Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 34 of 71
Previous
Next
Simple Creeds
If this were our creed it were creed enough To keep us thoughtful and make us brave;On this sad journey o'er pathways rough That lead us steadily on to the grave.Speak no evil, and cause no ache,Utter no jest that can pain awake;Guard your actions and bridle your tongue,Words are adders when hearts are stung.If this were our aim, it were all, in sooth, That any soul needs, to climb to heaven,And we would not cumber the way of truth With dreary dogmas, or rites priest given.Help whoever, whenever you can,Man for ever needs aid from man.Let never a day die in the West,That you have not comforted some sad heart.Were this our belief we need not...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
The Happy Change.
How blest thy creature is, O God,When, with a single eye,He views the lustre of thy word,The dayspring from on high!Through all the storms that veil the skies,And frown on earthly things,The Sun of Righteousness he eyes,With healing on his wings.Struck by that light, the human heart,A barren soil no more,Sends the sweet smell of grace abroad,Where serpents lurkd before.[1]The soul a dreary province onceOf Satans dark domain,Feels a new empire formd within,And owns a heavenly reign.The glorious orb, whose golden beamsThe fruitful year control,Since first, obedient to thy word,He started from the goal;Has cheerd the nations with the joysHis or...
William Cowper
Lively Hope And Gracious Fear.
I was a grovelling creature once,And basely cleaved to earth;I wanted spirit to renounceThe clod that gave me birth.But God has breathed upon a worm,And sent me, from above,Wings such as clothe an angels form,The wings of joy and love.With these to Pisgahs top I fly,And there delighted stand,To view beneath a shining skyThe spacious promised land.The Lord of all the vast domainHas promised it to me;The length and breadth of all the plain,As far as faith can see.How glorious is my privilege!To thee for help I call;I stand upon a mountains edge,Oh save me, lest I fall!Though much exalted in the Lord,My strength is not my own;Then let me tremble at h...
None Truly Happy Here.
Happy's that man to whom God givesA stock of goods, whereby he livesNear to the wishes of his heart:No man is blest through every part.
Robert Herrick
To-Day
I love this age of energy and force, Expectantly I greet each pregnant hour;Emerging from the all-creative source, Supreme with promise, imminent with power.The strident whistle and the clanging bell, The noise of gongs, the rush of motored thingsAre but the prophet voices which foretell A time when thought may use unfettered wings.Too long the drudgery of earth has been A barrier 'twixt man and his own mind.Remove the stone, and lo! the Christ within; For He is there, and who so seeks shall find.The Great Inventor is the Modern Priest. He paves the pathway to a higher goal.Once from the grind of endless toil released Man will explore the kingdom of his soul.And all this restless rush, this strain and strife,...
Love Eternal
The human heart will never change,The human dream will still go on,The enchanted earth be ever strangeWith moonlight and the morning sun,And still the seas shall shout for joy,And swing the stars as in a glass,The girl be angel for the boy,The lad be hero for the lass.The fashions of our mortal brainsNew names for dead men's thoughts shall give,But we find not for all our painsWhy 'tis so wonderful to live;The beauty of a meadow-flowerShall make a mock of all our skill,And God, upon his lonely towerShall keep his secret - secret still.The old magician of the skies,With coloured and sweet-smelling things,Shall charm the sense and trance the eyes,Still onward through a million springs;And nothing old and nothin...
Richard Le Gallienne
To Hannah
Spirit girl to whom 'twas givenTo revisit scenes of pain,From the hell I thought was HeavenYou have lifted me again;Through the world that I inherit,Where I loved her ere she died,I am walking with the spiritOf a dead girl by my side.Through my old possessions onlyFor a very little while,And they say that I am lonely,And they pity, but I smile:For the brighter side has won meBy the calmness that it brings,And the peace that is upon meDoes not come of earthly things.Spirit girl, the good is in me,But the flesh you know is weak,And with no pure soul to win meI might miss the path I seek;Lead me by the love you bore meWhen you trod the earth with me,Till the light is clear before meAnd my spiri...
