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The Monk's Walk
In this sombre garden closeWhat has come and passed, who knows?What red passion, what white painHaunted this dim walk in vain?Underneath the ivied wall,Where the silent shadows fall,Lies the pathway chill and dampWhere the world-quit dreamers tramp.Just across, where sunlight burns,Smiling at the mourning ferns,Stand the roses, side by side,Nodding in their useless pride.Ferns and roses, who shall sayWhat you witness day by day?Covert smile or dropping eye,As the monks go pacing by.Has the novice come to-dayHere beneath the wall to pray?Has the young monk, lately chidden,Sung his lyric, sweet, forbidden?Tell me, roses, did you noteThat pale father's throbbing throat?Did you hear ...
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Eurydice to Orpheus - A Picture by Leighton
But give them me, the mouth, the eyes, the brow!Let them once more absorb me! One look nowWill lap me round for ever, not to passOut of its light, though darkness lie beyond:Hold me but safe again within the bondOf one immortal look! All woe that was,Forgotten, and all terror that may be,Defied, no past is mine, no future: look at me!
Robert Browning
Peccavi, Domine
O Power to whom this earthly climeIs but an atom in the whole,O Poet-heart of Space and Time,O Maker and Immortal Soul,Within whose glowing rings are bound,Out of whose sleepless heart had birthThe cloudy blue, the starry round,And this small miracle of earth:Who liv'st in every living thing,And all things are thy script and chart,Who rid'st upon the eagle's wing,And yearnest in the human heart;O Riddle with a single clue,Love, deathless, protean, secure,The ever old, the ever new,O Energy, serene and pure.Thou, who art also part of me,Whose glory I have sometime seen,O Vision of the Ought-to-be,O Memory of the Might-have-been,I have had glimpses of thy way,And moved with winds and walked with stars,
Archibald Lampman
This Is No My Ain Lassie.
Tune - "This is no my ain house."I. O this is no my ain lassie, Fair tho' the lassie be; O weel ken I my ain lassie, Kind love is in her e'e. I see a form, I see a face, Ye weel may wi' the fairest place: It wants, to me, the witching grace, The kind love that's in her e'e.II. She's bonnie, blooming, straight, and tall, And lang has had my heart in thrall; And ay it charms my very saul, The kind love that's in her e'e.III. A thief sae pawkie is my Jean, To steal a blink, by a' unseen; But gleg as light are lovers' een, When kind love is in the e'e.IV....
Robert Burns
To Ellen At The South
The green grass is bowing,The morning wind is in it;'T is a tune worth thy knowing,Though it change every minute.'T is a tune of the Spring;Every year plays it overTo the robin on the wing,And to the pausing lover.O'er ten thousand, thousand acres,Goes light the nimble zephyr;The Flowers--tiny sect of Shakers--Worship him ever.Hark to the winning sound!They summon thee, dearest,--Saying, 'We have dressed for thee the ground,Nor yet thou appearest.'O hasten;' 't is our time,Ere yet the red SummerScorch our delicate prime,Loved of bee,--the tawny hummer.'O pride of thy race!Sad, in sooth, it were to ours,If our brief tribe miss thy face,We poor New England flowers.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
I Bring An Unaccustomed Wine
I bring an unaccustomed wineTo lips long parching, next to mine,And summon them to drink.Crackling with fever, they essay;I turn my brimming eyes away,And come next hour to look.The hands still hug the tardy glass;The lips I would have cooled, alas!Are so superfluous cold,I would as soon attempt to warmThe bosoms where the frost has lainAges beneath the mould.Some other thirsty there may beTo whom this would have pointed meHad it remained to speak.And so I always bear the cupIf, haply, mine may be the dropSome pilgrim thirst to slake, --If, haply, any say to me,"Unto the little, unto me,"When I at last awake.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
The Lover And Birds
Within a budding grove,In April's ear sang every bird his best,But not a song to pleasure my unrest,Or touch the tears unwept of bitter love;Some spake, methought, with pity, some as if in jest.To every wordOf every birdI listen'd, and replied as it behove.Scream'd Chaffinch, 'Sweet, sweet, sweet!Pretty lovey, come and meet me here!''Chaffinch,' quoth I, 'be dumb awhile, in fearThy darling prove no better than a cheat,And never come, or fly when wintry days appear.'Yet from a twig,With voice so big,The little fowl his utterance did repeat.Then I, 'The man forlornHears Earth send up a foolish noise aloft.''And what'll he do? What'll he do?' scoff'dThe Blackbird, standing, in an ancient thorn,Then spread his so...
William Allingham
Lines: 'When The Lamp Is Shattered'.
1.When the lamp is shatteredThe light in the dust lies dead -When the cloud is scatteredThe rainbow's glory is shed.When the lute is broken,Sweet tones are remembered not;When the lips have spoken,Loved accents are soon forgot.2.As music and splendourSurvive not the lamp and the lute,The heart's echoes renderNo song when the spirit is mute: -No song but sad dirges,Like the wind through a ruined cell,Or the mournful surgesThat ring the dead seaman's knell.3.When hearts have once mingledLove first leaves the well-built nest;The weak one is singledTo endure what it once possessed.O Love! who bewailestThe frailty of all things here,Why choose you the frailestFor your cradle, yo...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Picture Book.
