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Beggars
She had a tall man's height or more;Her face from summer's noontide heatNo bonnet shaded, but she woreA mantle, to her very feetDescending with a graceful flow,And on her head a cap as white as new-fallen snow.Her skin was of Egyptian brown:Haughty, as if her eye had seenIts own light to a distance thrown,She towered, fit person for a QueenTo lead those ancient Amazonian files;Or ruling Bandit's wife among the Grecian isles.Advancing, forth she stretched her handAnd begged an alms with doleful pleaThat ceased not; on our English landSuch woes, I knew, could never be;And yet a boon I gave her, for the creatureWas beautiful to see, a weed of glorious feature.I left her, and pursued my way;And soon before me did...
William Wordsworth
The Smoker's Year Book
JANUARYNow Time the harvester surveysHis sorry crops of yesterdays;Of trampled hopes and reaped regrets,And for another harvest whetsHis ancient scythe, eying the whileThe budding year with cynic smile.Well, let him smile; in snug retreatI fill my pipe with honeyed sweet,Whose incense wafted from the bowlShall make warm sunshine in my soul,And conjure mid the fragrant hazeFair memories of other days.FEBRUARYBend you now before the shrineOf the good Saint Valentine.Show to him your broken heart--Pray the Saint to take your part.Should he intercede in vainAnd the maid your heart disdain,Call upon Saint Nicotine;He will surely intervene.Bring burnt off'ring to his feet,<...
Oliver Herford
To Liberty
O spirit of the wind and sky,Where doth thy harp neglected lie?Is there no heart thy bard to be,To wake that soul of melody?Is liberty herself a slave?No! God forbid it! On, ye brave!I've loved thee as the common air,And paid thee worship everywhere:In every soil beneath the sunThy simple song my heart has won.And art thou silent? Still a slave?And thy sons living? On, ye brave!Gather on mountain and on plain!Make gossamer the iron chain!Make prison walls as paper screen,That tyrant maskers may be seen!Let earth as well as heaven be free!So, on, ye brave, for liberty!I've loved thy being from a boy:The Highland hills were once my joy:Then morning mists did round them lie,Like sunshine in the happi...
John Clare
St. Martins Summer
No protesting, dearest!Hardly kisses even!Dont we both know how it ends?How the greenest leaf turns serest,Bluest outbreak, blankest heaven,Lovers, friends?You would build a mansion,I would weave a bowerWant the heart for enterprise.Walls admit of no expansion:Trellis-work may haply flowerTwice the size.What makes glad Lifes Winter?New buds, old blooms after.Sad the sighing How suspectReams would ere mid-Autumn splinter,Rooftree scarce support a rafter,Walls lie wrecked?You are young, my princess!I am hardly older:Yet, I steal a glance behind!Dare I tell you what convincesTimid me that you, if bolder,Bold, are blind?Where we plan our dwellingGlooms a graveyard sur...
Robert Browning
Sunday Night.
The holy Sabbath day has fled; And has it been well spent?Have I remembered what was said, And why the day was sent?May I be better all the week, For what to-day has taught;May I God's love and favor seek, And do the things I ought!
H. P. Nichols
Fly Not Yet.
Fly not yet, 'tis just the hour,When pleasure, like the midnight flowerThat scorns the eye of vulgar light,Begins to bloom for sons of night, And maids who love the moon.'Twas but to bless these hours of shadeThat beauty and the moon were made;'Tis then their soft attractions glowingSet the tides and goblets flowing. Oh! stay,--Oh! stay,--Joy so seldom weaves a chainLike this to-night, and oh, 'tis pain To break its links so soon.Fly not yet, the fount that playedIn times of old through Ammon's shade,Though icy cold by day it ran,Yet still, like souls of mirth, began To burn when night was near.And thus, should woman's heart and looks,At noon be cold as winter brooks,Nor kindle till the night, returning...
Thomas Moore
Fill The Bumper Fair.
Fill the bumper fair! Every drop we sprinkleO'er the brow of Care Smooths away a wrinkle.Wit's electric flame Ne'er so swiftly passes,As when thro' the frame It shoots from brimming glasses.Fill the bumper fair! Every drop we sprinkleO'er the brow of Care Smooths away a wrinkle.Sages can, they say, Grasp the lightning's pinions,And bring down its ray From the starred dominions:--So we, Sages, sit, And, mid bumpers brightening,From the Heaven of Wit Draw down all its lightning.Wouldst thou know what first Made our souls inheritThis ennobling thirst For wine's celestial spirit?It chanced upon that day, When, as bards inform us,Prometheus...
Peace
Ah, that Time could touch a formThat could show what Homers ageBred to be a heros wage.Were not all her life but storm,Would not painters paint a formOf such noble lines I said,Such a delicate high head,All that sternness amid charm,All that sweetness amid strength?Ah, but peace that comes at length,Came when Time had touched her form.
William Butler Yeats
On The Banks Of A Rocky Stream
Behold an emblem of our human mindCrowded with thoughts that need a settled home,Yet, like to eddying balls of foamWithin this whirlpool, they each other chaseRound and round, and neither findAn outlet nor a resting-place!Stranger, if such disquietude be thine,Fall on thy knees and sue for help divine.
Only A Box.
[From Arthur Selwyn's Note-book.][Only A Box.] Only a box, secure and strong, Rough, and wooden, and six feet long, Lying here in the drizzling rain, Waiting to take the up-bound train. Only its owner, just inside, Cold, and livid, and glassy-eyed; Little to him if the train be late! Nothing has he to do but wait. Only an open grave, somewhere, Heady to close when he gets there; Turfs and grasses and flowerets sweet, Ready to press him 'neath their feet. ...
