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This Is My Task
When the whole world resounds with rude alarmsOf warring arms,When God's good earth, from border unto borderShows man's disorder,Let me not waste my dower of mortal mightIn grieving over wrongs I cannot right.This is my task: amid discordant strifeTo keep a clean sweet centre in my life;And though the human orchestra may bePlaying all out of key -To tune my soul to symphonies above,And sound the note of love.This is my task.When by the minds of men most beauteous FaithSeems doomed to death,And to her place is hoisted, by soul treason,The dullard Reason,Let me not hurry forth with flag unfurledTo proselyte an unbelieving world.This is my task: in depths of unstarred nightOr in diverting and distracting light
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Half Fledged
I feel the stirrings in me of great things.New half-fledged thoughts rise up and beat their wings,And tremble on the margin of their nest,Then flutter back, and hide within my breast.Beholding space, they doubt their untried strength.Beholding men, they fear them. But at length,Grown all too great and active for the heartThat broods them with such tender mother art,Forgetting fear, and men, and all, that hour,Save the impelling consciousness of powerThat stirs within them - they shall soar awayUp to the very portals of the Day.Oh, what exultant rapture thrills me throughWhen I contemplate all those thoughts may do;Like snow-white eagles penetrating space,They may explore full many an unknown place,And build their nests on mountai...
Apples Growing.
Underneath an apple-treeSat a dame of comely seeming,With her work upon her knee,And her great eyes idly dreaming.O'er the harvest-acres bright,Came her husband's din of reaping;Near to her, an infant wightThrough the tangled grass was creeping.On the branches long and high,And the great green apples growing,Rested she her wandering eye,With a retrospective knowing."This," she said, "the shelter is,Where, when gay and raven-headed,I consented to be his,And our willing hearts were wedded."Laughing words and peals of mirth,Long are changed to grave endeavor;Sorrow's winds have swept to earthMany a blossomed hope forever.Thunder-heads have hovered o'er -Storms my path have chilled and shaded;Of the b...
William McKendree Carleton
My Aviary
Through my north window, in the wintry weather, -My airy oriel on the river shore, -I watch the sea-fowl as they flock togetherWhere late the boatman flashed his dripping oar.The gull, high floating, like a sloop unladen,Lets the loose water waft him as it will;The duck, round-breasted as a rustic maiden,Paddles and plunges, busy, busy still.I see the solemn gulls in council sittingOn some broad ice-floe pondering long and late,While overhead the home-bound ducks are flitting,And leave the tardy conclave in debate,Those weighty questions in their breasts revolvingWhose deeper meaning science never learns,Till at some reverend elder's look dissolving,The speechless senate silently adjourns.But when along the waves the shr...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Epode
Not to know vice at all, and keepe true state,Is vertue, and not Fate:Next, to that vertue, is to know vice well,And her black spight expell.Which to effect (since no brest is so sure,Or safe, but shee'll procureSome way of entrance) we must plant a guardOf thoughts to watch, and wardAt th'eye and eare (the ports unto the minde)That no strange, or unkindeObject arrive there, but the heart (our spie)Give knowledge instantly,To wakefull Reason, our affections king:Who (in th'examining)Will quickly taste the reason, and commitClose, the close cause of it.'Tis the securest policie we have,To make our sense our slave.But this true course is not embrac'd by many:By many? scarce by any.For either our affections doe rebell,
Ben Jonson
Finding
From the candles and dumb shadows,And the house where love had died,I stole to the vast moonlightAnd the whispering life outside.But I found no lips of comfort,No home in the moon's light(I, little and lone and frightenedIn the unfriendly night),And no meaning in the voices. . . .Far over the lands and throughThe dark, beyond the ocean,I willed to think of YOU!For I knew, had you been with meI'd have known the words of night,Found peace of heart, gone gladlyIn comfort of that light.Oh! the wind with soft beguilingWould have stolen my thought away;And the night, subtly smiling,Came by the silver way;And the moon came down and danced to me,And her robe was white and flying;And trees bent their heads to me...