Henry Lawson
When?
If I were told that I must die to-morrow,That the next sunWhich sinks should bear me past all fear and sorrowFor any one,All the fight fought, all the short journey through:What should I do?I do not think that I should shrink or falter,But just go on,Doing my work, nor change, nor seek to alterAught that is gone;But rise and move and love and smile and prayFor one more day.And, lying down at night for a last sleeping,Say in that earWhich hearkens ever: "Lord, within Thy keepingHow should I fear?And when to-morrow brings Thee nearer still.Do Thou Thy will."I might not sleep for awe; but peaceful, tender,My soul would lieAll the night long; and when the morning splendorFlashed o'er the sky,I t...
Susan Coolidge
St. Telemachus
Had the fierce ashes of some fiery peakBeen hurld so high they ranged about the globe?For day by day, thro many a blood-red eve,In that four-hundredth summer after Christ,The wrathful sunset glared against a crossReard on the tumbled ruins of an old faneNo longer sacred to the Sun, and flamedOn one huge slope beyond, where in his caveThe man, whose pious hand had built the cross,A man who never changed a word with men,Fasted and prayd, Telemachus the Saint.Eve after eve that haggard anchoriteWould haunt the desolated fane, and thereGaze at the ruin, often mutter lowVicisti Galilæe; louder again,Spurning a shatterd fragment of the God,Vicisti Galilæe! butwhen nowBathed in that lurid crimsonaskd Is earthOn fire to the Wes...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Scenes Of The Mind
I have run where festival was loudWith drum and brass among the crowdOf panic revellers, whose criesAffront the quiet of the skies;Whose dancing lights contract the deepInfinity of night and sleepTo a narrow turmoil of troubled fire.And I have found my heart's desireIn beechen caverns that autumn fillsWith the blue shadowiness of distant hills;Whose luminous grey pillars bearThe stooping sky: calm is the air,Nor any sound is heard to marThat crystal silence - as from far,Far off a man may seeThe busy world all utterlyHushed as an old memorial scene.Long evenings I have sat and beenStrangely content, while in my handsI held a wealth of coloured strands,Shimmering plaits of silk and skeinsOf soft bright wool. Each co...
Aldous Leonard Huxley
Symbolism
Now when the spirit in us wakes and broods,Filled with home yearnings, drowsily it flingsFrom its deep heart high dreams and mystic moods,Mixed with the memory of the loved earth things;Clothing the vast with a familiar face;Reaching its right hand forth to greet the starry race.Wondrously near and clear the great warm firesStare from the blue; so shows the cottage lightTo the field labourer whose heart desiresThe old folk by the nook, the welcome brightFrom the house-wife long parted from at dawn--So the star villages in God's great depths withdrawn.Nearer to Thee, not by delusion led,Though there no house fires burn nor bright eyes gaze,We rise, but by the symbol charioted,Through loved things rising up to Love's own waysBy these ...
George William Russell
Awake, Arise, Thy Light Is Come. (Air.--Stevenson.)
Awake, arise, thy light is come;[1] The nations, that before outshone thee,Now at thy feet lie dark and dumb-- The glory of the Lord is on thee!Arise--the Gentiles to thy ray, From every nook of earth shall cluster;And kings and princes haste to pay Their homage to thy rising lustre.[2]Lift up thine eyes around, and see O'er foreign fields, o'er farthest waters,Thy exiled sons return to thee, To thee return thy home-sick daughters.[3]And camels rich, from Midians' tents, Shall lay their treasures down before thee;And Saba bring her gold and scents, To fill thy air and sparkle o'er thee.[4]See, who are these that, like a cloud,[5] Are ...
Thomas Moore
God's Witnesses. A Pen Picture From The Old Testament.
