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To Estelle
Coy, sweet maid, I love so well, Fair Estelle.How much I love thee tongue can't tell, Sweet Estelle.But I love thee - love thee true -More than violets love the dew,More than roses love the sun -Do I love thee, dearest one, Dear Estelle!Ah! my heart love's passions swell For Estelle!How I love my actions tell Thee, Estelle:That I love thy smiling face,And thy captivating grace -Love thy dreamy 'witching eyesMore than planets love the skies, Wee Estelle!Now I smite my lyre to swell For Estelle;Music's most entrancing spell O'er Estelle.With my fingers on my keys,Like the balmy morning breezeStealing softly through the grain,W...
Edward Smyth Jones
Vpon The Death Of The Lady Olive Stanhope
Canst thou depart and be forgotten so,STANHOPE thou canst not, no deare STANHOPE, no:But in despight of death the world shall see,That Muse which so much graced was by theeCan black Obliuion vtterly out-braue,And set thee vp aboue thy silent Graue.I meruail'd much the Derbian Nimphes were dumbe,Or of those Muses, what should be become,That of all those, the mountaines there among,Not one this while thy Epicediumsung;But so it is, when they of thee were reft,They all those hills, and all those Riuers left,And sullen growne, their former seates remoue,Both from cleare Darwin, and from siluer Doue,And for thy losse, they greeued are so sore,That they haue vow'd they will come there no more;But leaue thy losse to me, that I should rue thee,Vn...
Michael Drayton
Heart, We Will Forget Him!
Heart, we will forget him!You and I, to-night!You may forget the warmth he gave,I will forget the light.When you have done, pray tell me,That I my thoughts may dim;Haste! lest while you're lagging,I may remember him!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Mentana: First Anniversary
At the time when the stars are grey,And the gold of the molten moonFades, and the twilight is thinned,And the sun leaps up, and the wind,A light rose, not of the day,A stronger light than of noon.As the light of a face much lovedWas the face of the light that clomb;As a mothers whitened with woesHer adorable head that arose;As the sound of a God that is moved,Her voice went forth upon Rome.At her lips it fluttered and failedTwice, and sobbed into song,And sank as a flame sinks under;Then spake, and the speech was thunder,And the cheek as he heard it paledOf the wrongdoer grown grey with the wrong.Is it time, is it time appointed,Angel of time, is it near?For the spent night aches into dayWhen th...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
The Ship That Found Herself
We now, held in captivity,Spring to our bondage nor grieve,See now, how it is blesseder,Brothers, to give than receive!Keep trust, wherefore we were made,Paying the debt that we owe;For a clean thrust, and the shear of the blade,Will carry us where would go.
Rudyard
To Electra
I dare not ask a kiss,I dare not beg a smile;Lest having that, or this,I might grow proud the while.No, no, the utmost shareOf my desire shall be,Only to kiss that airThat lately kissed thee,
Robert Herrick
Phyllida And Corydon
In the merry month of May,In a morn by break of day,With a troop of damsels playingForth I rode, forsooth, a-maying,When anon by a woodside,Where as May was in his pride,I espied, all alone,Phyllida and Corydon.Much ado there was, God wot!He would love, and she would not:She said, never man was true;He says, none was false to you.He said, he had loved her long:She says, Love should have no wrong.Corydon would kiss her then,She says, maids must kiss no men,Till they do for good and all.Then she made the shepherd callAll the heavens to witness, truthNever loved a truer youth.Thus with many a pretty oath,Yea, and nay, and faith and troth! -Such as silly shepherds useWhen they will not love abus...
Nicholas Breton
Happiness
There is a voice that calls to me; a voice that cries deep down;That calls within my heart of hearts when Summer doffs her crown:When Summer doffs her crown, my dear, and by the hills and streamsThe spirit of September walks through gold and purple gleams:It calls my heart beyond the mart, beyond the street and town,To take again, in sun or rain, the oldtime trail of dreams.Oh, it is long ago, my dear, a weary time since weTrod back the way we used to know by wildwood rock and tree:By mossy rock and tree, dear Heart, and sat below the hill,And watched the wheel, the old mill-wheel, turn round on Babbit's mill:Or in the brook, with line and hook, to dronings of the bee,Waded or swam, above the dam, and drank of joy our fillThe ironweed is purple now; the bl...
Madison Julius Cawein
A Niëllo
IIt is not early spring and yetOf bloodroot blooms along the stream,And blotted banks of violet,My heart will dream.Is it because the windflower apesThe beauty that was once her brow,That the white memory of it shapesThe April now?Because the wild-rose wears the blushThat once made sweet her maidenhood,Its thought makes June of barren bushAnd empty wood?And then I think how young she died -Straight, barren Death stalks down the trees,The hard-eyed Hours by his side,That kill and freeze.IIWhen orchards are in bloom againMy heart will bound, my blood will beat,To hear the redbird so repeat,On boughs of rosy stain,His blithe, loud song, - like some far strainFrom out the...
Memories Of The Pacific Coast
I know a land, I, too, Where warm keen incense on the sea-wind blows,And all the winter long the skies are blue, And the brown deserts blossom with the rose.Deserts of all delight, Cactus and palm and earth of thirsty gold,Dark purple blooms round eaves of sun-washed white, And that Hesperian fruit men sought of old.O, to be wandering there, Under the palm-trees, on that sunset shore,Where the waves break in song, and the bright air Is crystal clean; and peace is ours, once more.There Beauty dwells, Beauty, re-born in whiteness from the foam;And Youth returns with all its magic spells, And the heart finds its long-forgotten home,--Home--home! Where is that land? For, when I dream it found...
