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Canzone XVII.
Di pensier in pensier, di monte in monte.DISTANCE AND SOLITUDE. From hill to hill I roam, from thought to thought,With Love my guide; the beaten path I fly,For there in vain the tranquil life is sought:If 'mid the waste well forth a lonely rill,Or deep embosom'd a low valley lie,In its calm shade my trembling heart's still;And there, if Love so will,I smile, or weep, or fondly hope, or fear.While on my varying brow, that speaks the soul,The wild emotions roll,Now dark, now bright, as shifting skies appear;That whosoe'er has proved the lover's stateWould say, He feels the flame, nor knows his future fate.On mountains high, in forests drear and wide,I find repose, and from the throng'd resortOf man turn fea...
Francesco Petrarca
At Waking
When night was lifting,And dawn had crept under its shade,Amid cold clouds driftingDead-white as a corpse outlaid,With a sudden scareI seemed to beholdMy Love in bareHard lines unfold.Yea, in a moment,An insight that would not dieKilled her old endowmentOf charm that had capped all nigh,Which vanished to noneLike the gilt of a cloud,And showed her but oneOf the common crowd.She seemed but a sampleOf earth's poor average kind,Lit up by no ampleEnrichments of mien or mind.I covered my eyesAs to cover the thought,And unrecognizeWhat the morn had taught.O vision appallingWhen the one believed-in thingIs seen falling, falling,With all to which hope can cling.Of...
Thomas Hardy
The Broken Lute
Good-bye, my song--I, who found words for sorrow,Offer my joy to-day a useless lute.In the deep night I sang me of the morrow;The sun is on my face and I am mute.Good-bye, my song, in you was all my yearning,The prayer for this poor heart I wore so long.Now love heaps roses where the wounds were burning;What need have I for song?Long since I sang of all one loves and misses;How may I sing to-day who know no wrong?My lips are all for laughter and for kisses.Good-bye, my song.
Theodosia Garrison
The Statues And The Tear
All night a fountain pleads, Telling her beads,Her tinkling beads monotonous 'neath the moon; And where she springs atween, Two statues lean--Two Kings, their marble beards with moonlight strewn. Till hate had frozen speech, Each hated each,Hated and died, and went unto his place: And still inveterate They lean and hateWith glare of stone implacable, face to face.One, who bade set them here In stone austere,To both was dear, and did not guess at all: Yet with her new-wed lord Walking the swardPaused, and for two dead friends a tear let fall. She turn'd and went her way.
Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
Comfort At Parting
O little Heart,So much I seeThy hidden smart,So much I longTo sing some songTo comfort thee.For, little Heart,Indeed, indeed,The hour to partMakes cruel speed;Yet, dear, think thouHow even now,With happy haste,With eager feet,The hour when weAgain shall meetCometh across the waste.
Richard Le Gallienne
Time's Changes In A Household.
They grew together side by side,They filled one house with gleeTheir graves are severed far and wide -By mountain stream and tree.Mrs. HemansThey were as fair and bright a band as ever filled with prideParental hearts whose task it was children beloved to guide;And every care that love upon its idols bright may showerWas lavished with impartial hand upon each fair young flower.Theirs was the father's merry hour sharing their childish bliss,The mother's soft breathed benison and tender, nightly kiss;While strangers who by chance might see their joyous graceful play,To breathe some word of fondness kind would pause upon their way.But years rolled on, and in their course Time many changes brought,And sorrow in that household gay ...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Sonnet. On Seeing A Young Lady, I Had Previously Known, Confined In A Madhouse.
Sweet wreck of loveliness! alas, how soonThe sad brief summer of thy joys hath fled:How sorrows Friendship for thy hapless doom,Thy beauty faded, and thy hopes all dead.Oh! 'twas that beauty's power which first destroy'dThy mind's serenity; its charms but ledThe faithless friend, that thy pure love enjoy'd,To tear the beauteous blossom from its bed.How reason shudders at thy frenzied air!To see thee smile, with fancy's dreams possess'd;Or shrink, the frozen image of despair.Or, love-enraptured, chant thy griefs to rest:Oh! cease that mournful voice, affliction's child,My heart but bleeds to hear thy musings wild.
Thomas Gent
Songs Of Two
ILast night I dreamed this dream: That I was dead;And as I slept, forgot of man and God,That other dreamless sleep of rest,I heard a footstep on the sod,As of one passing overhead,And lo, thou, Dear, didst touch me on the breast,Saying: "What shall I write against thy nameThat men should see?"Then quick the answer came,"I was beloved of thee."IIDear Giver of Thyself when at thy side,I see the path beyond divide,Where we must walk alone a little space,I say: "Now am I strong indeedTo wait with only memory awhile,Content, until I see thy face, "Yet turn, as one in sorest need,To ask once more thy giving grace,So, at the lastOf all our partings, when the nightHas hidden from my failing si...
Arthur Sherburne Hardy
To Mary In Heaven.
Tune - "Death of Captain Cook."I. Thou lingering star, with less'ning ray, That lov'st to greet the early morn, Again thou usherest in the day My Mary from my soul was torn. O Mary! dear departed shade! Where is thy place of blissful rest? Seest thou thy lover lowly laid? Hear'st thou the groans that rend his breast?II. That sacred hour can I forget, Can I forget the hallow'd grove, Where by the winding Ayr we met, To live one day of parting love! Eternity cannot efface Those records dear of transports past; Thy image at our last embrace; Ah! little thought we 'twas our last!III. Ayr, gurgli...