William McKendree Carleton
Poem For The Dedication Of The Fountain At Stratford-On-Avon, Presented By George W. Childs, Of Philadelphia
Welcome, thrice welcome is thy silvery gleam,Thou long-imprisoned stream!Welcome the tinkle of thy crystal beadsAs plashing raindrops to the flowery meads,As summer's breath to Avon's whispering reeds!From rock-walled channels, drowned in rayless night,Leap forth to life and light;Wake from the darkness of thy troubled dream,And greet with answering smile the morning's beam!No purer lymph the white-limbed Naiad knowsThan from thy chalice flows;Not the bright spring of Afric's sunny shores,Starry with spangles washed from golden ores,Nor glassy stream Bandusia's fountain pours,Nor wave translucent where Sabrina fairBraids her loose-flowing hair,Nor the swift current, stainless as it roseWhere chill Arveiron steals from Alpine snows.<...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
John Walsh
A strange life - strangely passed! We may not read the soul When God has folded up the scroll In death at last.We may not - dare not say of oneWhose task of life as well was doneAs he could do it, - "This is lost,And prayers may never pay the cost."Who listens to the song That sings within the breast, Should ever hear the good expressed Above the wrong.And he who leans an eager earTo catch the discord, he will hearThe echoes of his own weak heartBeat out the most discordant part.Whose tender heart could build Affection's bower above A heart where baby nests of love Were ever filled, -With upward growth may reach and twineAbout the children, grown divine,That ...
James Whitcomb Riley
Reconciliation
Some may have blamed you that you took awayThe verses that could move them on the dayWhen, the ears being deafened, the sight of the eyes blindWith lightning you went from me, and I could findNothing to make a song about but kings,Helmets, and swords, and half-forgotten thingsThat were like memories of you, but nowWell out, for the world lives as long ago;And while were in our laughing, weeping fit,Hurl helmets, crowns, and swords into the pit.But, dear, cling close to me; since you were gone,My barren thoughts have chilled me to the bone.
Lament Of The Scotch-Irish Exile
Oh, I want to win me hame To my ain countrie,The land frae whence I came Far away across the sea;Bit I canna find it there, on the atlas anywhere,And I greet and wonder sair Where the deil it can be?I hae never met a man, In a' the warld wide,Who has trod my native lan' Or its distant shores espied;But they tell me there's a place where my hypothetic raceIts dim origin can trace, Tipperary-on-the-Clyde.But anither answers: "Nae, Ye are varra far frae richt;Glasgow town in Dublin Bay Is the spot we saw the licht."But I dinna find the maps bearing out these pawkie chaps,And I sometimes think perhaps It has vanished out o' sight.Oh, I fain wad win me hame To that u...
James Jeffrey Roche
An Arctic Vision
Where the short-legged EsquimauxWaddle in the ice and snow,And the playful Polar bearNips the hunter unaware;Where by day they track the ermine,And by night another vermin,Segment of the frigid zone,Where the temperature aloneWarms on St. Elias cone;Polar dock, where Nature slipsFrom the ways her icy ships;Land of fox and deer and sable,Shore end of our western cable,Let the news that flying goesThrill through all your Arctic floes,And reverberate the boastFrom the cliffs off Beecheys coast,Till the tidings, circling roundEvery bay of Norton Sound,Throw the vocal tide-wave backTo the isles of Kodiac.Let the stately Polar bearsWaltz around the pole in pairs,And the walrus, in his glee,Bare his tu...
Bret Harte
Stanzas.
Say, why is the stern eye averted with scornOf the stoic who passes along?And why frowns the maid, else as mild as the morn.On the victim of falsehood and wrong?For the wretch sunk in sorrow, repentance, and shame,The tear of compassion is won:And alone must she forfeit the wretch's sad claim,Because she's deceived and undone?Oh! recal the stern look, ere it reaches her heart,To bid its wounds rankle anew;Oh! smile, or embalm with a tear the sad smart,And angels will smile upon you.Time was, when she knew nor opprobrium nor pain,And youth could its pleasures impart,Till some serpent distill'd through her bosom the stain,As he wound round the strings of her heart.Poor girl! let thy tears through thy blandishments break,
Thomas Gent
The Person of the House
IDYL CCCLXVITHE ACCOMPANIMENTS1. The Monthly Nurse2. The Caudle3. The SentencesTHE KID1. THE MONTHLY NURSEThe sickly airs had died of damp;Through huddling leaves the holy chimeFlagged; I, expecting Mrs. Gamp,Thought "Will the woman come in time?"Upstairs I knew the matron bedHeld her whose name confirms all joyTo me; and tremblingly I said,"Ah! will it be a girl or boy?"And, soothed, my fluttering doubts beganTo sift the pleasantness of things;Developing the unshapen man,An eagle baffled of his wings;Considering, next, how fair the stateAnd large the license that sublimesA nineteenth-century female fateSweet cause that thralls my liberal rhymes!And Chastities and colder Shames...
Algernon Charles Swinburne
Martin
When I am tired of earnest men, Intense and keen and sharp and clever,Pursuing fame with brush or pen Or counting metal disks forever,Then from the halls of Shadowland Beyond the trackless purple seaOld Martin's ghost comes back to stand Beside my desk and talk to me.Still on his delicate pale face A quizzical thin smile is showing,His cheeks are wrinkled like fine lace, His kind blue eyes are gay and glowing.He wears a brilliant-hued cravat, A suit to match his soft grey hair,A rakish stick, a knowing hat, A manner blithe and debonair.How good that he who always knew That being lovely was a duty,Should have gold halls to wander through And should himself inhabit beauty.How like ...
Alfred Joyce Kilmer