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Freedom
Once I wished I might rehearseFreedom's paean in my verse,That the slave who caught the strainShould throb until he snapped his chain,But the Spirit said, 'Not so;Speak it not, or speak it low;Name not lightly to be said,Gift too precious to be prayed,Passion not to be expressedBut by heaving of the breast:Yet,--wouldst thou the mountain findWhere this deity is shrined,Who gives to seas and sunset skiesTheir unspent beauty of surprise,And, when it lists him, waken canBrute or savage into man;Or, if in thy heart he shine,Blends the starry fates with thine,Draws angels nigh to dwell with thee,And makes thy thoughts archangels be;Freedom's secret wilt thou know?--Counsel not with flesh and blood;Loiter not for c...
Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Doubters And The Lovers.
Ye love, and sonnets write! Fate's strange behest!The heart, its hidden meaning to declare,Must seek for rhymes, uniting pair with pair:Learn, children, that the will is weak, at best.Scarcely with freedom the o'erflowing breastAs yet can speak, and well may it beware;Tempestuous passions sweep each chord that's there,Then once more sink to night and gentle rest.Why vex yourselves and us, the heavy stoneUp the steep path but step by step to roll?It falls again, and ye ne'er cease to strive.THE LOVERS.But we are on the proper road alone!If gladly is to thaw the frozen soul,The fire of love must aye be kept alive.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Come Up From The Fields, Father
Come up from the fields, father, here's a letter from our Pete;And come to the front door, mother--here's a letter from thy dear son.Lo, 'tis autumn;Lo, where the trees, deeper green, yellower and redder,Cool and sweeten Ohio's villages, with leaves fluttering in the moderate wind;Where apples ripe in the orchards hang, and grapes on the trellis'd vines;(Smell you the smell of the grapes on the vines?Smell you the buckwheat, where the bees were lately buzzing?)Above all, lo, the sky, so calm, so transparent after the rain, and with wondrous clouds;Below, too, all calm, all vital and beautiful--and the farm prospers well.Down in the fields all prospers well;But now from the fields come, father--come at the daughter's call;And come to the entry, ...
Walt Whitman
To The Muse Of The North.
O muse that swayest the sad Northern Song,Thy right hand full of smiting & of wrong,Thy left hand holding pity; & thy breastHeaving with hope of that so certain rest:Thou, with the grey eyes kind and unafraid,The soft lips trembling not, though they have saidThe doom of the World and those that dwell therein.The lips that smile not though thy children winThe fated Love that draws the fated Death.O, borne adown the fresh stream of thy breath,Let some word reach my ears and touch my heart,That, if it may be, I may have a partIn that great sorrow of thy children deadThat vexed the brow, and bowed adown the head,Whitened the hair, made life a wondrous dream,And death the murmur of a restful stream,But left no stain upon those souls of thine...
William Morris
Spring
(After the German of Goethe, Faust, II)When on the mountain tops ray-crowned ApolloTurns his swift arrows, dart on glittering dart,Let but a rock glint green, the wild goats followGlad-grazing shyly on each sparse-grown part.Rolled into plunging torrents spring the fountains;And slope and vale and meadowland grow green;While on ridg'd levels of a hundred mountains,Far fleece by fleece, the woolly flocks convene.With measured stride, deliberate and steady,The scattered cattle seek the beetling steep,But shelter for th' assembled herd is readyIn many hollows that the walled rocks heap:The lairs of Pan; and, lo, in murmuring places,In bushy clefts, what woodland Nymphs arouse!Where, full of yearning for the azure spaces,
Madison Julius Cawein
As In The Woodland I Walk
As in the woodland I walk, many a strange thing I learn -How from the dross and the drift the beautiful things return,And the fires quenched in October in April reburn;How foulness grows fair with the stern lustration of sleets and snows,And rottenness changes back to the breath and the cheek of the rose,And how gentle the wind that seems wild to each blossom that blows;How the lost is ever found, and the darkness the door of the light,And how soft the caress of the hand that to shape must not fear to smite,And how the dim pearl of the moon is drawn from the gulf of the night;How, when the great tree falls, with its empire of rustling leaves,The earth with a thousand hands its sunlit ruin receives,And out of the wreck of its glory each secret artist weaves...