Robert Burns
Song Of Parting
Say farewell, and let me go;Shatter every vow!All the future can bestowWill be welcome now! And if this fair hand I touch I have worshipped overmuch, It was my mistake - and so, Say farewell, and let me go.Say farewell, and let me go:Murmur no regret,Stay your tear-drops ere they flow -Do not waste them yet! They might pour as pours the rain, And not wash away the pain: I have tried them and I know. - Say farewell, and let me go.Say farewell, and let me go:Think me not untrue -True as truth is, even soI am true to you! If the ghost of love may stay Where my fond heart dies to-day, I am with you alway - so, Say farewell, and let me go.
James Whitcomb Riley
Yesterdays
Gone! and they return no more,But they leave a light in the heart;The murmur of waves that kiss a shoreWill never, I know, depart.Gone! yet with us still they stay,And their memories throb through life;The music that hushes or stirs to-day,Is toned by their calm or strife.Gone! and yet they never go!We kneel at the shrine of time:'Tis a mystery no man may know,Nor tell in a poet's rhyme.
Abram Joseph Ryan
By A Child's Bed
She breathèd deep,And stepped from out life's streamUpon the shore of sleep;And parted from the earthly noise,Leaving her world of toys,To dwell a little in a dell of dream.Then brooding on the love I hold so free,My fond possessions come to beClouded with grief;These fairy kisses,This archness innocent,Sting me with sorrow and disturbed content:I think of what my portion might have been;A dearth of blisses,A famine of delights,If I had never had what now I value most;Till all I have seems something I have lost;A desert underneath the garden shows,And in a mound of cinders roots the rose.Here then I linger by the little bed,Till all my spirit's sphere,Grows one half brightness and the other dead,O...
Duncan Campbell Scott
Sorrows Of The Moon
The moon tonight dreams vacantly, as ifShe were a beauty cushioned at her restWho strokes with wandering hand her liftingNipples, and the contour of her breasts;Lying as if for love, glazed by the softLuxurious avalanche, dying in swoons,She turns her eyes to visions-clouds aloftBillowing hugely, blossoming in blue.When sometimes from her stupefying calmOn to this earth she drops a furtive tearPale as an opal, iridescent, rare,The poet, sleepless watchman, is the oneTo take it up within his hollowed palmAnd in his heart to hide it from the sun.
Charles Baudelaire
Absence.
"What ails my love, where can he be?He never broke a vow,Though twice the clock's reminded meThat he's deceiv'd me now.Through some bad girl, I well know that,Poor Peggy's love's forgot:"Thus sigh'd a lass, as down she satOn the appointed spot.The night was gathering dark and deep,But absent was the swain;The dews on many a flower did weep,But Peggy wept in vain:And every noise that meets her ear,And fancy of her eye,Hope instant wipes away the tear,And paints the shepherd nigh."Ah, now he comes, my cheek glows hot,His dog barks to the sheep!"Alas, her own dog lay forgot,Loud whimpering in his sleep."He rustles down the wood-path park,The boughs hung o'er it stirr'd!"--Alas, her Rover's dreaming b...
John Clare
When Cold In The Earth.
When cold in the earth lies the friend thou hast loved, Be his faults and his follies forgot by thee then;Or, if from their slumber the veil be removed, Weep o'er them in silence, and close it again.And oh! if 'tis pain to remember how far From the pathways of light he was tempted to roam,Be it bliss to remember that thou wert the star That arose on his darkness and guided him home.From thee and thy innocent beauty first came The revealings, that taught him true love to adore,To feel the bright presence, and turn him with shame From the idols he blindly had knelt to before.O'er the waves of a life, long benighted and wild, Thou camest, like a soft golden calm o'er the sea;And if happiness purely and glowingly smiled On h...
Thomas Moore
Peru. Canto The Third.
THE ARGUMENT.Pizarro takes possession of Cuzco - the fanaticism of Valverde, a Spanish priest - its dreadful effects - A Peruvian priest put to the torture - his daughter's distress - he is rescued by Las Casas, an amiable Spanish ecclesiastic, and led to a place of safety, where he dies - his daughter's narration of her sufferings - her death.PERU.CANTO THE THIRD.Now stern Pizarro seeks the distant plains,Where beauteous Cusco lifts her golden fanes:The meek Peruvians gaz'd in pale dismay,Nor barr'd the dark oppressor's sanguine way:And soon on Cusco, where the dawning light Of glory shone, foretelling day more bright,Where the young arts had shed unfolding flowers,A scene...
Helen Maria Williams
Roses Can Wound
Roses can wound,But not from having thorns they do most harm;Often the night gives, starry-sheen or moon'd, Deep in the soul alarm.And it hath been deep within my heart like fear, Girl, when you are near. The mist of sense,Wherein the soul goes shielded, can divide,And she must cringe and be ashamed, and wince, Not in appearance hideOf rose or girl from the blazing mastery Of bared Eternity.
Lascelles Abercrombie
Abba Thule's Lament For His Son Prince Le Boo
I climb the highest cliff; I hear the soundOf dashing waves; I gaze intent around;I mark the gray cope, and the hollownessOf heaven, and the great sun, that comes to blessThe isles again; but my long-straining eye,No speck, no shadow can, far off, descry,That I might weep tears of delight, and say,It is the bark that bore my child away!Sun, that returnest bright, beneath whose eyeThe worlds unknown, and out-stretched waters lie,Dost thou behold him now! On some rude shore,Around whose crags the cheerless billows roar,Watching the unwearied surges doth he stand,And think upon his father's distant land!Or has his heart forgot, so far away,These native woods, these rocks, and torrents gray,The tall bananas whispering to the breeze,The shores...
William Lisle Bowles