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The Lover Mourns For The Loss Of Love
Pale brows, still hands and dim hair,I had a beautiful friendAnd dreamed that the old despairWould end in love in the end:She looked in my heart one dayAnd saw your image was there;She has gone weeping away.
William Butler Yeats
Dedication (To my Mother)
Let me cradle myself backInto the darknessOf the half shapes...Of the cauled beginnings...Let me stir the attar of unused air,Elusive... ironically fragrantAs a dead queen's kerchief...Let me blow the dust from off you...Resurrect your breathLying limp as a fanIn a dead queen's hand.
Lola Ridge
Open Windows
Out of the window a sea of green treesLift their soft boughs like the arms of a dancer,They beckon and call me, "Come out in the sun!"But I cannot answer.I am alone with Weakness and Pain,Sick abed and June is going,I cannot keep her, she hurries byWith the silver-green of her garments blowing.Men and women pass in the streetGlad of the shining sapphire weather,But we know more of it than they,Pain and I together.They are the runners in the sun,Breathless and blinded by the race,But we are watchers in the shadeWho speak with Wonder face to face.
Sara Teasdale
The Sweetness Of Life
It fell on a day I was happy,And the winds, the concave sky,The flowers and the beasts in the meadowSeemed happy even as I;And I stretched my hands to the meadow,To the bird, the beast, the tree:"Why are ye all so happy?"I cried, and they answered me.What sayest thou, Oh meadow,That stretches so wide, so far,That none can say how manyThy misty marguerites are?And what say ye, red roses,That o'er the sun-blanched wallFrom your high black-shadowed trellisLike flame or blood-drops fall?"We are born, we are reared, and we lingerA various space and die;We dream, and are bright and happy,But we cannot answer why."What sayest thou, Oh shadow,That from the dreaming hillAll down the broadening valley...
Archibald Lampman
Moods
Oh that a Song would sing itself to me Out of the heart of Nature, or the heart Of man, the child of Nature, not of Art, Fresh as the morning, salt as the salt sea,With just enough of bitterness to be A medicine to this sluggish mood, and start The life-blood in my veins, and so impart Healing and help in this dull lethargy!Alas! not always doth the breath of song Breathe on us. It is like the wind that bloweth At its own will, not ours, nor tarries long;We hear the sound thereof, but no man knoweth From whence it comes, so sudden and swift and strong, Nor whither in its wayward course it goeth.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
I Am He That Aches With Love
I am he that aches with amorous love;Does the earth gravitate? Does not all matter, aching, attract all matter?So the Body of me, to all I meet, or know.
Walt Whitman
The South.
Night, and beneath star-blazoned summer skies Behold the Spirit of the musky South,A creole with still-burning, languid eyes, Voluptuous limbs and incense-breathing mouth: Swathed in spun gauze is she,From fibres of her own anana tree.Within these sumptuous woods she lies at ease, By rich night-breezes, dewy cool, caressed:'Twixt cypresses and slim palmetto trees, Like to the golden oriole's hanging nest, Her airy hammock swings,And through the dark her mocking-bird yet sings.How beautiful she is! A tulip-wreath Twines round her shadowy, free-floating hair:Young, weary, passionate, and sad as death, Dark visions haunt for her the vacant air, While movelessly she liesWith lithe, lax, fo...
Emma Lazarus
By Night When Others Soundly Slept
By night when others soundly sleptAnd hath at once both ease and Rest,My waking eyes were open keptAnd so to lie I found it best.I sought him whom my Soul did Love,With tears I sought him earnestly.He bow'd his ear down from Above.In vain I did not seek or cry.My hungry Soul he fill'd with Good;He in his Bottle put my tears,My smarting wounds washt in his blood,And banisht thence my Doubts and fears.What to my Saviour shall I giveWho freely hath done this for me?I'll serve him here whilst I shall liveAnd Loue him to Eternity
Anne Bradstreet
An Unmarked Festival
There's a feast undated yet: Both our true lives hold it fast,--The first day we ever met. What a great day came and passed! --Unknown then, but known at last.And we met: You knew not me, Mistress of your joys and fears;Held my hands that held the key Of the treasure of your years, Of the fountain of your tears.For you knew not it was I, And I knew not it was you.We have learnt, as days went by. But a flower struck root and grew Underground, and no one knew.Days of days! Unmarked it rose, In whose hours we were to meet;And forgotten passed. Who knows, Was earth cold or sunny, Sweet, At the coming of your feet?One mere day, we thought; the measu...
Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell
The Boy's Appeal.
O say, dear sister, are you coming Forth to the fields with me?The very air is gaily ringing With hum of bird and bee,And crowds of swallows now are chirping Up in our ancient thorn,And earth and air are both rejoicing, On this gay summer morn.Shall we hie unto the streamlet's side To seek our little boat,And, plying our oars with right good will, Over its bright waves float?Or shall we loll on the grassy bank For hours dreamy, still,To draw from its depths some silv'ry prize, Reward of angler's skill?I do not talk of the tempting game The forest covers hide,So dear to the sportsman - plovers shy, Pheasants with eye of pride,For I know your timid nature shrinks From flas...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Eclogue III. The Funeral.