When I was not quite five years old I first saw the blue picture book,And Fraulein Spitzenburger toldStories that sent me hot and cold; I loathed it, yet I had to look: It was a German book.I smiled at first, for she'd begun With a back-garden broad and green,And rabbits nibbling there: page oneTurned; and the gardener fired his gun From the low hedge: he lay unseen Behind: oh, it was mean!They're hurt, they can't escape, and so He stuffs them head-down in a sack,Not quite dead, wriggling in a row,And Fraulein laughed, "Ho, ho! Ho, ho!" And gave my middle a hard smack, I wish that I'd hit back.Then when I cried she laughed again; On the next page was a dead boyM...
Robert von Ranke Graves
Waring
I.I.Whats become of WaringSince he gave us all the slip,Chose land-travel or seafaring,Boots and chest or staff and scrip,Rather than pace up and downAny longer London town?II.Whod have guessed it from his lipOr his brows accustomed bearing,On the night he thus took shipOr started landward? little caringFor us, it seems, who supped together(Friends of his too, I remember)And walked home thro the merry weather,The snowiest in all December.I left his arm that night myselfFor whats-his-names, the new prose-poetWho wrote the book there, on the shelfHow, forsooth, was I to know itIf Waring meant to glide awayLike a ghost at break of day?Never looked he half so gay!III.
On Eastnor Knoll
Silent are the woods, and the dim green boughs areHushed in the twilight: yonder, in the path throughThe apple orchard, is a tired plough-boyCalling the cows home.A bright white star blinks, the pale moon rounds, butStill the red, lurid wreckage of the sunsetSmoulders in smoky fire, and burns onThe misty hill-tops.Ghostly it grows, and darker, the burningFades into smoke, and now the gusty oaks areA silent army of phantoms throngingA land of shadows.
John Masefield
The Voice
Woman much missed, how you call to me, call to me,Saying that now you are not as you wereWhen you had changed from the one who was all to me,But as at first, when our day was fair.Can it be you that I hear? Let me view you, then,Standing as when I drew near to the townWhere you would wait for me: yes, as I knew you then,Even to the original air-blue gown!Or is it only the breeze, in its listlessnessTravelling across the wet mead to me here,You being ever consigned to existlessness,Heard no more again far or near? Thus I; faltering forward, Leaves around me falling,Wind oozing thin through the thorn from norward And the woman calling.December 1912.
Thomas Hardy
The Old Man's Relapse.
Verses Occasioned by the Foregoing Epistle. Sopitos suscita ignes. VIRG.From man's too curious and impatient sight,The future, Heaven involves in thickest night.Credit gray hairs: though freedom much we boast,Some least perform, what they determine most.What sudden changes our resolves betray!To-morrow is the satire on to-day,And shows its weakness. Whom shall men believe,When constantly themselves, themselves deceive? Long had I bid my once-loved muse adieu;You warm old age; my passion burns anew.How sweet your verse! how great your force of mind!What power of words! what skill in dark mankind!Polite the conduct; generous the design;And beauty files, and strength sustains...
Edward Young
The Earth's Shame
Name not his deed: in shuddering and in hasteWe dragged him darkly o'er the windy fell:That night there was a gibbet in the waste,And a new sin in hell.Be his deed hid from commonwealths and kings,By all men born be one true tale forgot;But three things, braver than all earthly things,Faced him and feared him not.Above his head and sunken secret faceNested the sparrow's young and dropped not dead.From the red blood and slime of that lost placeGrew daisies white, not red.And from high heaven looking upon him,Slowly upon the face of God did comeA smile the cherubim and seraphimHid all their faces from.
Gilbert Keith Chesterton
New-Year's Eve
Good old days--dear old daysWhen my heart beat high and bold--When the things of earth seemed full of life,And the future a haze of gold!Oh, merry was I that winter night,And gleeful our little one's din,And tender the grace of my darling's faceAs we watched the new year in.But a voice--a spectre's, that mocked at love--Came out of the yonder hall;"Tick-tock, tick-tock!" 't was the solemn clockThat ruefully croaked to all.Yet what knew we of the griefs to beIn the year we longed to greet?Love--love was the theme of the sweet, sweet dreamI fancied might never fleet!But the spectre stood in that yonder gloom,And these were the words it spake,"Tick-tock, tick-tock"--and they seemed to mockA heart about to break....
Eugene Field
The Highland Broach
If to Tradition faith be due,And echoes from old verse speak true,Ere the meek Saint, Columba, boreGlad tidings to Iona's shore,No common light of nature blessedThe mountain region of the west,A land where gentle manners ruledO'er men in dauntless virtues schooled,That raised, for centuries, a barImpervious to the tide of war:Yet peaceful Arts did entrance gainWhere haughty Force had striven in vain;And, 'mid the works of skilful hands,By wanderers brought from foreign landsAnd various climes, was not unknownThe clasp that fixed the Roman Gown;The Fibula, whose shape, I ween,Still in the Highland Broach is seen,The silver Broach of massy frame,Worn at the breast of some grave DameOn road or path, or at the doorOf f...
William Wordsworth
A Madrigal
Dream days of fond delight and hoursAs rosy-hued as dawn, are mine.Love's drowsy wine,Brewed from the heart of Passion flowers,Flows softly o'er my lipsAnd save thee, all the world is in eclipse.There were no light if thou wert not;The sun would be too sad to shine,And all the lineOf hours from dawn would be a blot;And Night would haunt the skies,An unlaid ghost with staring dark-ringed eyes.Oh, love, if thou wert not my love,And I perchance not thine--what then?Could gift of menOr favor of the God above,Plant aught in this bare heartOr teach this tongue the singer's soulful art?Ah, no! 'Tis love, and love aloneThat spurs my soul so surely on;Turns night to dawn,And thorns to roses fairest blown;<...