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Life
Our lives seem filled with things of little worth;A thousand petty cares arise each dayWhich bring our soaring thoughts from heaven to earth,Reminding us that we have feet of clay;Yet we will not from path of duty strayIf we amidst them all cleave to the right;Nor great nor small are actions in His sight;Through lowly vale He shows our feet the way.Our early dreams may not be realized;The roseate sky now proves quite commonplace;The constellations we so highly prizedHave vanished all--nor left the slightest traceOf former glory in its azure face,But high o'er all beams out the polar starTo guide us safe through rock and sandy bar;Life is complete and its cap-stone is grace.
Joseph Horatio Chant
Fragment: Life Rounded With Sleep.
The babe is at peace within the womb;The corpse is at rest within the tomb:We begin in what we end.
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Discontent
Light human nature is too lightly tostAnd ruffled without cause, complaining onRestless with rest, until, being overthrown,It learneth to lie quiet. Let a frostOr a small wasp have crept to the inner-mostOf our ripe peach, or let the wilful sunShine westward of our window, straight we runA furlong's sigh as if the world were lost.But what time through the heart and through the brainGod hath transfixed us, we, so moved before,Attain to a calm. Ay, shouldering weights of pain,We anchor in deep waters, safe from shore,And hear submissive o'er the stormy mainGod's chartered judgments walk for evermore.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Alleluia Height
Obedience to the seasons' marshall-rod,That is a law of God,Here beauty passes with her gorgeous train,On paths that range from bud to grain.O, here the searching eyesIn traffic for the soul's good gainEarn wealth of rare delight.Far pathways of surprise,In color's frumenty bedight,Lead off from avenues of dayThrough miles of pageantries:And from the starry chancels of the nightAnd the inscrutable farther skies,Beyond where trackless comets stray,Outspreads a world in thought's array.And lo! the heart's true voices singFrom the exulting reverent breast,And lips proclaim, with adoration blessed,Glad Alleluias to the King.Prompt is our praise unto a jewelled queenIn all her courtly splendor set,(Fair as those f...
Michael Earls
Children of earth are we,Lovers of land and sea,Of hill, of brook, of tree, Of all things fair;Of all things dark or bright,Born of the day and night,Red rose and lily white And dusky hair.Yet not alone from earthDo we derive our birth.What were our singing worth Were this the whole?Somewhere from heaven afarHath dropped a fiery star,Which makes us what we are, Which is our soul.
Robert Fuller Murray
Simplicity.
How happy is the little stoneThat rambles in the road alone,And does n't care about careers,And exigencies never fears;Whose coat of elemental brownA passing universe put on;And independent as the sun,Associates or glows alone,Fulfilling absolute decreeIn casual simplicity.
Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
For My Grand-Daughters, M. And L. - An Acrostic.
Mary and Lily - how sweet are those names,Allied as they are to my heart and my home;Recalling with freshness the days that are past,Yielding buds of sweet promise for days yet to come.Links are these names to the chain that hath boundIn fetters my heart, to which still they lay claim;Loved ones and lovely, still close by me found,Years past, and time present, whose names are the same.Enshrined in this bosom, is living one now,Still youthful and truthful, and talented too,Though years have elapsed since she passed from our view;E'en in Summer midst roses in beauty and bloom,She faded away, and was borne to the tomb.Weston, March 5, 1852.
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
The Undying
In thin clear light unshadowed shapes go bySmall on green fields beneath the hueless sky.They do not stay for question, do not hearAny old human speech: their tongue and earSeem only thought, for when I spoke they stirred notAnd their bright minds conversing my ear heard not.--Until I slept or, musing, on a heapOf warm crisp fern lay between sense and sleepDrowsy, still clinging to a strand of thoughtSpider-like frail and all unconscious wrought.For thinking of that unforgettable thing,The war, that spreads a loud and shaggy wingOn things most peaceful, simple, happy and bright,Until the spirit is blind though the eye is light;Thinking of all that evil, envy, hate,The cruelty most dark, most desolate;Thinking of the English dead--"How can you d...
John Frederick Freeman
Fate
Her planted eye to-day controls,Is in the morrow most at home,And sternly calls to being soulsThat curse her when they come.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Helpstone Church-Yard.
What makes me love thee now, thou dreary scene,And see in each swell'd heap a peaceful bed?I well remember that the time has been,To walk a church-yard when I us'd to dread;And shudder'd, as I read upon the stoneOf well-known friends and next-door-neighbours gone.But then I knew no cloudy cares of life,Where ne'er a sunbeam comes to light me thorough;A stranger then to this world's storms and strife,Where ne'er a charm is met to lull my sorrow:I then was blest, and had not eyes to seeLife's future change, and Fate's severe to-morrow;When all those ills and pains should compass me,With no hope left but what I meet in thee.
John Clare
A garden
We have a little garden, A garden of our own,And every day we water there The seeds that we have sown.We love our little garden, And tend it with such care,You will not find a faded leaf Or blighted blossom there.
Helen Beatrix Potter
Clover.
