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Sonnet, To Expression.
Expression, child of soul! I fondly trace Thy strong enchantments, when the poet's lyre, The painter's pencil catch thy sacred fire,And beauty wakes for thee her touching grace -But from this frighted glance thy form avert When horrors check thy tear, thy struggling sigh, When frenzy rolls in thy impassion'd eye,Or guilt sits heavy on thy lab'ring heart -Nor ever let my shudd'ring fancy bear The wasting groan, or view the pallid look Of him[A] the Muses lov'd - when hope forsookHis spirit, vainly to the Muses dear!For charm'd with heav'nly song, this bleeding breast,Mourns the blest power of verse could give despair no rest. -[A] Chatterton.
Helen Maria Williams
Submission.
O Lord, my best desire fulfil,And help me to resignLife, health, and comfort to thy will,And make thy pleasure mine.Why should I shrink at thy command,Whose love forbids my fears?Or tremble at the gracious handThat wipes away my tears?No, let me rather freely yieldWhat most I prize to thee;Who never hast a good withheld,Or wilt withhold, from me.Thy favour, all my journey through,Thou art engaged to grant;What else I want, or think I do,Tis better still to want.Wisdom and mercy guide my way,Shall I resist them both?A poor blind creature of a day,And crushd before the moth!But ah! my inward spirit cries,Still bind me to thy sway;Else the next cloud ...
William Cowper
Paul Verlaine
You would have understood me, had you waited;I could have loved you, dear! as well as he:Had we not been impatient, dear! and fatedAlways to disagree.What is the use of speech? Silence were fitter:Lest we should still be wishing things unsaid.Though all the words we ever spake were bitter,Shall I reproach you dead?Nay, let this earth, your portion, likewise coverAll the old anger, setting us apart:Always, in all, in truth was I your lover;Always, I held your heart.I have met other women who were tender,As you were cold, dear! with a grace as rare.Think you, I turned to them, or made surrender,I who had found you fair?Had we been patient, dear! ah, had you waited,I had fought death for you, better than he:But ...
Ernest Christopher Dowson
Roses Can Wound
Roses can wound,But not from having thorns they do most harm;Often the night gives, starry-sheen or moon'd, Deep in the soul alarm.And it hath been deep within my heart like fear, Girl, when you are near. The mist of sense,Wherein the soul goes shielded, can divide,And she must cringe and be ashamed, and wince, Not in appearance hideOf rose or girl from the blazing mastery Of bared Eternity.
Lascelles Abercrombie
Dead Roses.
He placed a rose in my nut-brown hair--A deep red rose with a fragrant heartAnd said: "We'll set this day apart,So sunny, so wondrous fair."His face was full of a happy light,His voice was tender and low and sweet,The daisies and the violets grew at our feet--Alas, for the coming of night!The rose is black and withered and dead!'Tis hid in a tiny box away;The nut-brown hair is turning to gray,And the light of the day is fled!The light of the beautiful day is fled,Hush'd is the voice so sweet and low--And I--ah, me! I loved him so--And the daisies grow over his head!
Eugene Field
To My Sister
It is the first mild day of March:Each minute sweeter than beforeThe redbreast sings from the tall larchThat stands beside our door.There is a blessing in the air,Which seems a sense of joy to yieldTo the bare trees, and mountains bare,And grass in the green field.My sister! ('tis a wish of mine)Now that our morning meal is done,Make haste, your morning task resign;Come forth and feel the sun.Edward will come with you; and, pray,Put on with speed your woodland dress;And bring no book: for this one dayWe'll give to idleness.No joyless forms shall regulateOur living calendar:We from to-day, my Friend, will dateThe opening of the year.Love, now a universal birth,From heart to heart is ste...
William Wordsworth
Things Of Choice Long A-Coming.
We pray 'gainst war, yet we enjoy no peace;Desire deferr'd is that it may increase.
Robert Herrick
On The Death Of A Favourite Old Spaniel.
And they have drown'd thee then at last! poor Phillis!The burthen of old age was heavy on thee.And yet thou should'st have lived! what tho' thine eyeWas dim, and watch'd no more with eager joyThe wonted call that on thy dull sense sunkWith fruitless repetition, the warm SunWould still have cheer'd thy slumber, thou didst loveTo lick the hand that fed thee, and tho' pastYouth's active season, even Life itselfWas comfort. Poor old friend! most earnestlyWould I have pleaded for thee: thou hadst beenStill the companion of my childish sports,And, as I roam'd o'er Avon's woody clifts,From many a day-dream has thy short quick barkRecall'd my wandering soul. I have beguil'dOften the melancholy hours at school,Sour'd by some little tyrant, with the thou...
Robert Southey
On The Portrait Of A Beautiful Woman, Carved On Her Monument.
Such wast thou: now in earth below, Dust and a skeleton thou art. Above thy bones and clay, Here vainly placed by loving hands, Sole guardian of memory and woe, The image of departed beauty stands. Mute, motionless, it seems with pensive gaze To watch the flight of the departing days. That gentle look, that, wheresoe'er it fell, As now it seems to fall, Held fast the gazer with its magic spell; That lip, from which as from some copious urn, Redundant pleasure seems to overflow; That neck, on which love once so fondly hung; That loving hand, whose tender pressure still The hand it clasped, with trembling joy would thrill; That bosom, whose transparent loveliness The color from t...
Giacomo Leopardi
The Wife-Blessed.
I. In youth he wrought, with eyes ablur, Lorn-faced and long of hair - In youth - in youth he painted her A sister of the air - Could clasp her not, but felt the stir Of pinions everywhere. II. She lured his gaze, in braver days, And tranced him sirenwise; And he did paint her, through a haze Of sullen paradise, With scars of kisses on her face And embers in her eyes. III. And now - nor dream nor wild conceit - Though faltering, as before - Through tears he paints her, as is meet, Tracing the dear face o'er With lilied patience meek and sweet As Mother Mary wore.
