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Brother Artist!
Brother artist, help me; come! Artists are a maimed band: I have words but not a hand;Thou hast hands though thou art dumb.Had I thine, when words did fail-- Vassal-words their hasting chief, On the white awaiting leafShapes of power should tell the tale.Had I hers of music-might, I would shake the air with storm Till the red clouds trailed enormBoreal dances through the night.Had I his whose foresight rare Piles the stones with lordliest art, From the quarry of my heartLove should climb a heavenly stair!Had I his whose wooing slow Wins the marble's hidden child, Out in passion undefiledStood my Psyche, white as snow!Maimed, a little help I pray; Words ...
George MacDonald
The Two Cousins
Valour and InnocenceHave latterly gone henceTo certain death by certain shame attended.Envy, ah! even to tears!,The fortune of their yearsWhich, though so few, yet so divinely ended.Scarce had they lifted upLifes full and fiery cup,Than they had set it down untouched before them.Before their day aroseThey beckoned it to close,Close in destruction and confusion oer them.They did not stay to askWhat prize should crown their task,Well sure that prize was such as no man strives for;But passed into eclipse,Her kiss upon their lips,Even Belphoebes, whom they gave their lives for!
Rudyard
The Fog
I saw the fog grow thick,Which soon made blind my ken;It made tall men of boys,And giants of tall men.It clutched my throat, I coughed;Nothing was in my headExcept two heavy eyesLike balls of burning lead.And when it grew so blackThat I could know no place,I lost all judgment then,Of distance and of space.The street lamps, and the lightsUpon the halted cars,Could either be on earthOr be the heavenly stars.A man passed by me close,I asked my way, he said,"Come, follow me, my friend",I followed where he led.He rapped the stones in front,"Trust me," he said, "and come";I followed like a child,A blind man led me home.
William Henry Davies
To --------
I will not mourn thee, lovely one,Though thou art torn away.'Tis said that if the morning sunArise with dazzling rayAnd shed a bright and burning beamAthwart the glittering main,'Ere noon shall fade that laughing gleamEngulfed in clouds and rain.And if thy life as transient proved,It hath been full as bright,For thou wert hopeful and beloved;Thy spirit knew no blight.If few and short the joys of lifeThat thou on earth couldst know,Little thou knew'st of sin and strifeNor much of pain and woe.If vain thy earthly hopes did prove,Thou canst not mourn their flight;Thy brightest hopes were fixed aboveAnd they shall know no blight.And yet I cannot check my sighs,Thou wert so young and fair,<...
Anne Bronte
The Old Remain, The Young Are Gone
The old remain, the young are gone.The farm dreams lonely on the hill:From early eve to early dawnA cry goes with the whippoorwill"The old remain, the young are gone."Where run the roads they wander on?The young, whose hearts romped shouting here:Whose feet thrilled rapture through this lawn,Where sadness walks now all the year.The old remain, the young are gone.To what far glory are they drawn?And do they weary of the quest?And serve they now a king or pawnThere in the cities of unrest?The old remain, the young are gone.They found the life here gray and wan,Too kind, too poor, too full of peace:The great mad world of brain and brawnCalled to their young hearts without cease.The old remain, the young are gone...
Madison Julius Cawein
The First Lesson.
Not in this world to see his faceSounds long, until I read the placeWhere this is said to beBut just the primer to a lifeUnopened, rare, upon the shelf,Clasped yet to him and me.And yet, my primer suits me soI would not choose a book to knowThan that, be sweeter wise;Might some one else so learned be,And leave me just my A B C,Himself could have the skies.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
To The Avon
Flow on, sweet river! like his verseWho lies beneath this sculptured hearseNor wait beside the churchyard wallFor him who cannot hear thy call.Thy playmate once; I see him nowA boy with sunshine on his brow,And hear in Stratford's quiet streetThe patter of his little feet.I see him by thy shallow edgeWading knee-deep amid the sedge;And lost in thought, as if thy streamWere the swift river of a dream.He wonders whitherward it flows;And fain would follow where it goes,To the wide world, that shall erelongBe filled with his melodious song.Flow on, fair stream! That dream is o'er;He stands upon another shore;A vaster river near him flows,And still he follows where it goes.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Pessimist
The pessimistic locust, last to leaf,Though all the world is glad, still talks of grief.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Ants.
What wonder strikes the curious, while he viewsThe black ant's city, by a rotten tree,Or woodland bank! In ignorance we muse:Pausing, annoy'd,--we know not what we see,Such government and thought there seem to be;Some looking on, and urging some to toil,Dragging their loads of bent-stalks slavishly:And what's more wonderful, when big loads foilOne ant or two to carry, quickly thenA swarm flock round to help their fellow-men.Surely they speak a language whisperingly,Too fine for us to hear; and sure their waysProve they have kings and laws, and that they beDeformed remnants of the Fairy-days.
