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Mary.
My Mary's as sweet as the flowers that grow,By the side of the brooklet that runs near her cot;Her brow is as fair as the fresh fallen snow,And the gleam of her smile can be never forgot.Her figure is lithe and as graceful I weenAs was Venus when Paris awarded the prize,She's the wiles of a fairy, - the step of a queen,And the light of true love's in her bonny brown eyes.To see was to love her, - to love was to mourn, -For her heart was as fickle as April daysWhen you'd given her all and asked some return,You got but a taste of her false winsome ways.You never could tell, though you knew her so well,That her sweet fascinations were nothing but lies,Like a fool you loved on when of hope there was noneAnd your heart sought relief in her bonny bro...
John Hartley
Art.
A Phantasy.I know not how I found youWith your wild hair a-blow,Nor why the world around youWould never let me know:Perhaps 't was Heaven relented,Perhaps 't was Hell resentedMy dream, and grimly ventedIts hate upon me so.In Shadowland I met youWhere all dim shadows meet;Within my heart I set you,A phantom bitter-sweet:No hope for me to win you,Though I with soul and sinewStrive on and on, when in youThere is no heart or heat!Yet ever, aye, and ever,Although I knew you lied,I followed on, but neverWould your white form abide:With loving arms stretched meward,As Sirens beckon seawardTo some fair vessel leeward,Before me you would glide.But like an evil fairy,
Madison Julius Cawein
Love And Reason.
Quand l'homme commence à raissonner, il cesse de sentir.--J. J. ROUSSEAU.'Twas in the summer time so sweet, When hearts and flowers are both in season,That--who, of all the world, should meet, One early dawn, but Love and Reason!Love told his dream of yesternight, While Reason talked about the weather;The morn, in sooth, was fair and bright, And on they took their way together.The boy in many a gambol flew, While Reason, like a Juno, stalked,And from her portly figure threw A lengthened shadow, as she walked.No wonder Love, as on they past, Should find that sunny morning chill,For still the shadow Reason castFell o'er the boy, and cooled him still.In vain...
Thomas Moore
At The Pantomime
The house was crammed from roof to floor,Heads piled on heads at every door;Half dead with August's seething heatI crowded on and found my seat,My patience slightly out of joint,My temper short of boiling-point,Not quite at Hate mankind as such,Nor yet at Love them overmuch.Amidst the throng the pageant drewWere gathered Hebrews not a few,Black-bearded, swarthy, - at their sideDark, jewelled women, orient-eyed:If scarce a Christian hopes for graceWho crowds one in his narrow place,What will the savage victim doWhose ribs are kneaded by a Jew?Next on my left a breathing formWedged up against me, close and warm;The beak that crowned the bistred faceBetrayed the mould of Abraham's race, -That coal-...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Bethlehem-Town
As I was going to Bethlehem-town,Upon the earth I cast me downAll underneath a little treeThat whispered in this wise to me:"Oh, I shall stand on CalvaryAnd bear what burthen saveth thee!"As up I fared to Bethlehem-town,I met a shepherd coming down,And thus he quoth: "A wondrous sightHath spread before mine eyes this night,--An angel host most fair to see,That sung full sweetly of a treeThat shall uplift on CalvaryWhat burthen saveth you and me!"And as I gat to Bethlehem-town,Lo! wise men came that bore a crown."Is there," cried I, "in BethlehemA King shall wear this diadem?""Good sooth," they quoth, "and it is HeThat shall be lifted on the treeAnd freely shed on CalvaryWhat blood redeemeth us and thee!...
Eugene Field
John Underhill
A score of years had come and goneSince the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth stone,When Captain Underhill, bearing scarsFrom Indian ambush and Flemish wars,Left three-hilled Boston and wandered down,East by north, to Cocheco town.With Vane the younger, in counsel sweet,He had sat at Anna Hutchinson's feet,And, when the bolt of banishment fellOn the head of his saintly oracle,He had shared her ill as her good report,And braved the wrath of the General Court.He shook from his feet as he rode awayThe dust of the Massachusetts Bay.The world might bless and the world might ban,What did it matter the perfect man,To whom the freedom of earth was given,Proof against sin, and sure of heaven?He cheered his heart as he rode along<...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Christ's Twofold Coming.
