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Before Dawn
Sweet life, if life were stronger,Earth clear of years that wrong her,Then two things might live longer,Two sweeter things than they;Delight, the rootless flower,And love, the bloomless bower;Delight that lives an hour,And love that lives a day.From evensong to daytime,When April melts in Maytime,Love lengthens out his playtime,Love lessens breath by breath,And kiss by kiss grows olderOn listless throat or shoulderTurned sideways now, turned colderThan life that dreams of death.This one thing once worth givingLife gave, and seemed worth living;Sin sweet beyond forgivingAnd brief beyond regret:To laugh and love togetherAnd weave with foam and featherAnd wind and words the tetherOur memories p...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
When First I Met Thee.
When first I met thee, warm and young, There shone such truth about thee.And on thy lip such promise hung, I did not dare to doubt thee.I saw the change, yet still relied, Still clung with hope the fonder,And thought, tho' false to all beside, From me thou couldst not wander. But go, deceiver! go, The heart, whose hopes could make it Trust one so false, so low, Deserves that thou shouldst break it.When every tongue thy follies named, I fled the unwelcome story;Or found, in even the faults they blamed, Some gleams of future glory.I still was true, when nearer friends Conspired to wrong, to slight thee;The heart that now thy falsehood rends, Would then have...
Thomas Moore
Before Life And After
A time there was - as one may guessAnd as, indeed, earth's testimonies tell -Before the birth of consciousness,When all went well.None suffered sickness, love, or loss,None knew regret, starved hope, or heart-burnings;None cared whatever crash or crossBrought wrack to things.If something ceased, no tongue bewailed,If something winced and waned, no heart was wrung;If brightness dimmed, and dark prevailed,No sense was stung.But the disease of feeling germed,And primal rightness took the tinct of wrong;Ere nescience shall be reaffirmedHow long, how long?
Thomas Hardy
America To England
1899Who would trust England, let him lift his eyesTo Nelson, columned o'er Trafalgar Square,Her hieroglyph of duty, written whereThe roar of traffic hushes to the skies;Or mark, while Paul's vast shadow softly liesOn Gordon's statued sleep, how praise and prayerFlush through the frank young faces clustering thereTo con that kindred rune of sacrifice.O England, no bland cloud-ship in the blue,But rough oak plunging on o'er perilous jarsOf reef and ice, our faith will follow youThe more for tempest roar that strains your sparsAnd splits your canvas, be your helm but true,Your courses shapen by the eternal stars.1900The nightmare melts at last, and London wakesTo her old habit of victorious ease.More men, ...
Katharine Lee Bates
Celia To Damon
What can I say? What Arguments can proveMy Truth? What Colors can describe my Love?If it's Excess and Fury be not known,In what Thy Celia has already done?Thy Infant Flames, whilst yet they were conceal'dIn tim'rous Doubts, with Pity I beheld;With easie Smiles dispell'd the silent Fear,That durst not tell Me, what I dy'd to hear:In vain I strove to check my growing Flame,Or shelter Passion under Friendship's Name:You saw my Heart, how it my Tongue bely'd;And when You press'd, how faintly I deny'dE'er Guardian Thought could bring it's scatter'd Aid;E'er Reason could support the doubting Maid;My Soul surpriz'd, and from her self disjoin'd,Left all Reserve, and all the Sex behind:From your Command her Motions She receiv'd;And not for M...
Matthew Prior
Lament X
My dear delight, my Ursula, and whereArt thou departed, to what land, what sphere?High o'er the heavens wert thou borne, to standOne little cherub midst the cherub band?Or dost thou laugh in Paradise, or nowUpon the Islands of the Blest art thou?Or in his ferry o'er the gloomy waterDoes Charon bear thee onward, little daughter?And having drunken of forgetfulnessArt thou unwitting of my sore distress?Or, casting off thy human, maiden veil,Art thou enfeathered in some nightingale?Or in grim Purgatory must thou stayUntil some tiniest stain be washed away?Or hast returned again to where thou wertEre thou wast born to bring me heavy hurt?Where'er thou art, ah! pity, comfort me;And if not in thine own entirety,Yet come before mine eyes a ...