James Whitcomb Riley
No End Of No-Story
There is a riverwhose waters run asleeprun run eversinging in the shallowsdumb in the hollowssleeping so deepand all the swallowsthat dip their feathersin the hollowsor in the shallowsare the merriest swallowsand the nests they makewith the clay they cakewith the water they shakefrom their wings that rakethe water out of the shallowsor out of the hollowswill hold togetherin any weatherand the swallowsare the merriest fellowsand have the merriest childrenand are built very narrowlike the head of an arrowto cut the airand go just wherethe nicest water is flowingand the nicest dust is blowingand each so narrowlike the head of an arrowis a wonderful barrowto c...
George MacDonald
Hymn To Spiritual Desire
IMother of visions, with lineaments dulcet as numbersBreathed on the eyelids of Love by music that slumbers,Secretly, sweetly, O presence of fire and snow,Thou comest mysterious,In beauty imperious,Clad on with dreams and the light of no world that we know:Deep to my innermost soul am I shaken,Helplessly shaken and tossed,And of thy tyrannous yearnings so utterly taken,My lips, unsatisfied, thirst;Mine eyes are accurstWith longings for visions that far in the night are forsaken;And mine ears, in listening lost,Yearn, waiting the note of a chord that will never awaken.IILike palpable music thou comest, like moonlight; and far, -Resonant bar upon bar, -The vibrating lyreOf the spirit responds with melodious fir...
Madison Julius Cawein
The Star's Song
Flower! Flower, why repine?God knows each creature's place;He hides within me when I shine,And your leaves hide His face.And you are near as I to Him,And you reveal as muchOf that eternal soundless hymnMan's words may never touch.God sings to man through all my raysThat wreathe the brow of night,And walks with me thro' all my ways --The everlasting light.Flower! Flower, why repine?He chose on lowly earth,And not in heaven where I shine,His Bethlehem and birth.Flower! Flower, I see Him passEach hour of night and day,Down to an altar and a MassGo thou! and fade away.Fade away upon His shrine!Thy light is brighter farThan all the light wherewith I shineIn heaven, as a star.
Abram Joseph Ryan
Mysteries
Soft and silken and silvery brown,In shoes of lichen and leafy gown,Little blue butterflies fluttering around her,Deep in the forest, afar from town,There where a stream came trickling down,I met with Silence, who wove a crownOf sleep whose mystery bound her.I gazed in her eyes, that were mossy greenAs the rain that pools in a hollow betweenThe twisted roots of a tree that towers:And I saw the things that none has seen,That mean far more than facts may mean,The dreams, that are true, of an age that has been,That God has thought into flowers.I gazed on her lips, that were dewy grayAs the mist that clings, at the close of day,To the wet hillside when the winds cease blowing;And I heard the things that none may say,That are...
Come, Walk With Me
Come, walk with me,There's only theeTo bless my spirit nowWe used to love on winter nightsTo wander through the snow;Can we not woo back old delights?The clouds rush dark and wildThey fleck with shade our mountain heightsThe same as long agoAnd on the horizon rest at lastIn looming masses piled;While moonbeams flash and fly so fastWe scarce can say they smiledCome walk with me, come walk with me;We were not once so fewBut Death has stolen our companyAs sunshine steals the dewHe took them one by one and weAre left the only two;So closer would my feelings twineBecause they have no stay but thine'Nay call me not, it may not beIs human love so true?Can Friendship's flower droop on for years
Emily Bronte
Heart of God
O great heart of God, Once vague and lost to me, Why do I throb with your throb to-night, In this land, eternity? O little heart of God, Sweet intruding stranger, You are laughing in my human breast, A Christ-child in a manger. Heart, dear heart of God, Beside you now I kneel, Strong heart of faith. O heart not mine, Where God has set His seal. Wild thundering heart of God Out of my doubt I come, And my foolish feet with prophets' feet, March with the prophets' drum.
Vachel Lindsay
The Naiads' Music
(From 'A Faun's Holiday')Come, ye sorrowful, and steepYour tired brows in a nectarous sleep:For our kisses lightlier runThan the traceries of the sunBy the lolling water castUp grey precipices vast,Lifting smooth and warm and steepOut of the palely shimmering deep.Come, ye sorrowful, and takeKisses that are but half awake:For here are eyes O softer farThan the blossom of the starUpon the mothy twilit waters,And here are mouths whose gentle laughtersAre but the echoes of the deepLaughing and murmuring in its sleep.Come, ye sorrowful, and seeThe raindrops flaming goldenlyOn the stream's eddies overheadAnd dragonflies with drops of redIn the crisp surface of each wingThreading slant rains that ...
Robert Malise Bowyer Nichols
Sonnet CCVI.
Il mal mi preme, e mi spaventa il peggio.TO A FRIEND, IN LOVE LIKE HIMSELF, HE CAN GIVE NO ADVICE BUT TO RAISE HIS SOUL TO GOD. Evil oppresses me and worse dismay,To which a plain and ample way I find;Driven like thee by frantic passion, blind,Urged by harsh thoughts I bend like thee my way.Nor know I if for war or peace to pray:To war is ruin, shame to peace, assign'd.But wherefore languish thus?--Rather, resign'd,Whate'er the Will Supreme ordains, obey.However ill that honour me beseemBy thee conferr'd, whom that affection cheatsWhich many a perfect eye to error sways,To raise thy spirit to that realm supremeMy counsel is, and win those blissful seats:For short the time, and few the allotted days.CAPEL LOFFT....
Francesco Petrarca