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Bombardment
The town has opened to the sun.Like a flat red lily with a million petalsShe unfolds, she comes undone.A sharp sky brushes uponThe myriad glittering chimney-tipsAs she gently exhales to the sun.Hurrying creatures runDown the labyrinth of the sinister flower.What is it they shun?A dark bird falls from the sun.It curves in a rush to the heart of the vastFlower: the day has begun.
David Herbert Richards Lawrence
Barclay Of Ury
Up the streets of Aberdeen,By the kirk and college green,Rode the Laird of Ury;Close behind him, close beside,Foul of mouth and evil-eyed,Pressed the mob in fury.Flouted him the drunken churl,Jeered at him the serving-girl,Prompt to please her master;And the begging carlin, lateFed and clothed at Urys gate,Cursed him as he passed her.Yet, with calm and stately mien,Up the streets of AberdeenCame he slowly riding;And, to all he saw and heard,Answering not with bitter word,Turning not for chiding.Came a troop with broadswords swinging,Bits and bridles sharply ringing,Loose and free and froward;Quoth the foremost, Ride him down!Push him! prick him! through the townDrive the Quaker cowar...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Air Castles.
I built a castle in the air - A radiant thing made out of dreams; Love's dear desire its golden stair - Naught heavier than a hope was there - A thing of mist and rainbow gleams. But when it fell - ah! when it fell, Though made o' dreams and mist and shine, The mystery of it who can tell? Its falling shook both heaven and hell, And ground to dust this heart of mine.
Jean Blewett
Vixit
Nurse not your grief, nor make obsequious moanWhen I have shed this flesh I love so well,Nor slowly toll the dull heart-bruising knell,Nor carve my name in customary stone;But let the generous earth reclaim her ownAnd my usurious profit who can tell?Dash tears aside, let joy resume her spell;Stars glitter where the storm is overblown.Because I have lived I would not have one say:Here long ago a man of such a nameWas left to moulder in his pit of clay.Let only love remember how I cameAnd built an earthen altar in my dayAnd lit thereon a comfortable flame.
John Le Gay Brereton
Charlotte Brontë'S Grave.
All overgrown by cunning moss,All interspersed with weed,The little cage of 'Currer Bell,'In quiet Haworth laid.This bird, observing others,When frosts too sharp became,Retire to other latitudes,Quietly did the same,But differed in returning;Since Yorkshire hills are green,Yet not in all the nests I meetCan nightingale be seen.Gathered from many wanderings,Gethsemane can tellThrough what transporting anguishShe reached the asphodel!Soft fall the sounds of EdenUpon her puzzled ear;Oh, what an afternoon for heaven,When 'Brontë' entered there!
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
A Child's Nightmare
Through long nursery nights he stoodBy my bed unwearying,Loomed gigantic, formless, queer,Purring in my haunted earThat same hideous nightmare thing,Talking, as he lapped my blood,In a voice cruel and flat,Saying for ever, "Cat! ... Cat! ... Cat!..."That one word was all he said,That one word through all my sleep,In monotonous mock despair.Nonsense may be light as air,But there's Nonsense that can keepHorror bristling round the head,When a voice cruel and flatSays for ever, "Cat! ... Cat! ... Cat!..."He had faded, he was goneYears ago with Nursery LandWhen he leapt on me againFrom the clank of a night train,Overpowered me foot and head,Lapped my blood, while on and onThe old voice cruel and flat
Robert von Ranke Graves
Rosy Hannah.
A Spring o'erhung with many a flow'r,The grey sand dancing in its bed,Embank'd beneath a Hawthorn bower,Sent forth its waters near my head:A rosy Lass approach'd my view;I caught her blue eye's modest beam:The stranger nodded 'How d'ye do!'And leap'd across the infant stream.The water heedless pass'd away:With me her glowing image stay'd.I strove, from that auspicious day,To meet and bless the lovely Maid.I met her where beneath our feetThrough downy Moss the Wild-Thyme grew;Nor Moss elastic, flow'rs though sweet,Match'd Hannah's cheek of rosy hue.I met her where the dark Woods wave,And shaded verdure skirts the plain;And when the pale Moon rising gaveNew glories to her cloudy train.From her sweet Cot upon th...
Robert Bloomfield
Night
The night is young yet; an enchanted nightIn early summer: calm and darkly bright.I love the Night, and every little breezeShe brings, to soothe the sleep of dreaming trees.Hearst thou the Voices? Sough! Susurrus! Hark!Tis Mother Nature whispering in the dark!Burden of cities, mad turmoil of men,That vex the daylight, she forgets them then.Her breasts are bare; Grief gains from them surcease:She gives her restless sons the milk of Peace.To sleep she lulls them, drawn from thoughts of pelfBy telling sweet old stories of herself.. . . . .All secrets deep, yea, all I hear and seeOf things mysterious, Night reveals to me.I know what every flower, with drowsy headDown-drooping, dreams of, ...
Victor James Daley
Dirge For The Year.