The coffin [1] as I past across the lane Came sudden on my view. It was not here, A sight of every day, as in the streets Of the great city, and we paus'd and ask'd Who to the grave was going. It was one, A village girl, they told us, who had borne An eighteen months strange illness, and had pined With such slow wasting that the hour of death Came welcome to her. We pursued our way To the house of mirth, and with that idle talk That passes o'er the mind and is forgot, We wore away the time. But it was eve When homewardly I went, and in the air Was that cool freshness, that discolouring shade That makes the eye turn inward. Then I heard Over the vale the heavy toll of death Sound slow; it made ...
Robert Southey
Memories Of Schooldays.
There are mem'ries glad of the old school-house,Which throng around me still;And voices spoke in my youthful days,My ears with music fill.Those youthful voices I seem to hear,With their gladsome, joyous tone,And joy and hope they bring to me,When I am all alone.I think of the joys of that time long past,Of its boyish hopes and fears,And 'tis partly joy, and partly pain,That wets my eyes with tears.For 'tis joy I feel, when I seem to stand,Where I stood long years ago,And when I think that cannot be,My heart is fill'd with woe.My old school mates are scatter'd far,And some are with the dead,And my old class mates have wander'd, too,To seek for fame, or bread.And those who still are near my ho...
Thomas Frederick Young
Dedicatory Poem.
Dear Carrie, were we truly wise,And could discern with finer eyes,And half-inspired sense,The ways of Providence:Could we but know the hidden thingsThat brood beneath the Future's wings,Hermetically sealed,But soon to be revealed:Would we, more blest than we are now,In due submission learn to bow, -Receiving on our kneesThe Omnipotent decrees?That which is just, we have. And weWho lead this round of mystery,This dance of strange unrest,What are we at the best? -Unless we learn to mount and climb;Writing upon the page of time,In words of joy or pain,That we've not lived in vain.We all are Ministers of Good;And where our mission's understood,How many hearts we mustRaise, t...
Charles Sangster
Betsey And I Are Out.
Draw up the papers, lawyer, and make 'em good and stout;For things at home are crossways, and Betsey and I are out.We, who have worked together so long as man and wife,Must pull in single harness for the rest of our nat'ral life."What is the matter?" say you. I swan it's hard to tell!Most of the years behind us we've passed by very well;I have no other woman, she has no other man -Only we've lived together as long as we ever can.So I have talked with Betsey, and Betsey has talked with me,And so we've agreed together that we can't never agree;Not that we've catched each other in any terrible crime;We've been a-gathering this for years, a little at a time.There was a stock of temper we both had for a start,Although we never suspected 'twould take...
William McKendree Carleton
To His Mistress.
Choose me your valentine,Next let us marry -Love to the death will pineIf we long tarry.Promise, and keep your vows,Or vow ye never -Love's doctrine disallowsTroth-breakers ever.You have broke promise twice,Dear, to undo me,If you prove faithless thriceNone then will woo ye.
Robert Herrick
In The End
All that could never be said,All that could never be done,Wait for us at lastSomewhere back of the sun;All the heart broke to foregoShall be ours without pain,We shall take them as lightly as girlsPluck flowers after rain.And when they are ours in the endPerhaps after allThe skies will not open for usNor heaven be there at our call.
Impatience.
How can I wait until you come to me? The once fleet mornings linger by the way, Their sunny smiles touched with malicious glee At my unrest; they seem to pause, and play Like truant children, while I sigh and say, How can I wait? How can I wait? Of old, the rapid hours Refused to pause or loiter with me long; But now they idly fill their hands with flowers, And make no haste, but slowly stroll among The summer blooms, not heeding my one song, How can I wait? How can I wait? The nights alone are kind; They reach forth to a future day, and bring Sweet dreams of you to people all my mind; And time speeds by on light and airy wing. I feast upon your face, I no m...
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Savitri. Part II.
Great joy in Madra. Blow the shellThe marriage over to declare!And now to forest-shades where dwellThe hermits, wend the wedded pair.The doors of every house are hungWith gay festoons of leaves and flowers;And blazing banners broad are flung,And trumpets blown from castle towers!Slow the procession makes its groundAlong the crowded city street:And blessings in a storm of soundAt every step the couple greet.Past all the houses, past the wall,Past gardens gay, and hedgerows trim,Past fields, where sinuous brooklets smallWith molten silver to the brimGlance in the sun's expiring light,Past frowning hills, past pastures wild,At last arises on the sight,Foliage on foliage densely piled,The woods primeval, where reside
Toru Dutt