Upon the plain of Dura stood an image great and high,With golden forehead broad and bright beneath the morning sky;All regal in its majesty and kingly in its mien,The grandest and most glorious thing the world had ever seen!Full sixty cubits high in air the lordly head was reared,And robed in gold from head to foot the stately form appeared;Adown the breast six cubits broad, a flood of yellow gold,All deftly wrought with matchless skill, its shining tresses rolled.And, fronting thus the rising sun, it sent back ray for ray -A golden flood of arrowy light - into-the face of day;While round its feet, in awe and dread, all Shinar stood amazed,And up into that radiant face with reverent wonder gazed.Woke sackbut, psaltery, and harp, woke dulcimer and flu...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
The Falls Of The Chaudière, Ottawa.
I have laid my cheek to Nature's, placed my puny hand in hers,Felt a kindred spirit warming all the life-blood of my face,Moved amid the very foremost of her truest worshippers,Studying each curve of beauty, marking every minute grace;Loved not less the mountain cedar than the flowers at its feet,Looking skyward from the valley, open-lipped as if in prayer,Felt a pleasure in the brooklet singing of its wild retreat,But I knelt before the splendour of the thunderous Chaudière.All my manhood waked within me, every nerve had tenfold force,And my soul stood up rejoicing, looking on with cheerful eyes,Watching the resistless waters speeding on their downward course,Titan strength and queenly beauty diademed with rainbow dyes.Eye and ear, with spirit quickened, mingle...
Charles Sangster
Heroes.
In rich Virginian woods,The scarlet creeper reddens over graves,Among the solemn trees enlooped with vines;Heroic spirits haunt the solitudes, -The noble souls of half a million braves, Amid the murmurous pines. Ah! who is left behind,Earnest and eloquent, sincere and strong,To consecrate their memories with wordsNot all unmeet? with fitting dirge and songTo chant a requiem purer than the wind, And sweeter than the birds? Here, though all seems at peace,The placid, measureless sky serenely fair,The laughter of the breeze among the leaves,The bars of sunlight slanting through the trees,The reckless wild-flowers blooming everywhere, The grasses' delicate sheaves, - Nathless eac...
Emma Lazarus
The River
I am a river flowing from God's seaThrough devious ways. He mapped my course for me;I cannot change it; mine alone the toilTo keep the waters free from grime and soil.The winding river ends where it began;And when my life has compassed its brief spanI must return to that mysterious source.So let me gather daily on my courseThe perfume from the blossoms as I pass,Balm from the pines, and healing from the grass,And carry down my current as I goNot common stones but precious gems to show;And tears (the holy water from sad eyes)Back to God's sea, from which all rivers riseLet me convey, not blood from wounded hearts,Nor poison which the upas tree imparts.When over flowery vales I leap with joy,Let me not devastate them, nor destroy,But ...
Show Me The Way.
Show me the way that leads to the true life. I do not care what tempests may assail me, I shall be given courage for the strife; I know my strength will not desert or fail me; I know that I shall conquer in the fray: Show me the way. Show me the way up to a higher plane, Where body shall be servant to the soul. I do not care what tides of woe or pain Across my life their angry waves may roll, If I but reach the end I seek, some day: Show me the way. Show me the way, and let me bravely climb Above vain grievings for unworthy treasures; Above all sorrow that finds balm in time; Above small triumphs or belittling pleasures; Up to those heights where...
Homespun
If heart be tired and soul be sadAs life goes on in homespun clad,Drab, colorless, with much of care,Not even a ribbon in her hair;Heart-broken for the near and new,And sick to do what others do,And quit the road of toil and tears,Doffing the burden of the years:And if beside you one should rise,Doubt, with a menace, in its eyesWhat then?Why, look Life in the face;And there again you may retraceThe dream that once in youth you hadWhen life was full of hope and glad,And knew no doubt, no dread, that trailsIn darkness by, and sighs, "All fails!"And in its every look and breathA shudder, old as night, that saith,With something of finality,"There is no immortality!"Confusing faith who stands aloneLike a green tre...
Madison Julius Cawein