Thy former coming was to cureMy soul's most desp'rate calenture;Thy second advent, that must beTo heal my earth's infirmity.
Robert Herrick
Prologue to Doctor Faustus
Light, as when dawn takes wing and smites the sea,Smote England when his day bade Marlowe be.No fire so keen had thrilled the clouds of timeSince Dante's breath made Italy sublime.Earth, bright with flowers whose dew shone soft as tears,Through Chaucer cast her charm on eyes and ears:The lustrous laughter of the love-lit earthRang, leapt, and lightened in his might of mirth.Deep moonlight, hallowing all the breathless air,Made earth and heaven for Spenser faint and fair.But song might bid not heaven and earth be oneTill Marlowe's voice gave warning of the sun.Thought quailed and fluttered as a wounded birdTill passion fledged the wing of Marlowe's word.Faith born of fear bade hope and doubt be dumbTill Marlowe's pride bade light or darkness come.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXV.
O tempo, o ciel volubil che fuggendo.HE NO LONGER CONTEMPLATES THE MORTAL, BUT THE IMMORTAL BEAUTIES OF LAURA. O Time! O heavens! whose flying changes frameErrors and snares for mortals poor and blind;O days more swift than arrows or the wind,Experienced now, I know your treacherous aim.You I excuse, myself alone I blame,For Nature for your flight who wings design'dTo me gave eyes which still I have inclinedTo mine own ill, whence follow grief and shame.An hour will come, haply e'en now is pass'd,Their sight to turn on my diviner partAnd so this infinite anguish end at last.Rejects not your long yoke, O Love, my heart,But its own ill by study, sufferings vast:Virtue is not of chance, but painful art.MACGREGOR.<...
Francesco Petrarca
To A Sky-Lark
Up with me! up with me into the clouds!For thy song, Lark, is strong;Up with me, up with me into the clouds!Singing, singing,With clouds and sky about thee ringing,Lift me, guide me till I findThat spot which seems so to thy mind!I have walked through wildernesses drearyAnd to-day my heart is weary;Had I now the wings of a Faery,Up to thee would I fly.There is madness about thee, and joy divineIn that song of thine;Lift me, guide me high and highTo thy banqueting-place in the sky.Joyous as morningThou art laughing and scorning;Thou hast a nest for thy love and thy rest,And, though little troubled with sloth,Drunken Lark! thou would'st be lothTo be such a traveller as I.Happy, happy Liver,With a so...
William Wordsworth
Farfaraway
What sight so lured him thro the fields he knewAs where earths green stole into heavens own hue,Farfaraway?What sound was dearest in his native dells?The mellow lin-lan-lone of evening bellsFarfaraway.What vague world-whisper, mystic pain or joy,Thro those three words would haunt him when a boy,Farfaraway?A whisper from his dawn of life? a breathFrom some fair dawn beyond the doors of deathFarfaraway?Far, far, how far? from oer the gates of Birth,The faint horizons, all the bounds of earth,Farfaraway?What charm in words, a charm no words could give?O dying words, can Music make you liveFarfaraway?
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Sunrise.
September 26, 1881.Weep for the martyr! Strew his bierWith the last roses of the year;Shadow the land with sables; knellThe harsh-tongued, melancholy bell;Beat the dull muffled drum, and flauntThe drooping banner; let the chantOf the deep-throated organ sob -One voice, one sorrow, one heart-throb,From land to land, from sea to sea -The huge world quires his elegy.Tears, love, and honor he shall have,Through ages keeping green his grave.Too late approved, too early lost,His story is the people's boast.Tough-sinewed offspring of the soil,Of peasant lineage, reared to toil,In Europe he had been a thingTo the glebe tethered - here a king!Crowned not for some transcendent gift,Genius of power that may lift<...