Jan Kochanowski
Her Prayer.
Low in the ivy-covered church she kneeled, The sunshine falling on her golden hair; The moaning of a soul with hurt unhealed Was her low-breathed and broken cry of prayer. "Thy wounded hand, dear Christ, Thy wounded hand! I pray Thee, lay it on this heart of mine - This heart so sick with grief it cannot stand Aught heavier than this tender touch of Thine. "Thy wounded hand, dear Christ, O let it press Here, where the hurt is hardest, where the pain Throbs fiercest, and the utter emptiness Mocks at glad memories and longings vain! "Thy wounded hand, dear Christ, who long ago Slept by Thy mother's side in Bethlehem! Think of her cradling arms, her love-song low, And pity me when Thou d...
Jean Blewett
Epilogue
The day is done; and, lo! the shadesMelt 'neath Diana's mellow grace.Hark, how those deep, designing maidsFeign terror in this sylvan place!Come, friends, it's time that we should go;We're honest married folk, you know.Was not the wine delicious coolWhose sweetness Pyrrha's smile enhanced?And by that clear Bandusian poolHow gayly Chloe sung and danced!And Lydia Die,--aha, methinksYou'll not forget the saucy minx!But, oh, the echoes of those songsThat soothed our cares and lulled our hearts!Not to that age nor this belongsThe glory of what heaven-born artsSpeak with the old distinctive charmFrom yonder humble Sabine farm!The day is done. Now off to bed,Lest by some rural ruse surprised,And by those artfu...
Eugene Field
The Nancy's Pride
On the long slow heave of a lazy sea,To the flap of an idle sail,The Nancy's Pride went out on the tide;And the skipper stood by the rail.All down, all down by the sleepy town,With the hollyhocks a-rowIn the little poppy gardens,The sea had her in tow.They let her slip by the breathing rip,Where the bell is never still,And over the sounding harbor bar,And under the harbor hill.She melted into the dreaming noon,Out of the drowsy land,In sight of a flag of goldy hair,To the kiss of a girlish hand.For the lass who hailed the lad who sailed,Was--who but his April bride?And of all the fleet of Grand Latite,Her pride was the Nancy's Pride.So the little vessel faded downWith her creaking boom...
Bliss Carman
Memorial
The wild October skyRises not so high,The tree's roots that creepInto the earth's body thrust not so deepAs our high and dark thought.Yet thought need not roamFar off to bring you home.The sky is our wild mind,Your roots are round our spirits twined,To ours are your hearts caught.O, never buried dead!The living brain in the headIs not so quick as youBurning our conscious darkness throughWith brightness past our thought.
John Frederick Freeman
Honor Among Scamps
We are the smirched. Queen Honor is the spotless. We slept thro' wars where Honor could not sleep. We were faint-hearted. Honor was full-valiant. We kept a silence Honor could not keep. Yet this late day we make a song to praise her. We, codeless, will yet vindicate her code. She who was mighty, walks with us, the beggars. The merchants drive her out upon the road. She makes a throne of sod beside our campfire. We give the maiden-queen our rags and tears. A battered, rascal guard have rallied round her, To keep her safe until the better years.
Vachel Lindsay
To Stern Critics
Here's to stern Critics!May they some day learnThe forward lookout'sBetter than the stern!
Oliver Herford
Ho Thëos meta sou God be with you
Farewell, my Highland lassie! when the year returns around,Be it Greece, or be it Norway, where my vagrant feet are found,I shall call to mind the place, I shall call to mind the day,The day thats gone for ever, and the glen thats far away;I shall mind me, be it Rhine or Rhone, Italian land or France,Of the laughings and the whispers, of the pipings and the dance;I shall see thy soft brown eyes dilate to wakening woman thought,And whiter still the white cheek grow to which the blush was brought;And oh, with mine commixing I thy breath of life shall feel,And clasp thy shyly passive hands in joyous Highland reel;I shall hear, and see, and feel, and in sequence sadly true,Shall repeat the bitter-sweet of the lingering last adieu;I shall seem as now to leave thee, with ...