Inscribed to the Memory of John Keats.Dear uplands, Chester's favorable fields,My large unjealous Loves, many yet one -A grave good-morrow to your Graces, all,Fair tilth and fruitful seasons! Lo, how still!The midmorn empties you of men, save me;Speak to your lover, meadows! None can hear.I lie as lies yon placid Brandywine,Holding the hills and heavens in my heartFor contemplation. 'Tis a perfect hour.From founts of dawn the fluent autumn dayHas rippled as a brook right pleasantlyHalf-way to noon; but now with widening turnMakes pause, in lucent meditation locked,And rounds into a silver pool of morn,Bottom'd with clover-fields. My heart just hearsEight lingering strokes of some far village-bell,
Sidney Lanier
Wollongong
Let me talk of years evanished, let me harp upon the timeWhen we trod these sands together, in our boyhoods golden prime;Let me lift again the curtain, while I gaze upon the past,As the sailor glances homewards, watching from the topmost mast.Here we rested on the grasses, in the glorious summer hours,When the waters hurried seaward, fringed with ferns and forest flowers;When our youthful eyes, rejoicing, saw the sunlight round the sprayIn a rainbow-wreath of splendour, glittering underneath the day;Sunlight flashing past the billows, falling cliffs and crags among,Clothing hopeful friendship basking on the shores of Wollongong.Echoes of departed voices, whispers from forgotten dreams,Come across my spirit, like the murmurs of melodious streams.Here we both hav...
Henry Kendall
Sonnet CCVII.
Due rose fresche, e colte in paradiso.THE TWO ROSES. Two brilliant roses, fresh from Paradise,Which there, on May-day morn, in beauty sprungFair gift, and by a lover old and wiseEqually offer'd to two lovers young:At speech so tender and such winning guise,As transports from a savage might have wrung,A living lustre lit their mutual eyes,And instant on their cheeks a soft blush hung.The sun ne'er look'd upon a lovelier pair,With a sweet smile and gentle sigh he said,Pressing the hands of both and turn'd away.Of words and roses each alike had share.E'en now my worn heart thrill with joy and dread,O happy eloquence! O blessed day!MACGREGOR.
Francesco Petrarca
Translation
From "La Diana de Monte-Mayor," in Spanish: where Sireno, a shepherd, whose mistress Diana had utterly forsaken him, pulling out a little of her hair, wrapped about with green silk, to the hair he thus bewailed himself.What changes here, O hair,I see, since I saw you!How ill fits you this green to wear,For hope, the colour due!Indeed, I well did hope,Though hope were mixed with fear,No other shepherd should have scopeOnce to approach this hair.Ah hair! how many daysMy Dian made me show,With thousand pretty childish plays,If I ware you or no:Alas, how oft with tears, -O tears of guileful breast! -She seemed full of jealous fears,Whereat I did but jest.Tell me, O hair of gold,If I then faulty be,That trust t...
Philip Sidney
On Mr Howard's Account Of Lazarettos
Mortal! who, armed with holy fortitude,The path of good right onward hast pursued;May HE, to whose eternal throne on highThe sufferers of the earth with anguish cry,Be thy protector! On that dreary roadThat leads thee patient to the last abodeOf wretchedness, in peril and in pain,May HE thy steps direct, thy heart sustain!'Mid scenes, where pestilence in darkness flies;In caverns, where deserted misery lies;So safe beneath His shadow thou may'st go,To cheer the dismal wastes of human woe.O CHARITY! our helpless nature's pride,Thou friend to him who knows no friend beside,Is there in morning's breath, or the sweet galeThat steals o'er the tired pilgrim of the vale,Cheering with fragrance fresh his weary frame,Aught like the incense of thy ...
William Lisle Bowles
The Misanthrope Reclaimed - ACT II.
The verge of Creation. Enter Werner and Spirit.Werner.We have outtravelled light and sound:The harmonies that pealed around us, asThrough yon array of dim and distant worldsWe winged our flight, have wholly died away,Or come to us so faintly echoed, thatOur ears must watch and wait to catch them.Those stars are now like watch-fires, which though seenBlazing afar, send not their light to makeThe path of the benighted wandererMore plain and cheerful.Before us stretches one vast field of gloom,So dense as to appear impenetrable: -Darkness, that has a body and a form,Both palpable to touch and sight, acrossOur path a barrier rears that seems to barOur farther progress. If there be, beyondThis wall of blackness, aught of myst...
George W. Sands
To A February Primrose
I know not what among the grass thou art, Thy nature, nor thy substance, fairest flower, Nor what to other eyes thou hast of powerTo send thine image through them to the heart;But when I push the frosty leaves apart And see thee hiding in thy wintry bower Thou growest up within me from that hour,And through the snow I with the spring depart.I have no words. But fragrant is the breath, Pale beauty, of thy second life within.There is a wind that cometh for thy death, But thou a life immortal dost begin,Where in one soul, which is thy heaven, shall dwellThy spirit, beautiful Unspeakable!
George MacDonald