Emma Lazarus
Song.
Nature's imperfect child, to whomThe world is wrapt in viewless gloom,Can unresisted still impartThe fondest wishes of his heart.And he, to whose impervious earThe sweetest sounds no charms dispense,Can bid his inmost soul appearIn clear, tho' silent, eloquence.But we, my Julia, not so blest,Are doom'd a diff'rent fate to prove, -To feel each joy and hope supprestThat flow from pure, but hidden, love.
John Carr
A Rose Plant In Jericho.
At morn I plucked a rose and gave it Thee,A rose of joy and happy love and peace,A rose with scarce a thorn:But in the chillness of a second mornMy rose bush drooped, and all its gay increaseWas but one thorn that wounded me.I plucked the thorn and offered it to Thee;And for my thorn Thou gavest love and peace,Not joy this mortal morn:If Thou hast given much treasure for a thorn,Wilt thou not give me for my rose increaseOf gladness, and all sweets to me?My thorny rose, my love and pain, to TheeI offer; and I set my heart in peace,And rest upon my thorn:For verily I think to-morrow mornShall bring me Paradise, my gift's increase,Yea, give Thy very Self to me.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Upturn The Rock
Upon the rocks where the baubles of broken blue glass wink at the sun and gather strands of rusted wire with the occasional bloodroot wildflower, a man is unbending in his efforts to construct a stone rail fence. Specks of mica in the rock are like lizards basking in the heat of a mid-day or a man's thumb placed squarely about these noisome stones clattering as one more of their number comes to rest and home.The line of cherokee rocks bends first up, then downward in movement across the meadow much like a labouring oar listing but finally brought into play. The glitter of turquoise water with jewels of light on her passing wave - like wings entrances much as does this fence moving smartly into the space of green and earth.The man, a stooped farmer, has toiled for days to clear this land for tillage. His impact seem...
Paul Cameron Brown
How Good Are The Poor.
("Il est nuit. La cabane est pauvre.")[Bk. LII. iii.]'Tis night - within the close stout cabin door,The room is wrapped in shade save where there fallSome twilight rays that creep along the floor,And show the fisher's nets upon the wall.In the dim corner, from the oaken chest,A few white dishes glimmer; through the shadeStands a tall bed with dusky curtains dressed,And a rough mattress at its side is laid.Five children on the long low mattress lie -A nest of little souls, it heaves with dreams;In the high chimney the last embers die,And redden the dark room with crimson gleams.The mother kneels and thinks, and pale with fear,She prays alone, hearing the billows shout:While to wild winds, to rocks, to midnigh...
Victor-Marie Hugo
The Primrose Of The Rock
A Rock there is whose homely frontThe passing traveller slights;Yet there the glow-worms hang their lamps,Like stars, at various heights;And one coy Primrose to that RockThe vernal breeze invites.What hideous warfare hath been waged,What kingdoms overthrown,Since first I spied that Primrose-tuftAnd marked it for my own;A lasting link in Natures chainFrom highest heaven let down!The flowers, still faithful to the stems,Their fellowship renew;The stems are faithful to the root,That worketh out of view;And to the rock the root adheresIn every fibre true.Close clings to earth the living rock,Though threatening still to fall:The earth is constant to her sphere;And God upholds them all:So blooms ...
Sunrise On The Hills.
I stood upon the hills, when heaven's wide archWas glorious with the sun's returning march,And woods were brightened, and soft galesWent forth to kiss the sun-clad vales.The clouds were far beneath me; - bathed in lightThey gathered mid-way round the wooded height,And, in their fading glory, shoneLike hosts in battle overthrown,As many a pinnacle, with shifting glance,Through the grey mist thrust up its shattered lance,And rocking on the cliff was leftThe dark pine blasted, bare, and cleft,The veil of cloud was lifted, and belowGlowed the rich valley, and the river's flowWas darkened by the forest's shade,Or glistened in the white cascade;Where upward, in the mellow blush of day,The noisy bittern wheeled his spiral way.I heard...
William Henry Giles Kingston