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The Comet - October, 1858.
Erratic Soul of some great Purpose, doomedTo track the wild illimitable space,Till sure propitiation has been madeFor the divine commission unperformed!What was thy crime? Ahasuerus' curseWere not more stern on earth than thine in Heaven!Art thou the Spirit of some Angel World,For grave rebellion banished from thy peers,Compelled to watch the calm, immortal stars,Circling in rapture the celestial void,While the avenger follows in thy trainTo spur thee on to wretchedness eterne?Or one of nature's wildest fantasies,From which she flies in terror so profound,And with such whirl of torment in her breast,That mighty earthquakes yearn where'er she treads;While War makes red its terrible right hand,And Famine stalks abroad all lea...
Charles Sangster
Watching
Like a beautiful face looking ever at meA pure bright moon cometh over the sea;And I stand on the crags, and hear the fallsGo tumbling down, through the black river-walls;And the heart of the gorge is rent with the cryOf the pent-up winds in their agony!You are far from me, dear, where I watch and wait,Like a weary bird for a long-lost mate,And my life is as dull as the sluggish streamFeeling its way through a world of dream;For here is a waste of darkness and fear,And I call and I call, but no one will hear!O darling of mine, do you ever yearnFor a something lost, which will never return?O darling of mine, on the grave of dead Hours,Do you feel, like me, for a handful of flowers?Through the glens of the Past, do you wander along,Li...
Henry Kendall
England's Brave Sons
The yeoman lays aside his soil-stained smock,And from his herd selects a trusty steed,And sallies forth to help in hour of need;Nor dreads the battle's shock.The artisan from mine, or shop, or store,Responds at duty's call without delay,Nor stops to ask, "What will my nation pay?"It calls--what needs he more?The man of law--the herald of the cross--The painter, skilled--he of the healing art--The man of trade--come each with loyal heart,Nor calculates his loss.But brave as these are those of noble birth;Genteel in manner, but with athlete frames,They do full honor to their ancient names,And prove by deeds their worth.Palatial homes have they and wealth untold;Nor need to labor, and no cause for fret,But deeds...
Joseph Horatio Chant
The Sky
Where'er he be, on water or on land,Under pale suns or climes that flames enfold;One of Christ's own, or of Cythera's band,Shadowy beggar or Crsus rich with gold;Citizen, peasant, student, tramp; whate'erHis little brain may be, alive or dead;Man knows the fear of mystery everywhere,And peeps, with trembling glances, overhead.The heaven above? A strangling cavern wall;The lighted ceiling of a music-hallWhere every actor treads a bloody soilThe hermit's hope; the terror of the sot;The sky: the black lid of the mighty potWhere the vast human generations boil!
Charles Baudelaire
In Time Of Need
Better than I,Thou knowest, Lord,All my necessity,And with a wordThou canst it all supply.Help other is there noneSave Thee alone;Without Thee I'm undone.And so, to Thee I cry,--O, be Thou nigh!For, better far than I,Thou knowest, Lord,All my necessity.
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
De Profundis.
I thought today within the crowded mart I saw thee for a moment, friend of mine, And all at once my blood leapt fast and fineAnd a new light broke on my shadowed heart.'T was but a moment that my fancy's art Moulded another's features into thine, For when he passed me by and gave no sign,The bitter truth came back with sudden start.Then I remembered how the Merlin spell Of waving arms and woven paces bandsThy dust forever in its four-walled cell, Heedless of all except thy Seer's commands--Holds thee enraptured with the charms that dwell In broken paces and in folded hands.
Charles Hamilton Musgrove
The Fugitive
His shatterd Empire thunders to the ground:A myriad hearts peal laughter as it falls,While red flags flutter on its ruined wallsAnd living joy darts all the world around.The imperial criminal, naked and uncrowned,Breathing a shuddering air of curses, crawls,Baffled and beaten, from his gorgeous halls,While Vengeance halloos lapdog, cur and hound.Behold the arrogant humbled, and rejoiceThe grasping hand holds naught but flying dust,And Envy meets the pitiless grin of Fate.Take warning of your own hearts inward voice,Bid your own soul be humble and distrustThe yelping promises of greed and hate.
John Le Gay Brereton
Address To The Flag
Float in the winds of heaven, O tattered Flag!Emblem of hope to all the misruled world:Thy field of golden stars is rent and redDyed in the blood of brothers madly spilledBy brother-hands upon the mother-soil.O fatal Upas of the savage Nile,[CT]Transplanted hither rooted multipliedWatered with bitter tears and sending forthThy venom-vapors till the land is mad,Thy day is done. A million blades are swungTo lay thy jungles open to the sun;A million torches fire thy blasted boles;A million hands shall drag thy fibers outAnd feed the fires till every root and branchLie in dead ashes. From the blackened soil,Enriched and moistened with fraternal blood,Beside the palm shall spring the olive-tree,And every breeze shall waft the happy ...
Hanford Lennox Gordon
Good Christians
Play their offensive and defensive parts,Till they be hid o'er with a wood of darts.
Robert Herrick
To The Earl Of Clare.
Tu semper amorisSis memor, et cari comitis ne abscedat imago.VAL. FLAC. 'Argonaut', iv. 36.1.Friend of my youth! when young we rov'd,Like striplings, mutually belov'd,With Friendship's purest glow;The bliss, which wing'd those rosy hours,Was such as Pleasure seldom showersOn mortals here below.2.The recollection seems, alone,Dearer than all the joys I've known,When distant far from you:Though pain, 'tis still a pleasing pain,To trace those days and hours again,And sigh again, adieu!3.My pensive mem'ry lingers o'er,Those scenes to be enjoy'd no more,Those scenes regretted ever;The measure of our youth is full,Life's evening dream is dark and dull,
George Gordon Byron
Diffidence.
