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Janus
Image of beauty, when I gaze on thee,Trembling I waken to a mystery,How through one door we go to life or deathBy spirit kindled or the sensual breath.Image of beauty, when my way I go;No single joy or sorrow do I know:Elate for freedom leaps the starry power,The life which passes mourns its wasted hour.And, ah, to think how thin the veil that liesBetween the pain of hell and paradise!Where the cool grass my aching head embowersGod sings the lovely carol of the flowers.
George William Russell
My Trust
A picture memory brings to meI look across the years and seeMyself beside my mothers knee.I feel her gentle hand restrainMy selfish moods, and know againA childs blind sense of wrong and pain.But wiser now, a man gray grown,My childhoods needs are better known,My mothers chastening love I own.Gray grown, but in our Fathers sightA child still groping for the lightTo read His works and ways aright.I wait, in His good time to seeThat as my mother dealt with meSo with His children dealeth He.I bow myself beneath His handThat pain itself was wisely plannedI feel, and partly understand.The joy that comes in sorrows guise,The sweet pains of self-sacrifice,I would not have them otherwise...
John Greenleaf Whittier
A Summer Pilgrimage
To kneel before some saintly shrine,To breathe the health of airs divine,Or bathe where sacred rivers flow,The cowled and turbaned pilgrims go.I too, a palmer, take, as theyWith staff and scallop-shell, my wayTo feel, from burdening cares and ills,The strong uplifting of the hills.The years are many since, at first,For dreamed-of wonders all athirst,I saw on Winnipesaukee fallThe shadow of the mountain wall.Ah! where are they who sailed with meThe beautiful island-studded sea?And am I he whose keen surpriseFlashed out from such unclouded eyes?Still, when the sun of summer burns,My longing for the hills returns;And northward, leaving at my backThe warm vale of the Merrimac,I go to meet the winds of morn,...
Wireless
Now to those who search the deep, Gleam of Hope and Kindly Light,Once, before you turn to sleep, Breathe a message through the night.Never doubt that they'll receive it.Send it, once, and you'll believe it.Wrecks that burn against the stars, Decks where death is wallowing green,Snare the breath among their spars, Hear the flickering threads between,Quick, through all the storms that blind them,Quick with words that rush to find them.Think you these aërial wires Whisper more than spirits may?Think you that our strong desires Touch no distance when we pray?Think you that no wings are flying'Twixt the living and the dying?Inland, here, upon your knees, You shall breathe from ur...
Alfred Noyes
The Unattainable.
I yearn for the Unattainable;For a glimpse of a brighter day, When hatred and strife, With their legions rife,Shall forever have passed away; When pain shall cease, And the dawn of peaceCome down from heaven above,And man can meet his fellow-manIn the spirit of Christian Love.I yearn for the Unattainable;For a Voice that may long be still, To compel the mind, As heaven designed,To work the Eternal Will; When the brute that sleeps In the heart's still deepsWill be changed to Pity's dove,And man can meet his fellow-manIn the spirit of Perfect Love.
Charles Sangster
To A Skylark
Ethereal minstrel! pilgrim of the sky!Dost thou despise the earth where cares abound?Or, while the wings aspire, are heart and eyeBoth with thy nest upon the dewy ground?Thy nest which thou canst drop into at will,Those quivering wings composed, that music still!Leave to the nightingale her shady wood;A privacy of glorious light is thine;Whence thou dost pour upon the world a floodOf harmony, with instinct more divine;Type of the wise who soar, but never roam;True to the kindred points of Heaven and Home!
William Wordsworth
Of The True Endeavour
Happy he in whom the honest love of fair endeavour lingers,Who has strength to do his labour, and has pride to do it well,Carve he gems of purest water with an artists cunning fingers,Hew the granite, forge the beam, or make a simple tale to tellHis to feel a glow ecstatic of the mighty exhultationThat arose when out of chaos all the wheeling planets stood.Since when God beheld the wonder, saw the stir of His creationIn the busy scheme of heaven, and He said that it was good,Never man has made with willing hands some thing of true intention,Cut in bone a strange, rude picture to inspire the naked hordes,Or contrived a subtle engine with laborious invention,But has entered straight and freely to the joy that was the LordsThose so blessed have with t...
Edward