1.Orphan Hours, the Year is dead,Come and sigh, come and weep!Merry Hours, smile instead,For the Year is but asleep.See, it smiles as it is sleeping,Mocking your untimely weeping.2.As an earthquake rocks a corseIn its coffin in the clay,So White Winter, that rough nurse,Rocks the death-cold Year to-day;Solemn Hours! wail aloudFor your mother in her shroud.3.As the wild air stirs and swaysThe tree-swung cradle of a child,So the breath of these rude daysRocks the Year: - be calm and mild,Trembling Hours, she will ariseWith new love within her eyes.4.January gray is here,Like a sexton by her grave;February bears the bier,March with grief doth howl and rave,And April weep...
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Charles George Gordon.
"Rather be dead than praised," he said,That hero, like a hero dead,In this slack-sinewed age enduedWith more than antique fortitude!"Rather be dead than praised!" Shall we,Who loved thee, now that Death sets freeThine eager soul, with word and lineProfane that empty house of thine?Nay,--let us hold, be mute. Our painWill not be less that we refrain;And this our silence shall but beA larger monument to thee.
Henry Austin Dobson
Poems From "A Shropshire Lad" - VII
When smoke stood up from Ludlow,And mist blew off from Teme,And blithe afield to ploughingAgainst the morning beamI strode beside my team,The blackbird in the coppiceLooked out to see me stride,And hearkened as I whistledThe tramping team beside,And fluted and replied:"Lie down, lie down, young yeoman;What use to rise and rise?Rise man a thousand morningsYet down at last he lies,And then the man is wise."I heard the tune he sang me,And spied his yellow bill;I picked a stone and aimed itAnd threw it with a will:Then the bird was still.Then my soul within meTook up the blackbird's strain,And still beside the horsesAlong the dewy laneIt Sang the song again:"Lie dow...
Alfred Edward Housman
Fragment, Or The Triumph Of Conscience.
'Twas dead of the night when I sate in my dwelling,One glimmering lamp was expiring and low, -Around the dark tide of the tempest was swelling,Along the wild mountains night-ravens were yelling,They bodingly presaged destruction and woe!'Twas then that I started, the wild storm was howling,Nought was seen, save the lightning that danced on the sky,Above me the crash of the thunder was rolling,And low, chilling murmurs the blast wafted by. -My heart sank within me, unheeded the jarOf the battling clouds on the mountain-tops broke,Unheeded the thunder-peal crashed in mine ear,This heart hard as iron was stranger to fear,But conscience in low noiseless whispering spoke.'Twas then that her form on the whirlwind uprearing,The dark ghost of the...
The Ruin
When the last colours of the dayHave from their burning ebbed away,About that ruin, cold and lone,The cricket shrills from stone to stone;And scattering o'er its darkened green,Bands of the fairies may be seen,Chattering like grasshoppers, their feetDancing a thistledown dance round it:While the great gold of the mild moonTinges their tiny acorn shoon.
Walter De La Mare
Sonnet On Approaching Italy
I reached the Alps: the soul within me burned,Italia, my Italia, at thy name:And when from out the mountain's heart I cameAnd saw the land for which my life had yearned,I laughed as one who some great prize had earned:And musing on the marvel of thy fameI watched the day, till marked with wounds of flameThe turquoise sky to burnished gold was turned.The pine-trees waved as waves a woman's hair,And in the orchards every twining sprayWas breaking into flakes of blossoming foam:But when I knew that far away at RomeIn evil bonds a second Peter lay,I wept to see the land so very fair.TURIN.
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
A Lament.
I.White moons may come, white moons may go,She sleeps where wild wood blossoms blow,Nor knows she of the rosy June,Star-silver flowers o'er her strewn,The pearly paleness of the moon, - Alas! how should she know! II.The downy moth at evening comesTo suck thin honey from wet blooms;Long, lazy clouds that swimming highBrood white about the western sky,Grow red as molten iron and lie Above the fragrant glooms. III.Rare odors of the weed and fern,Dry whisp'rings of dim leaves that turn,A sound of hidden waters loneFrothed bubbling down the streaming stone,And now a wood-dove's plaintive moan Drift from the bushy burne. IV....
Madison Julius Cawein
Artist
Quit the hut, frequent the palace,Reck not what the people say;For still, where'er the trees grow biggest,Huntsmen find the easiest way.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Sweethearts of the Year
Sweetheart Spring Our Sweetheart, Spring, came softly, Her gliding hands were fire, Her lilac breath upon our cheeks Consumed us with desire. By her our God began to build, Began to sow and till. He laid foundations in our loves For every good and ill. We asked Him not for blessing, We asked Him not for pain - Still, to the just and unjust He sent His fire and rain. Sweetheart Summer We prayed not, yet she came to us, The silken, shining one, On Jacob's noble ladder Descended from the sun. She reached our town of Every Day, Our dry and dusty sod - We prayed not, yet she brought to us The misty wine of Go...
Vachel Lindsay
The Evenlode
I will not try to reach again,I will not set my sail alone,To moor a boat bereft of menAt Yarnton's tiny docks of stone.But I will sit beside the fire,And put my hand before my eyes,And trace, to fill my heart's desire,The last of all our Odysseys.The quiet evening kept her tryst:Beneath an open sky we rode,And passed into a wandering mistAlong the perfect Evenlode.The tender Evenlode that makesHer meadows hush to hear the soundOf waters mingling in the brakes,And binds my heart to English ground.A lovely river, all alone,She lingers in the hills and holdsA hundred little towns of stone,Forgotten in the western wolds.
Hilaire Belloc