I cannot deck my thought in proud attire, Or make it fit for thee in any dress, Or sing to thee the songs of thy desire, In summer's heat, or by the winter's fire, Or give thee cause to comfort or to bless. For I have scann'd mine own unworthiness And well I know the weakness of the lyre Which I have striven to sway to thy caress. Yet must I quell my tears and calm the smart Of my vext soul, and steadfastly emerge From lonesome thoughts, as from the tempest's surge. I must control the beating of my heart, And bid false pride be gone, who, with his art, Has press'd, too long, a suit I dare not urge.
Eric Mackay
Antarctica
Perhaps it is needed to balance the planet: to provideemployment for penguins, or that ice in the form ofcrystals calls forth tiny sleighs.That the orange hibiscus be associated only with deepest tropics...plankton learn to feed Baleen whalesAnd iron hulks, off ships. submit to greater Masters. the elements.Second TheoriesAnother supposition projects...snowy wastes are but vapour trails of jets and tatter sails.Sleet comes only from cannonized rain, galvanized by inclement ironmongers.Yet a third hypothesizes frozen energy is stored in theform of ice caps and that the lost amongst departedsouls are reborn with every powdery breath.Ptolemy knew of a southern polar continent. Cookand Shackelton attempted separate conquests. Ship...
Paul Cameron Brown
Old St. David's At Radnor
What an image of peace and rest Is this little church among its graves!All is so quiet; the troubled breast,The wounded spirit, the heart oppressed, Here may find the repose it craves.See, how the ivy climbs and expands Over this humble hermitage,And seems to caress with its little handsThe rough, gray stones, as a child that stands Caressing the wrinkled cheeks of age!You cross the threshold; and dim and small Is the space that serves for the Shepherd's Fold;The narrow aisle, the bare, white wall,The pews, and the pulpit quaint and tall, Whisper and say: "Alas! we are old."Herbert's chapel at Bemerton Hardly more spacious is than this;But Poet and Pastor, blent in one,Clothed with a splendor, ...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
There's Joy, &C.
There's joy when the rosy morning floods The purple east with light,When the zephyr sweeps from a thousand buds The pearly tears of night.There's joy when the lark exulting springs To pour his matin lay,From the blossomed thorn when the blackbird sings, And the merry month is May.There's joy abroad when the wintry snow Melts as it ne'er had been,When cowslips bud and violets blow, And leaves are fresh and green.There's joy in the swallow's airy flight, In the cuckoo's blithesome cry,When the floating clouds reflect the light Of evening's glowing sky.There's joy in April's balmy showers 'Mid gleam of sunshine shed,When May calls forth a thousand flowers To deck the earth's green bed.
Susanna Moodie
Relieving Guard
Thomas Starr King. Obiit March 4, 1864Came the relief. What, sentry, ho!How passed the night through thy long waking?Cold, cheerless, dark, as may befitThe hour before the dawn is breaking.No sight? no sound? No; nothing saveThe plover from the marshes calling,And in yon western sky, aboutAn hour ago, a star was falling.A star? Theres nothing strange in that.No, nothing; but, above the thicket,Somehow it seemed to me that GodSomewhere had just relieved a picket.
Bret Harte
A Shadow.
The world to-day is radiant, as I ne'erCould picture it in wildest dreaming, whenFor long, long hours I lay in flowery glenOr wooded copse, and tried in vain to tearThe glamour from my eyes, and face the glareAnd tumult of the busy world of men.I staked my all, and won! and ne'er againCan my blest spirit know a heart's despair.And yet - and yet - why should it be that now,When all my heart has longed for is at last Within my grasp, and I should be at rest,A ghostly Something rising in the glow Of Love's own fire, an uninvited guest,Taunts me with just one memory of the past!
Sophie M. (Almon) Hensley
Sir Launcelot And Queen Guinevere
Like souls that balance joy and pain,With tears and smiles from heaven againThe maiden Spring upon the plainCame in a sun-lit fall of rain.In crystal vapour everywhereBlue isles of heaven laugh'd between,And far, in forest-deeps unseen,The topmost elm-tree gather'd greenFrom draughts of balmy air.Sometimes the linnet piped his song:Sometimes the throstle whistled strong:Sometimes the sparhawk, wheel'd along,Hush'd all the groves from fear of wrong:By grassy capes with fuller soundIn curves the yellowing river ran,And drooping chestnut-buds beganTo spread into the perfect fan,Above the teeming ground.Then, in the boyhood of the year,Sir Launcelot and Queen GuinevereRode thro' the coverts of the deer,With...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Undecaying Fruit
Doomed to decay are all things here;Whate'er their form or worth,Color and beauty disappear,Or turn to mother earth.The luscious fruits which please the tasteAnd please the eye as well,Sometimes reduced to rot and waste,Ere from the tree they fell--Some gathered with a gentle hand,And stored away with care,To serve a place in banquet grand,Some favorite peach or pear,Is found diseased in skin and core,And loathsome to the sight,When 'tis too late to gather more,And comes the festal night.So is it with all earthly joy--It pleases for a time,As toy may please a growing boy,Though costing but a dime;But soon he tires and asks for more,Appropriate to his age;So, though a man may high...