John Clare
Flower Of Love
Sweet, I blame you not, for mine the faultwas, had I not been made of common clayI had climbed the higher heights unclimbedyet, seen the fuller air, the larger day.From the wildness of my wasted passion I hadstruck a better, clearer song,Lit some lighter light of freer freedom, battledwith some Hydra-headed wrong.Had my lips been smitten into music by thekisses that but made them bleed,You had walked with Bice and the angels onthat verdant and enamelled mead.I had trod the road which Dante treading sawthe suns of seven circles shine,Ay! perchance had seen the heavens opening,as they opened to the Florentine.And the mighty nations would have crownedme, who am crownless now and without name,And some orient dawn...
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
Sonnets on English Dramatic Poets (1590-1650): John Ford
Hew hard the marble from the mountains heartWhere hardest night holds fast in iron gloomGems brighter than an April dawn in bloom,That his Memnoniah likeness thence may startRevealed, whose hand with high funereal artCarved night, and chiselled shadow: be the tombThat speaks him famous graven with signs of doomIntrenched inevitably in lines athwart,As on some thunder-blasted Titans browHis record of rebellion. Not the dayShall strike forth music from so stern a chord,Touching this marble: darkness, none knows how,And stars impenetrable of midnight, may.So locms the likeness of thy soul, John Ford.
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Lines Written In A Copy Of The Poem On Princess Charlotte.
Madam! when sorrowing o'er the virtuous dead,The gentlest solace of the tears we shed,Is, to surviving excellence to turn,And honour there those merits that we mourn.The Muse, whose hand fair Brunswick's ashes strewWith votive flowers, would weave a wreath for You;But living worth forbids th' applausive lay.Therefore, repressing all respect, would say,She proffers silently her simple strain;If you approve--she has not toil'd in vain!
Thomas Gent
In The Royal Academy.
HUGH (on furlough).HELEN (his cousin).HELEN.They have not come! And ten is past,--Unless, by chance, my watch is fast;--Aunt Mabel surely told us "ten."HUGH.I doubt if she can do it, then.In fact, their train....HELEN.That is,--you knew.How could you be so treacherous, Hugh?HUGH.Nay;--it is scarcely mine, the crime,One can't account for railway-time!Where shall we sit? Not here, I vote;--At least, there's nothing here of note.HELEN.Then here we'll stay, please. Once for all,I bar all artists,--great and small!From now until we go in JuneI shall hear nothing but this tune:--Whether I like Long's "Vashti," orLike Leslie's "Naughty Kitty" mo...
Henry Austin Dobson
The Lost Dream
The black night showed its hungry teeth,And gnawed with sleet at roof and pane;Beneath the door I heard it breatheA beast that growled in vain.The hunter wind stalked up and down,And crashed his ice-spears through each tree;Before his rage, in tattered gown,I saw the maid moon flee.There stole a footstep to my door;A voice cried in my room and there!A shadow cowled and gaunt and hoar,Death, leaned above my chair.He beckoned me; he bade me rise,And follow through the madman night;Into my heart's core pierced his eyes,And lifted me with might.I rose; I made no more delay;And followed where his eyes compelled;And through the darkness, far away,They lit me and enspelled.Until we reached an ancie...
Sonnets I.
Inscribed to S.F.S.They say that lonely sorrows do not chance.I think it true, and that the cause I know:A sorrow glideth in a funeral showEasier than if it broke into a dance.But I think too, that joy doth joy enhanceAs often as an added grief brings low;And if keen-eyed to see the flowers that grow,As keen of nerve to feel the thorns that lanceThe foot that must walk naked in one way--Blest by the lily, white from toils and fears,Oftener than wounded by the thistle-spears,We should walk upright, bold, and earnest-gay.I'll tell you how it fared with me one dayAfter noon in a world, so-called, of tears.
A Skeltoniad
The Muse should be sprightly,Yet not handling lightlyThings graue; as much loath,Things that be slight, to cloathCuriously: To retayneThe Comelinesse in meane,Is true Knowledge and Wit.Not me forc'd Rage doth fit,That I thereto should lackeTabacco, or need Sacke,Which to the colder BraineIs the true Hyppocrene;Nor did I euer careFor great Fooles, nor them spare.Vertue, though neglected,Is not so deiected,As vilely to descendTo low Basenesse their end;Neyther each ryming SlaueDeserues the Name to haueOf Poet: so the RabbleOf Fooles, for the Table,That haue their Iests by Heart,As an Actor his Part,Might assume them ChayresAmongst the Muses Heyres.Parnassus is not clomeBy euery suc...
Michael Drayton
Long-Looked-For Comes At Last.
Though long it be, years may repay the debt;None loseth that which he in time may get.
Robert Herrick
To My Brothers.
Not while I live may I forgetThat garden which my spirit trod!Where dreams were flowers, wild and wet,And beautiful as God.Not while I breathe, awake adream,Shall live again for me those hours,When, in its mystery and gleam,I met her 'mid the flowers.Eyes, talismanic heliotrope,Beneath mesmeric lashes, whereThe sorceries of love and hopeHad made a shining lair.And daydawn brows, whereover hungThe twilight of dark locks; and lips,Whose beauty spoke the rose's tongueOf fragrance-voweled drips.I will not tell of cheeks and chin,That held me as sweet language holds;Nor of the eloquence withinHer bosom's moony molds.Nor of her large limbs' languorousWin...