Rupert Brooke
Laugh And Be Merry
Laugh and be merry, remember, better the world with a song,Better the world with a blow in the teeth of a wrong.Laugh, for the time is brief, a thread the length of a span.Laugh and be proud to belong to the old proud pageant of man.Laugh and be merry: remember, in olden time.God made Heaven and Earth for joy He took in a rhyme,Made them, and filled them full with the strong red wine ofHis mirthThe splendid joy of the stars: the joy of the earth.So we must laugh and drink from the deep blue cup of the sky,Join the jubilant song of the great stars sweeping by,Laugh, and battle, and work, and drink of the wine outpouredIn the dear green earth, the sign of the joy of the Lord.Laugh and be merry together, like brothers akin,Guesting awhile in...
John Masefield
Gregory Parable, LL.D.
A leafy cot, where no dry rotHad ever been by tenant seen,Where ivy clung and wopses stung,Where beeses hummed and drummed and strummed,Where treeses grew and breezes blewA thatchy roof, quite waterproof,Where countless herds of dicky-birdsBuilt twiggy beds to lay their heads(My mother begs I'll make it "eggs,"But though it's true that dickies doConstruct a nest with chirpy noise,With view to rest their eggy joys,'Neath eavy sheds, yet eggs and beds,As I explain to her in vainFive hundred times, are faulty rhymes).'Neath such a cot, built on a plotOf freehold land, dwelt MARY andHer worthy father, named by meGREGORY PARABLE, LL.D.He knew no guile, this simple man,No worldly wile, or plot, or plan,Except that ...
William Schwenck Gilbert
Prologue[1] To The University Of Oxford, 1681.
The famed Italian Muse, whose rhymes advance Orlando and the Paladins of France, Records, that, when our wit and sense is flown, 'Tis lodged within the circle of the moon, In earthen jars, which one, who thither soar'd, Set to his nose, snuff'd up, and was restored. Whate'er the story be, the moral's true; The wit we lost in town, we find in you. Our poets their fled parts may draw from hence, And fill their windy heads with sober sense. When London votes with Southwark's disagree, Here may they find their long-lost loyalty. Here busy senates, to the old cause inclined, May snuff the votes their fellows left behind: Your country neighbours, when their grain grows dear, May come, and find their last pro...
John Dryden
To My Husband On Our Wedding-Day.
I leave for thee, beloved one, The home and friends of youth,Trusting my hopes, my happiness, Unto thy love and truth;I leave for thee my girlhood's joys, Its sunny, careless mirth,To bear henceforth my share amid The many cares of earth.And yet, no wild regret I give To all that now I leave,The golden dreams, the flow'ry wreaths That I no more may weave;The future that before me lies A dark and unknown sea -Whate'er may be its storms or shoals, I brave them all with thee!I will not tell thee now of love Whose life, ere this, thou'st guessed,And which, like sacred secret, long Was treasured in my breast;Enough that if thy lot be calm, Or storms should o'er it sweep,
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Earths Immortalities
FameSee, as the prettiest graves will do in time,Our poets wants the freshness of its prime;Spite of the sextons browsing horse, the sodsHave struggled thro its binding osier-rods;Headstone and half-sunk footstone lean awry,Wanting the brick-work promised by-and-by;How the minute grey lichens, plate oer plate,Have softened down the crisp-cut name and date!LoveSo, the years done with(Love me for ever!)All March begun with,Aprils endeavour;May-wreaths that bound meJune needs must sever;Now snows fall round me,Quenching Junes fever,(Love me for ever!)
Robert Browning
To My Mother
Once more the Christian festival is near,And I, for whom each day repeats all daysContinuously in ecstasy of praise,Loves birthday lasting through the unending year,Am dreaming how the spirit draws me sheerFrom farthest wandering in the illusive mazeTo that white centre whose creative blazeSpun me aloft and sets me tremulous here.And since all heaven is figured in my heart,As in a dewdrop ere it change and liveThere shines the glory of the eternal dome,Mother, to you the showering meteors dartOf free affection, fancies fugitive,And flare, with increasing heat and splendour, home.