Richard Le Gallienne
The Never-Never Country
By homestead, hut, and shearing-shed,By railroad, coach, and track,By lonely graves of our brave dead,Up-Country and Out-Back:To where 'neath glorious the clustered starsThe dreamy plains expand,My home lies wide a thousand milesIn the Never-Never Land.It lies beyond the farming belt,Wide wastes of scrub and plain,A blazing desert in the drought,A lake-land after rain;To the sky-line sweeps the waving grass,Or whirls the scorching sand,A phantom land, a mystic land!The Never-Never Land.Where lone Mount Desolation lies,Mounts Dreadful and Despair,'Tis lost beneath the rainless skiesIn hopeless deserts there;It spreads nor'-west by No-Man's-Land,Where clouds are seldom seen,To where the cattle-stati...
Henry Lawson
At Carnoy
Down in the hollow there's the whole BrigadeCamped in four groups: through twilight falling slowI hear a sound of mouth-organs, ill-played,And murmur of voices, gruff, confused, and low.Crouched among thistle-tufts I've watched the glowOf a blurred orange sunset flare and fade;And I'm content. To-morrow we must goTo take some cursèd Wood.... O world God made!July 3rd, 1916.
Siegfried Sassoon
The Herons Of Elmwood
Warm and still is the summer night, As here by the river's brink I wander;White overhead are the stars, and white The glimmering lamps on the hillside yonder.Silent are all the sounds of day; Nothing I hear but the chirp of crickets,And the cry of the herons winging their way O'er the poet's house in the Elmwood thickets.Call to him, herons, as slowly you pass To your roosts in the haunts of the exiled thrushes,Sing him the song of the green morass; And the tides that water the reeds and rushes.Sing him the mystical Song of the Hern, And the secret that baffles our utmost seeking;For only a sound of lament we discern, And cannot interpret the words you are speaking.Sing of the air, and the wild de...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
My Two Geniuses
I.One is a slow and melancholy maid;I know riot if she cometh from the skiesOr from the sleepy gulfs, but she will riseOften before me in the twilight shade,Holding a bunch of poppies and a bladeOf springing wheat: prostrate my body liesBefore her on the turf, the while she tiesA fillet of the weed about my head;And in the gaps of sleep I seem to hearA gentle rustle like the stir of corn,And words like odours thronging to my ear:"Lie still, beloved--still until the morn;Lie still with me upon this rolling sphere--Still till the judgment; thou art faint and worn."II.The other meets me in the public throng;Her hair streams backward from her loose attire;She hath a trumpet and an eye of fire;She points me downwa...
George MacDonald
Poor Pierrot
Here far away from the city, here by the yellow dunesI will lie and soothe my heart where the sea croons.For what can I do with strife, or what can I do with hate?Or the city, or life, or fame, or love or fate?Or the struggle since time began of the rich and poor?Or the law that drives the weak from the temple's door?Bury me under the sand so that my sorrow shall lieHidden under the dunes from the world's eye.I have learned the secret of silence, silence long and deep:The dead knew all that I know, that is why they sleep.They could do nothing with fate, or love, or fame, or strife -When life fills full the soul then life kills life.I would glide under the earth as a shadow over a dune,Into the soul of silence, under the sun and moon.And f...
Edgar Lee Masters
Who Bides His Time
Who bides his time, and day by dayFaces defeat full patiently,And lifts a mirthful roundelay,However poor his fortunes be,He will not fail in any qualmOf poverty - the paltry dimeIt will grow golden in his palm,Who bides his time.Who bides his time - he tastes the sweetOf honey in the saltest tear;And though he fares with slowest feet,Joy runs to meet him, drawing near;The birds are heralds of his cause;And like a never-ending rhyme,The roadsides bloom in his applause,Who bides his time.Who bides his time, and fevers notIn the hot race that none achieves,Shall wear cool-wreathen laurel, wroughtWith crimson berries in the leaves;And he shall reign a goodly king,And sway his hand o'er every clime,Wi...