Arthur Hugh Clough
The Garrison Of Cape Ann
From the hills of home forth looking, far beneath the tent-like spanOf the sky, I see the white gleam of the headland of Cape Ann.Well I know its coves and beaches to the ebb-tide glimmering down,And the white-walled hamlet children of its ancient fishing town.Long has passed the summer morning, and its memory waxes old,When along yon breezy headlands with a pleasant friend I strolled.Ah! the autumn sun is shining, and the ocean wind blows cool,And the golden-rod and aster bloom around thy grave, Rantoul!With the memory of that morning by the summer sea I blendA wild and wondrous story, by the younger Mather penned,In that quaint Magnalia Christi, with all strange and marvellous things,Heaped up huge and undigested, like the chaos Ovid sings.Dear to ...
John Greenleaf Whittier
The Return
I come to you grown weary of much laughter,From jangling mirth that once seemed over-sweet,From all the mocking ghosts that follow afterA man's returning feet;Give me no word of welcome or of greetingOnly in silence let me enter in,Only in silence when our eyes are meeting,Absolve me of my sin.I come to you grown weary of much living,Open your door and lift me of your grace,I ask for no compassion, no forgiving,Only your face, your face;Only in that white peace that is your dwellingTo come again, before your feet to sink,And of your quiet as of wine compellingDrink as the thirsting drink.Be kind to me as sleep is kind that closesWith tender hands men's fever-wearied eyes,Your arms are as a garden of white rosesWher...
Theodosia Garrison
To The Rev. William Bull.
June 22, 1782.My dear Friend,If reading verse be your delight,Tis mine as much, or more, to write;But what we would, so weak is man,Lies oft remote from what we can.For instance, at this very timeI feel a wish by cheerful rhymeTo soothe my friend, and, had I power,To cheat him of an anxious hour;Not meaning (for I must confess,It were but folly to suppress)His pleasure, or his good alone,But squinting partly at my own.But though the sun is flaming highIn the centre of yon arch, the sky,And he had once (and who but he?)The name for setting genius free,Yet whether poets of past daysYielded him undeserved praise.And he by no uncommon lotWas famed for virtues he had not;Or whether, which is like enou...
William Cowper
Apple-Blossoms.
Underneath an apple-treeSat a maiden and her lover;And the thoughts within her heYearned, in silence, to discover.Round them danced the sunbeams bright,Green the grass-lawn stretched before them;While the apple-blossoms whiteHung in rich profusion o'er them.Naught within her eyes he readThat would tell her mind unto him;Though their light, he after said,Quivered swiftly through and through him;Till at last his heart burst freeFrom the prayer with which 'twas laden,And he said, "When wilt thou beMine for evermore, fair maiden?""When," said she, "the breeze of MayWith white flakes our heads shall cover,I will be thy brideling gay--Thou shall be my husband-lover.""How," said he, in sorrow bowed,"Can I hope...
Will Carleton
Courtin', The
God makes sech nights, all white an' still Fur 'z you can look or listen,Moonshine an' snow on field an' hill, All silence an' all glisten.Zekle crep' up quite unbeknown An' peeked in thru' the winder,An' there sot Huldy all alone, 'Ith no one nigh to hender.A fireplace filled the room's one side With half a cord o' wood in,There warn't no stoves (tell comfort died) To bake ye to a puddin'.The wa'nut logs shot sparkles out Towards the pootiest, bless her,An' leetle flames danced all about The chiny on the dresser.Agin the chimbley crook-necks hung, An' in amongst 'em rustedThe ole queen's-arm that Gran'ther Young Fetched back f'om Concord busted.The very room, c...
James Russell Lowell