Alfred Noyes
For All The Grief
For all the grief I have given with wordsMay now a few clear flowers blow,In the dust, and the heat, and the silence of birds, Where the lonely go.For the thing unsaid that heart asked of meBe a dark, cool water calling - callingTo the footsore, benighted, solitary, When the shadows are falling.O, be beauty for all my blindness,A moon in the air where the weary wend,And dews burdened with loving-kindness In the dark of the end.
Walter De La Mare
A Song. If Wine And Music Have The Power
If wine and music have the powerTo ease the sickness of the soul,Let Phoebis every string explore,And Bacchus fill the sprightly bowl:Let them their friendly aid employTo make my Cloe's absense light,And seek for pleasure to destroyThe sorrows of this live-long night.But she to-morrow will return:Venus, be thou to-morrow great;Thy myrtles strow, thy odours burn,And meet thy favourite nymph in state,Kind goddess, to no other powersLet us to-morrow's blessings own,Thy darling Loves shall guide the hours,And all the day be thine alone.
Matthew Prior
Winter in Northumberland
Outside the gardenThe wet skies harden;The gates are barred onThe summer side:"Shut out the flower-time,Sunbeam and shower-time;Make way for our time,"Wild winds have cried.Green once and cheery,The woods, worn weary,Sigh as the drearyWeak sun goes home:A great wind grapplesThe wave, and dapplesThe dead green floor of the sea with foam.Through fell and moorland,And salt-sea foreland,Our noisy norlandResounds and rings;Waste waves thereunderAre blown in sunder,And winds make thunderWith cloudwide wings;Sea-drift makes dimmerThe beacon's glimmer;Nor sail nor swimmerCan try the tides;And snowdrifts thickenWhere, when leaves quicken,Under the heather the sundew hide...
Fringford Brook
The willows stand by Fringford brook, From Fringford up to Hethe,Sun on their cloudy silver heads, And shadow underneath.They ripple to the silent airs That stir the lazy day,Now whitened by their passing hands, Now turned again to grey.The slim marsh-thistle's purple plume Droops tasselled on the stem,The golden hawkweeds pierce like flame The grass that harbours them;Long drowning tresses of the weeds Trail where the stream is slow,The vapoured mauves of water-mint Melt in the pools below;Serenely soft September sheds On earth her slumberous look,The heartbreak of an anguished world Throbs not by Fringford brook.All peace is here. Beyond our range, Ye...
Violet Jacob
The Physician
She comes when I am grieving and doth say,"Child, here is that shall drive your grief away."When I am hopeless, kisses me and stirsMy breast with the strong lively courage of hers.Proud--she will humble me with but a word,Or with mild mockery at my folly gird;Fickle--she holds me with her loyal eyes;Remorseful--tells of neighbouring Paradise;Envious--"Be not so mad, so mad," she saith,"Envied and envier both race with Death"She my good Angel is: and who is she?--The soul's divine Physician, Memory.
John Frederick Freeman
The Cicalas: An Idyll
Scene: AN ENGLISH GARDEN BY STARLIGHTPersons: A LADY AND A POET THE POET Dimly I see your face: I hear your breath Sigh faintly, as a flower might sigh in death And when you whisper, you but stir the air With a soft hush like summer's own despair. THE LADY (aloud) O Night divine, O Darkness ever blest, Give to our old sad Earth eternal rest. Since from her heart all beauty ebbs away, Let her no more endure the shame of day. THE POET A thousand ages have not made less bright The stars that in this fountain shine to-night: Your eyes in shadow still betray the gleam That every son of man desires in dream. ...
Henry John Newbolt
To The Memory Of Mrs. Ewing.
Written After Perusing The Interesting Memoir Composed By Her Husband, The Rev. Greville Ewing.Daughter of Scotland! may a stranger twine One cypress wreath around thy honoured urn?--Yet, when I meditate on faith like thine, I feel my breast with sacred ardour burn;Deep admiration checks the starting tear,--Such drops would stain a Ewing's holy bier!Death was to thee a messenger of love; He met thee in the path thy Saviour trod,Bearing this blessed mandate from above, "Come, happy spirit--come away to God!Thy works of piety on earth are o'er,--Plume thy bright wing to reach the heavenly shore!"Calm was thy exit from this troubled scene; Pain from thy lips no hasty murmurs wrung;With brow unruffled and with mind ...
Susanna Moodie
Alcyone
In the silent depth of space,Immeasurably old, immeasurably far,Glittering with a silver flameThrough eternity,Rolls a great and burning star,With a noble name,Alcyone!In the glorious chart of heavenIt is marked the first of seven;'Tis a Pleiad:And a hundred years of earthWith their long-forgotten deeds have come and gone,Since that tiny point of light,Once a splendour fierce and bright,Had its birthIn the star we gaze upon.It has travelled all that time -Thought has not a swifter flight -Through a region where no faintest gustOf life comes ever, but the power of nightDwells stupendous and sublime,Limitless and void and lonely,A region mute with age, and peopled onlyWith the dead and ruined ...
Archibald Lampman