John Le Gay Brereton
From Hawk And Kite (The Rocky Road To Dublin)
Poor, frightened, fluttered, silent one! If we had seen your nest of clay We would have passed it by, and gone, Nor frightened you away. For there are others guard a nest From hawk and kite and lurking foe, And more despair is in their breast Than you can ever know. Shield the nests where'er they be, On the ground or on the tree; Guard the poor from treachery.
James Stephens
Outside The Casement
A Reminiscence Of The WarWe sat in the roomAnd praised her whomWe saw in the portico-shade outside:She could not hearWhat was said of her,But smiled, for its purport we did not hide.Then in was broughtThat message, fraughtWith evil fortune for her out there,Whom we loved that dayMore than any could say,And would fain have fenced from a waft of care.And the question pressedLike lead on each breast,Should we cloak the tidings, or call her and tell?It was too intenseA choice for our sense,As we pondered and watched her we loved so well.Yea, spirit failed usAt what assailed us;How long, while seeing what soon must come,Should we counterfeitNo knowledge of it,And stay the ...
Thomas Hardy
A Story From A Dictionary.
"Sic visum Veneri: cui placet imparesFormas atque animos sub juga aëneaSaevo mittere cum joco."--Hor. i. 33."Love mocks us all"--as Horace said of old:From sheer perversity, that arch-offenderStill yokes unequally the hot and cold,The short and tall, the hardened and the tender;He bids a Socrates espouse a scold,And makes a Hercules forget his gender:--Sic visum Veneri! Lest samples fail,I add a fresh one from the page of BAYLE.It was in Athens that the thing occurred,In the last days of Alexander's rule,While yet in Grove or Portico was heardThe studious murmur of its learned school;--Nay, 'tis one favoured of Minerva's birdWho plays therein the hero (or the fool)With a Megarian, who must then have beenA mai...
Henry Austin Dobson
To This End
And hast Thou help for such as me,Sin-weary, stained, forlorn? "Yea then,--if not for such as thee To what end was I born?"But I have strayed so far away,So oft forgotten Thee. "No smallest thing that thou hast done But was all known to Me."And I have followed other gods,And brought Thy name to scorn. "It was to win thee back from them I wore the crown of thorn."And, spite of all, Thou canst forgive,And still attend my cry? "Dear heart, for this end I did live, To this end did I die."And if I fall away again,And bring Thy Love to shame? "I'll find thee out where'er thou art, ...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
A Better Resurrection
I have no wit, no words, no tears; My heart within me like a stoneIs numbed too much for hopes or fears. Look right, look left, I dwell alone;I lift mine eyes, but dimmed with grief No everlasting hills I see;My life is in the falling leaf: O Jesus, quicken me.My life is like a faded leaf, My harvest dwindled to a husk;Truly my life is void and brief And tedious in the barren dusk;My life is like a frozen thing, No bud nor greenness can I see:Yet rise it shall - the sap of Spring; O Jesus, rise in me.My life is like a broken bowl, A broken bowl that cannot holdOne drop of water for my soul Or cordial in the searching coldCast in the fire the perished thing, Melt and remo...
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Cobbler Keezars Vision
The beaver cut his timberWith patient teeth that day,The minks were fish-wards, and the crowsSurveyors of highway,When Keezar sat on the hillsideUpon his cobblers form,With a pan of coals on either handTo keep his waxed-ends warm.And there, in the golden weather,He stitched and hammered and sung;In the brook he moistened his leather,In the pewter mug his tongue.Well knew the tough old TeutonWho brewed the stoutest ale,And he paid the goodwifes reckoningIn the coin of song and tale.The songs they still are singingWho dress the hills of vine,The tales that haunt the BrockenAnd whisper down the Rhine.Woodsy and wild and lonesome,The swift stream wound away,Through birches and scar...
John Greenleaf Whittier