the mainThrough whirlwinds and through night.No more can faith or candor move;But each ingenuous deed of love,Which reason would applaud,Now, smiling o'er her dark distress,Fancy malignant str...
Mark Akenside
A Vision Of The Sea.
'Tis the terror of tempest. The rags of the sailAre flickering in ribbons within the fierce gale:From the stark night of vapours the dim rain is driven,And when lightning is loosed, like a deluge from Heaven,She sees the black trunks of the waterspouts spinAnd bend, as if Heaven was ruining in,Which they seemed to sustain with their terrible massAs if ocean had sunk from beneath them: they passTo their graves in the deep with an earthquake of sound,And the waves and the thunders, made silent around,Leave the wind to its echo. The vessel, now tossedThrough the low-trailing rack of the tempest, is lostIn the skirts of the thunder-cloud: now down the sweepOf the wind-cloven wave to the chasm of the deepIt sinks, and the walls of the watery valeWhose dep...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Dream Of Dread.
I have lain for an hour or twainAwake, and the tempest is beatingOn the roof, and the sleet on the pane,And the winds are three enemies meeting;And I listen and hear it again,My name, in the silence, repeating.Then dumbness of death that must slay,Till the midnight is burst like a bubble;And out of the darkness a ray'T is she! the all beautiful double;With a face like the breaking of day,Eyes dark with the magic of trouble.I move not; she lies with her lipsAt mine; and I feel she is drawingMy life from my heart to their tips,My heart where the horror is gnawing;My life in a thousand slow sips,My flesh with her sorcery awing.She binds me with merciless eyes;She drinks of my blood, and I hear itDrain up w...
On The Death Of W. C.
Thou arrant robber, Death!Couldst thou not findSome lesser one than heTo rob of breath,--Some poorer mindThy prey to be?His mind was like the sky,--As pure and free;His heart was broad and openAs the sea.His soul shone purely through his face,And Love made him her dwelling place.Not less the scholar than the friend,Not less a friend than man;The manly life did shorter endBecause so broad it ran.Weep not for him, unhappy Muse!His merits found a grander useSome other-where. God wisely seesThe place that needs his qualities.Weep not for him, for when Death lowersO'er youth's ambrosia-scented bowersHe only plucks the choicest flowers.
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Life.
Oh Life! I breathe thee in the breeze,I feel thee bounding in my veins,I see thee in these stretching trees,These flowers, this still rock's mossy stains.This stream of odours flowing byFrom clover-field and clumps of pine,This music, thrilling all the sky,From all the morning birds, are thine.Thou fill'st with joy this little one,That leaps and shouts beside me here,Where Isar's clay-white rivulets runThrough the dark woods like frighted deer.Ah! must thy mighty breath, that wakesInsect and bird, and flower and tree,From the low trodden dust, and makesTheir daily gladness, pass from me,Pass, pulse by pulse, till o'er the groundThese limbs, now strong, shall creep with pain,And this fair world of sight and so...
William Cullen Bryant
Lament XIII
Ursula, winsome child, I would that IHad never had thee if thou wert to dieSo early. For with lasting grief I pay,Now thou hast left me, for thy sweet, brief stay.Thou didst delude me like a dream by nightThat shines in golden fullness on the sight,Then vanishes, and to the man awakeLeaves only of its treasures much heartbreak.So hast thou done to me, beloved cheat:Thou madest with high hope my heart to beatAnd then didst hurry off and bear with theeAll of the gladness thou once gavest me.'Tis half my heart I lack through this thy takingAnd what is left is good for naught but aching.Stonecutters, set me up a carven stoneAnd let this sad inscription run thereon:Ursula Kochanowski lieth here,Her father's sorrow and her father's dear;
Jan Kochanowski
Love And Madness
Hark! from the battlements of yonder towerThe solemn bell has tolled the midnight hour!Roused from drear visions of distempered sleep,Poor Broderick wakesin solitude to weep!"Cease, Memory; cease (the friendless mourner cried)To probe the bosom too severely tried!Oh! ever cease, my pensive thoughts, to strayThrough tie bright fields of Fortune's better day,When youthful Hope, the music of the mind,Tuned all its charms, and Errington was kind!Yet, can I cease, while glows this trembling frame,In sighs to speak thy melancholy name!I hear thy spirit wail in every storm!In midniglit shades I view thy passing form!Pale as in that sad hour when doomed to feel!Deep in thy perjured heart, the bloody steel!Demons of Vengeance! ye, ...
Thomas Campbell
Podas Okus
Am I waking? Was I sleeping?Dearest, are you watching yet?Traces on your cheeks of weepingGlitter, Tis in vain you fret;Drifting ever! drifting onward!In the glass the bright sand runsSteadily and slowly downward;Hushed are all the Myrmidons.Has Automedon been banishdFrom his post beside my bed?Where has Agamemnon vanished?Where is warlike Diomed?Where is Nestor? where Ulysses?Menelaus, where is he?Call them not, more dear your kissesThan their prosings are to me.Daylight fades and night must follow,Low, where sea and sky combine,Droops the orb of great Apollo,Hostile god to me and mine.Through the tents wide entrance streaming,In a flood of glory rare,Glides the golden sunset, gleamingOn...
Adam Lindsay Gordon