James Whitcomb Riley
In A London Flat
I"You look like a widower," she saidThrough the folding-doors with a laugh from the bed,As he sat by the fire in the outer room,Reading late on a night of gloom,And a cab-hack's wheeze, and the clap of its feetIn its breathless pace on the smooth wet street,Were all that came to them now and then . . ."You really do!" she quizzed again.IIAnd the Spirits behind the curtains heard,And also laughed, amused at her word,And at her light-hearted view of him."Let's get him made so just for a whim!"Said the Phantom Ironic. "'Twould serve her rightIf we coaxed the Will to do it some night.""O pray not!" pleaded the younger one,The Sprite of the Pities. "She said it in fun!"IIIBut so it befell, whatever the...
Thomas Hardy
The Banks Of Doon. (First Version.)
I. Ye flowery banks o' bonnie Doon, How can ye bloom sae fair; How can ye chant, ye little birds, And I sae fu' o' care!II. Thou'll break my heart, thou bonnie bird, That sings upon the bough; Thou minds me o' the happy days When my fause love was true.III. Thou'll break my heart, thou bonnie bird, That sings beside thy mate; For sae I sat, and sae I sang, And wist na o' my fate.IV. Aft hae I rov'd by bonnie Doon, To see the woodbine twine, And ilka bird sang o' its love; And sae did I o' mine.V. Wi' lightsome heart I pu'd a rose, Frae aff its thorny tree: An...
Robert Burns
The Man And The Echo
i(Man)In a cleft that's christened AltUnder broken stone I haltAt the bottom of a pitThat broad noon has never lit,And shout a secret to the stone.All that I have said and done,Now that I am old and ill,Turns into a question tillI lie awake night after nightAnd never get the answers right.Did that play of mine send outCertain men the English shot?Did words of mine put too great strainOn that woman's reeling brain?Could my spoken words have checkedThat whereby a house lay wrecked?And all seems evil until ISleepless would lie down and die.i(Echo)Lie down and die.i(Man)That were to shirkThe spiritual intellect's great work,And shirk it in vain. There is no releaseIn a bodkin or dise...
William Butler Yeats
Pereunt Et Imputantur
(After Martial)Bernard, if to you and me Fortune all at once should giveYears to spend secure and free, With the choice of how to live,Tell me, what should we proclaimLife deserving of the name?Winning some one else's case? Saving some one else's seat?Hearing with a solemn face People of importance bleat?No, I think we should not stillWaste our time at others' will.Summer noons beneath the limes, Summer rides at evening cool,Winter's tales and home-made rhymes, Figures on the frozen pool---These would we for labours take,And of these our business make.Ah! but neither you nor I Dare in earnest venture so;Still we let the good days die And to swell the reckoning g...
Henry John Newbolt
The Send-off
Down the close, darkening lanes they sang their way To the siding-shed, And lined the train with faces grimly gay. Their breasts were stuck all white with wreath and spray As men's are, dead. Dull porters watched them, and a casual tramp Stood staring hard, Sorry to miss them from the upland camp. Then, unmoved, signals nodded, and a lamp Winked to the guard. So secretly, like wrongs hushed-up, they went. They were not ours: We never heard to which front these were sent. Nor there if they yet mock what women meant Who gave them flowers. Shall they return to beatings of great bells In wild trainloads? A few, a few, too few for drums and yells, May...
Wilfred Edward Salter Owen
To Laura In Death. Sonnet LXVII.
Lasciato hai, Morte, senza sole il mondo.HER TRUE WORTH WAS KNOWN ONLY TO HIM AND TO HEAVEN. Death, thou the world, since that dire arrow sped,Sunless and cold hast left; Love weak and blind;Beauty and grace their brilliance have resign'd,And from my heavy heart all joy is fled;Honour is sunk, and softness banishèd.I weep alone the woes which all my kindShould weep--for virtue's fairest flower has pinedBeneath thy touch: what second blooms instead?Let earth, sea, air, with common wail bemoanMan's hapless race; which now, since Laura died,A flowerless mead, a gemless ring appears.The world possess'd, nor knew her worth, till flown!I knew it well, who here in grief abide;And heaven too knows, which decks its forehead with my...
Francesco Petrarca